December 21 (the December solstice) is the day on which the northern hemisphere receives the least hours of daylight.
The actual North Pole experiences 6 months of night, from around September 21 to March 21, so December 21 is the middle of the night there.
The sun rises at the South Pole about September 21 and sets about March 21. During each day, week and month between those two dates, there are no sunsets.
24 hours
Zero.
During the winter, the month of December will peak to a low of 8 hours of daylight. During the summer, the month of June will peak to a high of 18 hours of daylight
Europe
Havana, Cuba receives about 13.2hours of sunlight on December 21.
during the sunlight hours
Florida being closer to the equator would mean that they have slightly longer daylight hours in the summer based on the angle of the earth toward the sun. Michigan gets more daylight during the summer since it is farther from the equator and closer to the Arctic Circle, north of which there is no sunset on the day of the summer solstice. On June 21, Detroit has about 15¼ hours of sunlight while Miami has only about 13 3/4 hours of sunlight. Consequently, on December 21, Detroit has about 9 hours of sunlight while Miami has about 10½ hours of sunlight.
Anything south of the Tropic of Capricorn - i.e., within about 23.5 degrees of the south pole.
During the winter, the month of December will peak to a low of 8 hours of daylight. During the summer, the month of June will peak to a high of 18 hours of daylight
June has the most hours of sunlight, December has the least, in the US.
Anywhere south of the Antarctic Circle. The only land area there is the continent of Antarctica.
At the North Pole during the December solstice, there is 24 hours of darkness. This is because the axial tilt of the Earth causes the North Pole to be tilted away from the sun during this time, preventing sunlight from reaching that region.
Europe
Because the tilt of the earth prevents sunlight reaching the far north during the winter months.
during winter it is 6 hours of sunlight
No, you'd have 24 hours of sunlight.
The only desert that would have 21 hours of sunlight would be Antarctica during the summer months.
Most of the sunlight is during summer but during winter it probably averages 3-4 hours of sunlight a day.
The minimum (around December 21) is 10 hours and 11 minutes.