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.
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.
Many would argue that all daylight and hot weather comes from the sun. In many ways the original source of all of this really does come from the sun.
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.
That would depend on where you live, and which part of autumn you mean. The definition of "autumn" is the period between the autumnal equinox and the winter solstice, so the number of hours of daylight would be "less than 12, and decreasing". On September 22, the number of hours of hours of daylight would be only a minute or so less than 12 hours, while on December 19 the length of the day will be somewhere between 11.9 hours and zero, depending on your latitude.
Every point along the equator gets a little more than 12 hours of daylight every day.
64 minutes
3 minutes a day
6 minutes
It differs across the state, however, about 350 hours of sunlight are experienced in August.
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The minimum is nine hours and five minutes.
Gain... compared to what? Please clarify what you are comparing with what.
14 hours and 32 minutes
Same as the rest of the planet - about four minutes per day.
The amount of daylight gained between December 21 and December 22 is measured in seconds. By the first week in January, it may be as much as a minute. From February 1 to February 2, 2 minutes, and by March 21, 4 minutes per day. Then it begins to decrease until June 21, when the difference goes back to zero.
There are about 8.5 hours of daylight at the start of November and about 9 hours at the end of February, but on the winter solstice (around December 21-22), there is about 7 hours and 52 minutes of daylight.