Well obviously it is 12 hours because it's on the other side of the earth but it's near the polar caps so it wont get as much light as america
Depends on your latitude.
The moon rotates on its axis once each month, so daylight / darkness is about 14 or 15 days each.
Yes. In fact, for up to six months at the South Pole, every summer, Antarctica experiences at least one 24-hour period of sunlight each day.
all men and women who are adult and do not have a problem like sick should fast during daylight of one month in each year.
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.
"In 1966, the federal government devised an official six-month daylight-saving schedule, although each state could choose whether to observe it. The OPEC oil embargo led President Nixon to sign the Emergency Daylight Saving Time Energy Conservation Act. Clocks were set forward to save energy in the winter of 1974, and daylight-saving time lasted for eight months in 1975. While it did save energy, Nixon's act also increased the number of morning traffic accidents involving schoolchildren. These "dark morning" incidents were offset by a reduction in child accidents later in the day, but the government returned to the six-month schedule for 1976. Under Reagan, an extra month was added again at the urging of business groups (like sports equipment and barbecue grill manufacturers) who expected increased profits with longer days."
Each month, usually on the 1st of the month.
If May 15 gains time each day, it means the days are longer than 24 hours. If May 15 loses time each day, it means the days are shorter than 24 hours. However, in reality, the length of a day remains constant at 24 hours due to Earth's consistent rotation.
Each country is free to choose whether or not to use daylight saving time and when to begin and end it. In the United States, Congress sets the dates for daylight saving time, but each state has the option not to observe D.S.T.
An each of his two journeys to Antarctica, Captain Scott sailed in ships.
Each country supports its own research station on Antarctica. All of Antarctica is "controlled" by the Antarctic Treaty.
The time between sunrise and sunset is a little longer each day from the December solstice to the June solstice in the northern hemisphere and from the June solstice to the December solstice in the southern hemisphere.