Yes, anybody who lives far to the south.
That is because we go round the Sun. That means that every day the stars we see at midnight shift to the right by about 4 minutes of time. The stars that were due south last night at midnight will be due south at 23.56 tonight and by midnight they will be a little further west. Through the course of a year the stars that happen to be due south at midnight rotate right round the full circle.
Denmark is certainly far enough north to see the northern lights; they've been seen (on extremely rare occasions) as far south as Mexico City.
If Orion is visible in the south at 6 PM, then we know that it is around April, and that it will set around midnight. Interesting thing about star observations; the time, your location, and the elevation and azimuth of the star. If you know any two with sufficient accuracy, you can calculate the third VERY precisely.
Everywhere north of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic Circle has at least one day per year on which the sun does not set. The closer you get to the poles, the more days without a sunset there are. Six months later, those places have multiple consecutive days on which the sun never rises.
where and when can you see the midnight sun
Yes, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Greenland (a part of Denmark) and Iceland all have land inside the arctic circle.
The Norwegians will see the midnight sun during the month of June. The length of day light can be more than 20 hours.
It is too far south of the north pole to be able to see them.
See the link below for statistics of Sweden.
That there's a person there, you are dreaming or that something unexplained enjoys letting people see them at midnight.
The Land of the Midnight Sun may refer to any of the world's northern regions above the Arctic Circle including: Canada, including the Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut Denmark (Greenland) Finland Iceland Lapland Norway Russia Sweden United States (Alaska)
Anywhere above (or near) Arctic Circle is good choice for aurora spotting. For example Alaska, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Russia and Iceland. Farther south you go from Arctic circle, Northern lights get's more uncommon. During summer you can't see Aurora at all because of Midnight sun.
Yes, anybody who lives far to the south.
That is because we go round the Sun. That means that every day the stars we see at midnight shift to the right by about 4 minutes of time. The stars that were due south last night at midnight will be due south at 23.56 tonight and by midnight they will be a little further west. Through the course of a year the stars that happen to be due south at midnight rotate right round the full circle.
Denmark is certainly far enough north to see the northern lights; they've been seen (on extremely rare occasions) as far south as Mexico City.
If Orion is visible in the south at 6 PM, then we know that it is around April, and that it will set around midnight. Interesting thing about star observations; the time, your location, and the elevation and azimuth of the star. If you know any two with sufficient accuracy, you can calculate the third VERY precisely.