The great majority of the state uses Alaska Standard Time (AKST), UTC - 9 hours, and Alaska Daylight Saving Time (AKDT), UTC - 8 hours. The Aleutian Islands that are west of 170° west longitude use Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST), UTC - 10 hours, and Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Saving Time (HADT), UTC - 9 hours. There is also a village of native Americans, Metlakatla, Alaska, in one of the southern parts of Alaska adjacent to British Columbia that stay on Metlakatla Time (MeST), UTC - 8 hours, all year.
Quote from the Related Link: "Alaska has the longest day of the year in the U.S. No sunset for 82 days in summer. Alaska also has the longest night with no sunrise for 67 days in winter."
Quote from a related question: "Alaska has the longest day of the year in the U.S. No sunset for 82 days in summer. Alaska also has the longest night with no sunrise for 67 days in winter"
In Alaska there is 6 months day & night
A long time.
5 million years
Contrary to myth, Alaska really does have seasons: in fact, summer can be very beautiful and warm; temperatures can reach into the low 80s, and there is sunlight for nearly the entire day and night. (That is why Alaska is sometimes called the land of the midnight sun.) But compared to some states in the "lower 48," summer doesn't last very long-- it is generally about four to five weeks. Soon, after a brief autumn, it is winter. Alaska generally has very cold, long, and snowy winters, with temperatures remaining below zero for weeks at a time. (Note that the farther north you go, the more severe the winter; southern Alaska, in cities like Anchorage, has winters that are similar to Minneapolis or Chicago.) Also, in winter, Alaska only gets about one hour of sunlight, and sometimes there isn't any at all.
Alaska
1 day
It depends on what season it is.
its just like one day O_O u know Alaska is apart of America too!
45 mins a day for 96 days
Same as the continental US and plus Alaska's Day, the day Alaska became a state
Alaska
That varies for each location. In Nome, Alaska, each day in January is 24 hours of darkness.
The long tail of Alaska that stretches hundreds of miles to the west are called the Aleutian Islands. They all belong to the state of Alaska.
Last Monday in March
It is up 24 hours a day and in winter it isn't up at all!
Alaska Day, celebrated on October the 18th. Celebrates the formal transfer of Alaska from Russia to the United States.