Daylight hours depend on the specific latitude and time of the year. The amount of daylight in the desert is the same as received by non-desert areas in the same region. Being a desert does not affect the amount of daylight.
The amount of sunlight in a desert depends upon its latitude as well as the season of the year. Over a period of a year a desert will average 12 hours of light and 12 hours of dark.
A lot
Answer:
The insolation rate for a desert located near the equator is likely to be of the order of 5.89 kWh/m2/day or higher.
there is quite a lot of light in the Sahara desert and at night it is quite a bit of light.
Mount Desert Light was created in 1847.
yes, pretty much - except at night :)
I do not have the slightest idea, I thought someone else might know.
The answer depends on the specific desert and season of the year. A desert may receive only a light sprinkle or it may suddenly receive a deluge of several inches under certain conditions.
just like light in the beach!
Light weight and light colors.
30 percent is desert
Antarctica would be the only desert that is dark in the winter.
There is a Mojave Desert and a Namib Desert but no Mohib Desert.
Because the bombs effected the atmosphere causing is to not block as much UV light and be much brighter, especially in the desert.
Much desert is the area of France indeed.