Year round, Hawaii has between 10 hours 50 minutes and 13 hours 26 minutes of daylight, the least on December 21-22 (winter solstice) and the most on June 20-21 (summer solstice).
This is because at Hawaii's latitude of 20 degrees N, it is affected slightly by the tilt of either pole toward the Sun. The islands are technically in summer during the month of June, July, and August but the angle of the Sun and length of the day are not always the primary factor in seasonal temperature variations. The average day length is about 12 hours and 8 minutes, which occurs on the two equinoxes.
* Some calendars show extreme differences (up to 30 minutes) in daylight length within the same month, and these are not consistently reliable.
At the equator, each day has approximately 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness regardless of the specific longitude. The length of daylight hours stays relatively consistent due to the Earth's axial tilt and rotation.
The amount of daylight on August 1st will depend on where you are in the world. In Indiana on August 1st, there will be 14 hours and 10 minutes of daylight, which will translate to 850 minutes of daylight.
There is no answer to that, because it varies all around the world. So the amount of daylight on a given day in one part of the world, isn't the same in all other parts of the world. In the middle of the northern hemisphere's winter there is no daylight at the North Pole, but there is more and more as you head south ending in there being 24 hours of daylight at the South Pole, where it is the middle of summer. You can also say that there is always daylight somewhere in the world, and therefore there is permanent daylight on Earth, so there is 24 hours of daylight every day.
Increases from 12 hours at the equator to 24 hours at the Artic Circle.
All locations on Earth will experience 12 hours of daylight on the equinoxes. Area where it is spring or summer will experience more than 12 hours of daylight while places where it is fall or winter will experience fewer. The Equator always experiences 12 hours of daylight.
the average hours of daylight in the the winter are 11 for Hawaii
Utah is four hours ahead of Hawaii from mid-March until early November.
Hawaii
Hawaii has it's own time zone "Hawaii Standard Time". Hawaii does not observe daylight saving time. HST is UTC -10, and is 2 hours earlier than Pacific Standard time and 3 hours earlier than Pacific Daylight Time
About 12 hours. In Late December, it is about 11, in late June, just over 13. Hawaii is so far South that seasons make little change in day length.
Yes, since California observes Daylight Saving Time and Hawaii does not, when California "springs forward" they are an extra hour ahead of Hawaii. The difference is three hours from March to November and two hours from November to March.7 AM HAST (in Hawaii) =9 AM PST (in Calif. Nov-Mar) =10 AM PDT (in Calif. Mar-Nov)
Thailand (UTC + 7 hours) is 11 hours ahead of Eastern Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 4 hours), 12 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time and Central Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 5 hours), 13 hours ahead of Central Standard Time and Mountain Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 6 hours), 14 hours ahead of Mountain Standard Time and Pacific Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 7 hours), 15 hours ahead of Pacific Standard Time and Alaska Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 8 hours), 16 hours ahead of Alaska Standard Time and Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Saving Time (UTC - 9 hours), and 17 hours ahead of Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (UTC - 10 hours).
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
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.
4
Hawaii does not utilize Daylight Savings Time, so the time difference depends on the time of year. During the summer months (after you "Spring" forward), Hawaii is 3 hours behind California. During the winter months (after you "Fall" back), Hawaii is 2 hours behind California. ~Hawaii's official time zone is UTC/GMT -10 hours.