Tropical Storm Nock-ten strengthened as it moved closer to the Philippines on Thursday. At 10:00 p.m. EST on Thursday the center of Tropical Storm Nock-ten was located at latitude 12.0°N and longitude 132.7°E which put it about 850 miles (1370 km) east-southeast of Manila, Philippines. Nock-ten was moving toward the west-northwest at 22 m.p.h. (35 km/h). The maximum sustained wind speed was 65 m.p.h. (105 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 80 m.p.h. (130 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 987 mb.
Even though Tropical Storm Nock-ten moved quickly on Thursday the circulation continued to organized. A mid-level eye appeared to develop on microwave satellite imagery. Additional rainbands developed outside the core of the tropical storm. Thunderstorms around the core of Nock-ten generated strong upper level divergence that pumped out mass in all directions.
Tropical Storm Nock-ten is moving through an environment that is favorable for intensification. It is moving over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is near 30°C. An upper level ridge to the east of Nock-ten is producing southeasterly winds that are blowing toward the top of the circulation. However, Tropical Storm Nock-ten is moving fairly rapidly toward the west-northwest. The rapid motion is reducing the effective vertical wind shear, and so the wind shear is not inhibiting intensification. Tropical Storm Nock-ten will continue to strengthen and it should become a typhoon within 12 to 24 hours.
A subtropical ridge to the north of Nock-ten is steering the tropical storm toward the west-northwest. That general motion is expected to continue for another 24 to 36 hours. The subtropical ridge is expected to strengthen after that time and it will steer Nock-ten more toward the west. On its anticipated track Nock-ten will approach southeast Luzon in about 48 hours.
Nock-ten is likely to be a strong typhoon when it reaches the Philippines. It could be the equivalent of a major hurricane. In addition to strong winds, Nock-ten will generate a storm surge and produce locally heavy rains. It will produce a risk of floods and mudslides.