Cold weather arrives after nationwide rain
Following the rain that fell across the country on Monday, temperatures are expected to drop significantly on Tuesday morning, with some areas likely to see morning temperatures below freezing and the first cold wave alerts.
The Korea Meteorological Administration forecast that the morning temperature in Seoul on Tuesday to drop to 3 degrees Celsius, which is 12 C lower than the previous day, marking the coldest weather this fall. In northern Gyeonggi Province and some parts of Gangwon Province, morning temperatures are expected to drop below zero.
About 1 to 3 centimeters of snow is expected to fall over the mountainous areas of Gangwon Province in early Tuesday, around 1 cm in northeastern Gyeonggi Province, and less than 1 cm in northeastern North Gyeongsang Province. The KMA warned citizens to take caution as the snow could freeze overnight, creating icy roads.
The inflow of significantly cold air from the northwest, which reaches minus 25 C, is causing a sudden drop in temperature, the weather agency explained.
Cold wave warnings were to take effect from Monday 9 p.m. in Gangwon Province and northeastern North Gyeongsang Province, the KMA said. Cold wave advisories were to be in place in northern Seoul, eastern and northern Gyeonggi Province and Gangwon Province. This is the first cold wave alert to be issued this fall.
The cold wave warning is issued when the morning temperature is forecast to drop more than 15 C compared to the previous day, while an advisory is for when the temperature drops more than 10 C.
Temperatures will creep up from Thursday, but more severe cold will begin again from Sunday. Temperatures in Seoul are expected to drop below freezing on Sunday for the first time this fall.
The daily lowest temperatures across the country next week are expected to hit between minus 4 and 16 C, and daytime highs will remain between 6 and 23 C, which is similar to or slightly lower than the average year records.
(责任编辑:건강)
下一篇:Drug offences rise by nearly 50 percent on
- ·LG CNS, NYC, AmCham Korea forge partnerships on digital transformation
- ·From artisan to 'foreign laborer:' a French craftsman's take on Korea's construction scene
- ·Following an Israeli airstrike, crowded Gaza hospital struggles to treat wounded children
- ·Arrest warrant issued for ex
- ·Hyundai, Kia report robust EV US sales, shrug off impact of IRA
- ·[From the Scene] Samsung bets big on package substrates for future chips
- ·[New in Korean] Even in city overrun by mold, humans dream of stars, sunsets
- ·[New in Korean] 'The path to happiness is forgiveness,' says Korea's first million
- ·안철수 “이준석 신당 성공 가능성 낮아…3가지 갖추지 못해“
- ·홍준표 "뜬금없이 김포 편입론, 반짝 특수 노리는 떴다방"
- ·[Our Museums] Explore plaintive and joyful melodies of Korea at Arirang Museum
- ·LX Holdings CEO promoted to president
- ·Court overturns ruling on fabricated asylum interview: report
- ·[Korean History] In 2004, serial murderer with goal to kill 100 was stopped at 20
- ·김성태 "인요한, 방향 잘 설정해 뚜벅뚜벅 잘 하고 있다"
- ·[Korea Beyond Korea] Anthropologist stresses multidisciplinary approach for strong Korean studies
- ·Congresswoman redoubles calls for support to designate Nov. 22 as 'Kimchi Day'
- ·'Omega X will not give up': Boy band returns to share message of hope
- ·Court overturns ruling on fabricated asylum interview: report
- ·[KH Explains] Why do Woori, NongHyup hold on to North Korean operations?
- ·[Korea Beyond Korea] Yale sociologist and BTS fan researches K
- ·[From the scene] Jazz music livens up Seoul's streets
- ·BMW, Mercedes
- ·Samsung SDI, Volvo Trucks vow to enhance battery partnership
- ·인요한 만난 김종인 “처방은 잘했지만, 환자가 약을 먹어야”
- ·[Herald Interview] Through memories, Bora Jin pens ode to grandfather and Busan
- ·S. Korea asks UAE to correct nat'l flag image mix
- ·Child hurt after angry dad pushes the swing too hard