Want this question answered?
December has 31 days. Each day has 24 hours. Each hour has 60 minutes. Thus, the number of minutes in december is 31*24*60, or 44,640
-- They only get longer between December 21 and June 21. For the other half of the year, they get shorter. -- Just after December 21 and just before June 21, they get longer very slowly ... only a small difference between one day and the next. -- Around March 21, they get longer fast ... many minutes' difference between one day and the next. EDIT: The length of the day differs by 4 minutes each day throughout the year.
Since each hour has 60 minutes and each day has 24 hours and each year has 365.25 days, 4 years is equivalent to 2,103,840 minutes.
1 day is 24 hours, and each hour is 60 minutes. Each day, therefore, is 1440 minutes. 1440 * 37 = 4320 minutes ■
That would depend on how many days were in each month.
December has 31 days. Each day has 24 hours. Each hour has 60 minutes. Thus, the number of minutes in december is 31*24*60, or 44,640
No. Now that the Winter Solstice has passed (the Solstice was on December 21) the days will be getting a little longer each day from now until the Summer Solstice on June 21.
Days get `longer` between June 21st and December 21st for the southern Hemisphere, while they get shorter for those in the northern hemisphere. Between December 21st and June 21st, the days get longer for those in the northern hemisphere and shorter for those in the southern hemisphere.
-- They only get longer between December 21 and June 21. For the other half of the year, they get shorter. -- Just after December 21 and just before June 21, they get longer very slowly ... only a small difference between one day and the next. -- Around March 21, they get longer fast ... many minutes' difference between one day and the next. EDIT: The length of the day differs by 4 minutes each day throughout the year.
The number of seconds or minutes gained per day is different for every date, and for every latitude. It runs in a sinusoidal curve; starting from a trough on December 21, the day length begins to CREEP up slowly, day by day, a few seconds, then many seconds, then an additional minute each day. By March 21, the equinox, the Alberta BC days are getting rapidly longer; 4 minutes each day! Then the pace of increase slows, until mid June when the days are getting only seconds longer each day until June 21, when the cycle peaks and begins to fall.
There are 159 days between the 29th of June and the 5th of December each year.
There are 183 days between the 21st of June and the 21st of December each year.
Each day has (exactly) 24 hours, each with (exactly ) 60 minutes. Therefore, each day has 24 X 60 equals (exactly) 1440 minutes. 21,573,834/1440 = 14,981.829 days, to the justified number of significant digits.
The answer is given after the list of "these" days.
The game is played in 2 halves of 45 minutes which can be longer depending on stoppage time which is 5 minutes maximum
Days never get shorter, they are always the same length. We do, however, lose a few minutes of daylight each day from June 21 to December 21. It's hard to say exactly how many minutes because it depends on one's latitude. Somewhere around 3-4 minutes for those of us in the continental US, I'd guess.
Since each hour has 60 minutes and each day has 24 hours and each year has 365.25 days, 4 years is equivalent to 2,103,840 minutes.