Zero hours of sunlight. The Winter Solstice on the 21st of June is the day that the sun is furthest away from the South Pole. Sunrise at the South Pole is on about the 21st of September every year. Sunset is on about the 22nd of March the following year. The reverse is the case at the North Pole. So a polar day is about 6 months and a polar night is also about 6 months.
As viewed from the south pole, the sun is down for 6 months ... from
March 21 to september 21. June 21 is the middle of this period.
So ON the date of June 21, which lasts for 24 hours, the sun is down during
all of them, and those hours are the middle 24 out of a total period of about
4,383 hours, during which the sun never rises there.
At the north pole, the longest day of the year is six months long. The sun is up
continuously, in the sky, above the horizon, and does not set for 6 months. And
June 21 is the day right in the middle of that period.
The sun is the planet so it does rise at 6:00 am in the morning everywhere
There is no daylight in June at the South Pole. The sun doesn't rise until about September 21.
on the June solstice, The North pole gets sunlight for the entire 24 hours
June 21 is Mid-Winter's Day in Antarctica, most of which receives zero sunlight on that day.
The south pole has six months of darkness. June 21 is right in the middle of it.
The sun sets at the South Pole about March 21 and does not rise again until about September 21. This means that on 21 June, there is no sunrise -- or 24 hours of darkness on that date.
9 hours ahead
Not sure need help 4 project. So please tell
NONE! England is actually 24 hours AHEAD of South Africa
It depends on your location on Earth. At the south pole, there are 0 hours of daylight on June 21... until ~13,000 years from now when the Earth's axis of rotation will precess to give it summer in June.
The sun sets at the South Pole about March 21 and does not rise again until about September 21. This means that on 21 June, there is no sunrise -- or 24 hours of darkness on that date.
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.
12 hours of daylight. 12 hours of darkness.
Mid-winter's Day in most of Antarctica, June 21, is a day without a sunrise. This is also true at the South Pole.
Depends on what time of year it is
12 hours of sunlight and 12 hours of darkness
4
It depends on where you are and what season it is. If you are at the equator then there is 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night. If you are above the arctic circle then during the winter there is 24 hours of darkness each day, this will occur on Dec. 21st. If you are further above the arctic circle the darkness can last for months. During the summer there will be 24 hours of daylight on June 21st, and again this can last for months if you are very far north. The same is true for the South pole as well.
24 hours
If you mean day by day 24.
That depends on where exactly you are, and on the season.
6 hours from Beaufort South Carolina.