For any specific place on Earth, it depends on the season and latitude. Locations on the equator receive 12 hours of daylight per day, consistently. The poles on the other hand have weeks with no sunlight at all (in winter) and weeks with no night (in summer).
The planet Uranus is 2.7 light hours from the sun.
It only takes sunlight about 8.3 minutes (0.138 hours) to travel the 150 million kilometers from the Sun to Earth, traveling at almost 300,000 kilometers per second.
12 hours
About eight minutes for the sun's light to reach the earth, if that's what you're asking...
Because it only takes 8 minutes for sunlight to reach Earth, but it takes 4 hours to reach Neptune.
In terms of the speed of light, the distance between the Earth and Sun is81/3 light minutes,or about 0.00001585 light-year.
365.256363004 days = 8,766.15271 hours
Earth is 8.3 light-minues from the sun. This is straight from my earth Science teachers lecturer notes.
There is light on earth because of the sun. Is that the answer you were looking for?
About 8 light-minutes.
Daytime is when you can see the sun from where you are, and its light and heat can reach you. Nighttime is when the sun is on the other side of the Earth from you, and its light and heat don’t get to you
it takes Neptune164 earth years to orbit the sun and a 16 Earth hours