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23
6 hours
Though you would expect twelve hours of day and twelve hours of night at the Equator, that is not the case. Because of atmospheric refraction and the size of the Sun, it actually exceeds 12 hours by about 7 minutes each day.
there is about 23 hours flight between the two cities
New Zealand Daylight Saving Time (UTC+13) is 23 hours ahead of Cook Islands Time (UTC-10).
23
March 20 and September 23 are the two equinox days when there are 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness at any place on the Earth.
Zero. At the north pole, the sun sets around September 23, and it doesn't rise again until March 21.
Equinox. It happens every March 21-22 and September 22-23. ~Earth Science Ninth Edition 2000
6 hours
New Zealand Standard Time (NZST) is 22 hours ahead of Cook Island Time (CKT). New Zealand Daylight Saving Time (NZDT), which is observed from the last Sunday of September until the first Sunday of April, is 23 hours ahead of CKT.
23 years = 201,613.7 hours.
23 hours is not a whole day
23 hours is 82,800 seconds.
Keene New Hampshire, at 42 degrees 56 minutes one second North and 72 degrees 16 minutes 41 seconds W (42.93361 degrees N 72.27806 degrees W) never reaches 16 hours of daylight, but it reaches a respectable 15 hours and 23 minutes of daylight at the time of the summer solstice. See link for daylight calculator.
Though you would expect twelve hours of day and twelve hours of night at the Equator, that is not the case. Because of atmospheric refraction and the size of the Sun, it actually exceeds 12 hours by about 7 minutes each day.
None. Every country has the same length day. The only time a day is ever 23 hours is when the first day of daylight-saving begins, and then it is brought forward 1 hour, technically making it the only 23-hour day of the year. Then when it returns to normal time at the end of daylight saving there is a 25-hour day to compensate.