Yes, but the shortest day in the Northern Hemisphere is also the longest in the Southern Hemisphere, and vice versa.
Yes, if all days on Earth were the same length. But this doesn't happen because of the axial tilt.
Neptune has the longest year( Pluto would be but it isn't a planet) Mercury has the shortest year(1 year=88 earth days)
The planet that has the shortest period of revolution is Mercury, which is 88 days. The planet with the longest revolution is Neptune, which is 165 years. Earth's revolution is the third shortest.
The're the longest and shortest days of the year!
No, the length of a day remains the same during a solstice. The solstice marks the longest or shortest day of the year based on the tilt of the Earth's axis, but the actual length of a day (24 hours) does not change.
Yes.
The winter solstice and the summer solstice.
The're the longest and shortest days of the year!
The real "planet" with the longest year is Neptune It takes 165 Earth Years. Mercury has the shortest year. It is closest to the Sun and therefore the Suns gravity acts upon it with more strength
An equinox is not the shortest day. It has the same amount of daylight and darkness. The solstices have the longest and shortest days. The winter solstice is the shortest day of the year in terms of the amount of daylight.
Shortest: American Opossum or Virginian Opossum - 8 days Longest: Asiatic Elephant - 760 days *These are mammals, the longest remains the same but the shortest would be the house fly with a gestation period of 24 hours.
Yes, the first day of winter has the longest days though.