24 hours per day
12 hours a day.
12 hours
Every point along the equator gets a little more than 12 hours of daylight every day.
The tropical day is near to 12 hours as is the night. The nearer the equator, the closer it is to 12 hours per day and 12 hours per night.
Anywhere from 0 to 24 hours, depending on your latitude (how far north or south of the equator you live).
Your distance from the equator determines how many hours of sunlight you have on the solstices.
The equator gets 12 hours of sunlight every day of the year (this only refers to the actual equator, not the Tropics in general, though sunlight doesn't vary much at the low latitudes either).
Since the sun is illuminating 50% of the equator at all times, the time from sunrise to sunset all along the equator is 12 hours every day (actually, it's slightly more than 12 hours due to the refraction of sunlight as it passes at a shallow angle through the atmosphere making the sun visible while it is actually slightly below the horizon).
Depends on the time of year and place. When you are at the equator, the days are exactly 12 hours and the nights are exactly 12 hours.
The equator.
depends on where u live, equator has 12 hours of light, but the true is that generally the same amount of time.
The rotational period of Jupiter varies from pole to equator. At the equator, the day lasts 9 hours, 50 minutes, 30 seconds. At the poles, the day is 9 hours, 55 minutes, 40.6 seconds.