
The transmission was quite well received with clear images.
The satellite image offers a visible snapshot of cloud patterns across the western Northwest Pacific — perfect for tracking convective systems, identifying storm's development, and analyzing frontal bands (when visible). Such imagery feeds directly into numerical models and gives forecasters a clear, near-real-time picture, even for vessels far from internet or satellite links.
The ocean wave chart showed modeled wave heights and swell directions for the East China Sea, the Sea of Japan, and nearby Pacific waters. These products blend atmospheric wind forecasts with spectral wave models to estimate wave height, dominant period, and direction — essential for ship routing, fishing fleets, offshore work, and coastal safety planning.Podul’s typhoon forecast chart depicted a strong tropical system with its projected path, intensity estimates, and wind field. Current guidance from JMA, JTWC, and other agencies suggested a west to west-northwest track toward Taiwan within 48–72 hours, possibly intensifying near landfall. Even if the center stayed offshore, its wind and wave field was expected to expand and affect a wide area.
Other real-time observations confirmed growing wave heights in Podul’s quadrant — several meters in places exposed to its strongest winds, in line with the forecast chart. Mariners should treat these charts as part of a bigger risk picture, alongside wind forecasts, storm surge warnings, and local coastal information.
Date: August 10, 2025
Location: Howrah, WB. India.
Station: JMH Tokyo, Japan
Thank you so much for your kind attention. Comments, suggestions and correction (if required), will be very much appreciated.
- Soumya Bhattacharya
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