For a little less than half the year, we had Sun at Scott Base, but that is over 1000km from the Pole. Very roughly, 3 months of all Sun, 3 months of all night, and the other bits some day, some night.
BTW, even in midwinter, it does not necessarily get completely dark, for there is still the Moon.
And one weird effect, was that going out on a sledge trip, and passing through the Moon shadow of some rock pinnacles, it felt as if it got colder! Rubbish of course, but that's how deep in our psyche good old Sol is.
So more directly to your question, it depends upon your latitude. If you type in your http bar "Daylight Hours" you should be directed to a great site ptaf.ca/soleil that presents you with graphs for any nominated place. I chose Mt Erebus, Antarctica.
Any day, anywhere in the world is 24 hours.
Every day in Antarctica is 24 hours long. You may be asking about the number of hours of sunlight that shines during any one of these days. The answer is 24 in some locations.
A day in Antarctica usually lasts 24 hours.
The average day in Antarctica is 24 hours. Some days there is no sunrise and some days there is no sunset.
During some periods, there are 24 hours when the sun is above the horizon.
In Antarctica, a day lasts 24 hours.
24 hours
Antarctica receives zero hours of daylight in the winter.
24
Sunny, clear, cold, windy and people are active. Some of these hours of daylight last 24 hours a day.
In summer generally, there are 24 hours of daylight; in winter there are generally zero hours of daylight.
No. Weather does not affect the sun.
same as summer and winter!
On December 25, all of Antarctica experiences 24 hours of sunlight.
Most everywhere on the continent, this number is 24 sunny hours out of 24 hours in a day.
I don't know what Santa's rules are for Antarctica. It will be 24 hours of daylight in Antarctica now and maybe nobody will be asleep.
The only place where clocks are advanced two hours for Daylight Saving Time is Troll Station, Antarctica.
18 hours
Depends on the location. North of the Arctic Circle, December clocks in with "zero" hours of daylight, while on Antarctica, June is the darkest month.