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.
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.
There are approximately 24 hours of daylight at the North Pole on June 21. (:
24 hours of daylight and 0 hours of darkness
It varies from place to place. The further south you go, the shorter the daylight time is. Sydney gets just under 10 hours of daylight on the winter solstice.
December 22 is close to the northern hemisphere's winter solstice (December 21), when the Sun is furthest south. At that date the Sun does not rise above the horizon at all latitudes north of the Arctic Circle (approximately 66.5 degrees north). They therefore have zero hours of daylight.
about 16.3 hours
They only have more daylight hours in the summer because of the tilting of the earth on its axis.
In winter, you go south to get longer days. In summer, going north yields longer days.
There is a very minimal amount of daylight in the North Pole. By the equator, there is much more sunlight and a much more warmer climate.
24 hours
The country which has 24 hours of daylight is the North AND South poles.
6 months of daylight = 4380 hours
Approximately 12 hours.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
4383 hours.
December 22 is close to the northern hemisphere's winter solstice (December 21), when the Sun is furthest south. At that date the Sun does not rise above the horizon at all latitudes north of the Arctic Circle (approximately 66.5 degrees north). They therefore have zero hours of daylight.
There is approximately 7 to 8 hours of daylight in areas such as Stockholm Switzerland in the winter. Areas like Kiruna Switzerland have 24 hours of darkness through January.
This depends on where you are in Norway. Usually, in the south, you'll have daylight from 5 in the morning to 11 in the evening during the summer. In the north you'll have daylight 24 hours a day. In the winter, you'll have something like 1 hour of daylight in the north and 5-6 hours of daylight in the south.
There is no single answer to that. Different parts of the northern hemisphere will have different lengths of daylight on the 21st of June. The further north of the equator you go, the more hours of daylight there will be, with there being about 12 hours at the equator and 24 hours at the north pole. So you need to know exactly where in the northern hemisphere you are before the question can be answered.
about 16.3 hours
They only have more daylight hours in the summer because of the tilting of the earth on its axis.