2.5-minute Target Sector JMA Himawari-9 AHI Infrared images (above) showed Super Typhoon Sinlaku as it rapidly intensified to a 160-knot Category 5 storm (ADT | SATCON) by 1800 UTC on 12 April 2026, southeast of Saipan (station identifier PGSN) in the Mariana Islands. Cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures began to gradually... Read More

2.5-minute Himawari-9 Infrared (10.4 µm) images, from 0602 UTC on 12 April to 0602 UTC on 13 April [click to play animated GIF]
2.5-minute Target Sector
JMA Himawari-9
AHI Infrared images
(above) showed Super Typhoon Sinlaku as it rapidly intensified to a 160-knot Category 5 storm (
ADT |
SATCON) by 1800 UTC on 12 April 2026, southeast of Saipan (station identifier PGSN) in the Mariana Islands. Cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures began to gradually warm once Sinlaku reached peak intensity.
A nocturnal NOAA-20 VIIRS Day/Night Band image (below) provided a stunning example of mesospheric airglow waves that were propagating radially outward from Sinlaku.

NOAA-20 VIIRS Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) image at 1445 UTC on 12 April [click to enlarge]
Microwave images from DMSP-18 and ATMS
(below) did display evidence of dry air becoming entrained into the circulation of Sinlaku, which was beginning to surround the well-defined eye and eyewall..

DMSP-18 SSMIS Microwave (85 GHz) image at 0850 UTC on 12 April

ATMS Microwave (183 GHz) image at 1547 UTC on 12 April
Sinlaku was moving through an environment characterized by fairly low values of deep-layer wind shear (below) — one factor which favored the rapid intensification of this tropical cyclone.

Himawari-9 Infrared (11.2 µm) images, with an overlay of contours and streamlines of deep-layer wind shear at 1800 UTC on 12 April
Sinlaku was also traversing warm water, as seen in relatively high values of Sea Surface Temperature and Ocean Heat Content (below).

Sea Surface Temperature and Ocean Heat Content, with a plot of Sinlaku’s track ending at 1800 UTC on 12 April
Himawari-9 Infrared images with plots of Mesoscale Atmospheric Motion Vectors or AMVs (below) highlighted areas of high-altitude radial outflow — which enhanced upper-level divergence and promoted the maintenance of convective updrafts.

Himawari-9 Infrared (11.2 µm) images with plots of Mesoscale Atmospheric Motion Vectors (AMVs), from 2034 UTC on 11 April to 2214 UTC on 12 April [click to play MP4 animation]
Microwave, Wind Shear, Sea Surface Temperature, Ocean Heat Content, Mesoscale AMVs, ADT and SATCON images/plots were sourced from the
CIMSS Tropical Cyclones site.
View only this post
Read Less