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.
In south of Norway, winter daylight is approximately 9 to 16, 7-8 hours.
In north of Norway, north of the Polar Circle, there are periods in the winter with no daylight at all. At Nordkapp, the northernmost point, it is dark from 20th November to 22d January.
From ZERO and up depending on where in Norway you are.
Sunrise about 7am and sunset about 5pm, so about 10 hours in total.
Depends on location in Norway (Varies from zero to 24 actually).
And of course the time of year - winter=almost none, summer=from o6-o8 am to ca 10 pm
24-(no. of hours of darkness)
none norway doesn't exist
It depends on the time of year.
Zero
In the summer; yes, in the north.
Norway
I presume you mean 'How many hours of daylight.' That would depend on which particular place you mean. In southern Britain you might get 6 hours, in North Cape, Norway, you would not really get any daylight at all.
Approx 12 hours, from 06.30ish to 18.30ish
The country which has 24 hours of daylight is the North AND South poles.
6 months of daylight = 4380 hours
In November, December, and January how many hours of day light does Utah have?
No, they are constantly changing.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
Down to zero above the arctic circle. The more closer to summer, the more hours of daylight. Moderator: This is a true answer, so don't delete AGAIN.
In Oslo, the sunset will be 5 hours and 54 minutes after the sunrise on December 25, 2011.
4383 hours.