Everywhere north of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic Circle has at least one day per year without a sunset and at least one day per year without a sunrise. The closer you get to the poles the longer the periods of constant daylight and constant darkness. Directly at the geographic poles there is one sunrise per year and one sunset per year.
well you would be standing on the sun were the summer is.
This is an old backpacker trick. This only works for adults though as children's hands are too small. Find the horizon, and now place your right hand palm facing you so the bottom edge(ie your pinky) is parallel with the horizon. Now place your left hand on top of your right, and keep doing this until one hand covers the sun. The number of hands required to do this is generally equal to the number of hours of remaining daylight.
It depends on particular Russian and US regions. There are 11 time zones in Russia and 5 time zones in the US. So these differences are different :) For example, the time difference between Moscow and New York is 8 hours.
The sun (appears to) get to Pacific Daylight Time 3 hours after it gets to Eastern Daylight time. After following the moronic mindless tradition of daylight pretending time, Subtract 3 from the current time in EDT to find the current time in PDT. If it is 8 o'clock in EDT it is 5 o'clock in PDT. Or add 3 to PDT. If it is noon PDT, it is 3 o'clock EDT.
Alaska is in the AKDT (GMT-9) time zone while Norway is in CEST (GMT+1). Both zones observe daylight savings. There is a ten hour time difference so 4pm in Alaska is 2am (the following day) in Norway.
It is almost impossible to find out as there is no such reason to try it. But I think there would be a chemical reaction and the lava would most probably cool down or explode!! Not really sure...
The following is a hypothesis: "The number of eggs a chicken lays is affected by the hours of daylight." In this hypothesis, the independent variable is the hours of daylight.
Depends on where you are in Canada and what time of the year it is. You could get to places where there are 24 hours of daylight and six months later there is no daylight at all. So you can find it at any of the times in between at some point in Canada at different times of the year.
You can find tables of world daylight hours from various sources, including websites that provide weather information, astronomy resources, or time zone data. Websites like timeanddate.com or the World Clock section of time.is offer tables of daylight hours for different locations around the world.
Sunrise and sunset is further apart during the longer daylight hours of summer.
Depends on where you are in Canada and what time of the year it is. You could get to places where there are 24 hours of daylight and six months later there is no daylight at all. So you can find it at any of the times in between at some point in Canada at different times of the year.
yes
Complex question. Use this link to go find out, it varies on what month and day it is, the change in the tilt of the earth causes the seasons. http://www.jgiesen.de/daylight/
Travel and eat. They may find a place to sleep for a little bit before travelling and eating again.
You would find water, almost anywhere on this god forsaken planet since like 72% of it is covered in it.
They are almost always salary and not hourly but it's good, just hard to find positions.
Every day has 24 hours. Since 1 hour = 60 minutes, (24 hr)*(60 min/hr) = 1440 min. The exception to the 24 hours is that every once in awhile, they add a 'leap second' to the day, so that the atomic clocks stay in sync with the Earth's rotation. If you are referring to minutes of daylight on the Summer Solstice (day with the most daylight hours), then I'm sure there are tables out there to find this information, but it will vary by location. In areas near the Arctic Circle they have daylight nearly all day in the Summer time, for example.
you can find THEM almost any place that a creature in the wild would go to get away from man