It is up 24 hours a day and in winter it isn't up at all!
Don't count me on this, but in the summer the sun stays up VERY late, only about 4 hours of darkness up where i was. so I'm assuming it would be the opposite in the winter, so about 4 hours perhaps.
it is 'bigger' in summer. although the arc remains roughly the same, you are just seeing the tip of the arc in winter, and more of the same arc in summer. in very northern or southern places, winter can mean not seeing any arc of the sun whatsoever (totally dark for days or months) or seeing part of the arc constantly (meaning the sun is always up in summer or always down in winter, such as antarctica and parts of far north Canada and Greenland)
Canada ended up with a total of 14 gold medals at the 2010 Winter Olympics.
canada
How long does it take up drive from Georgia to quebec canada?
winter
Most people do not get exposed to the sun in the winter because we cover up.
winter. i think?
During the Antarctic summer, the sun can stay up for 24 hours a day for several months due to the phenomenon known as the midnight sun. Conversely, during the Antarctic winter, the sun may not rise above the horizon for several months, resulting in polar night.
lots of things fall in winter like the temperature, rain, snow, sleet and the amount of time the sun is up.
Not very much because of the long nights during the Antarctic winter. When the sun returns it starts to heal the ozone layer up. Within a month of the sun's return, we see things are back to normal.