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On the Antarctic continent, depending on where you are, you will have at least one 24-hour period of no daylight in winter and at least one 24-hour period of no sunset in summer.
Only above the Arctic and Antarctic Circles experience 24 hours of daylight at any point. Being near the equator, the sun angle and hours of daylight don't change much throughout the year.
I think there is around 18 hours of daylight!
Question: How many hours of daylight does Kamchatka have? Answer: About Seven through Eight hours... - Kesuvaglar
How many hours of daylight in New York in December 2010
4
This phenomenon occurs because the Earth tilts away from the sun, and this is the day where the extent of that phenomenon is shortest: one 24-hour period.
Twelve hours of daylight on the Antarctic continent would be a phenomenon experienced in a narrow, circular band of geography between the Antarctic Circle and the South Pole. This phenomenon would occur midway between December 21 and June 21, and again between June 21 and December 21.
North of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic one, the periods of daylight and darkness both vary from zero to six months, during the course of a year.
There are 1407.5 hours of daylight on Mercury which is 56.646 earth days!!
It is 4 hours.
Antarctica receives zero hours of daylight in the winter.