At certain times of the year, yes.
Yes.
North of the arctic circle, or south of the antarctic circle
North of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic one, the periods of daylight and darkness both vary from zero to six months, during the course of a year.
On Earth, it's daylight and cold all day for part of the year near the North and South poles. Just inside the Arctic circle it's daylight all day for a week or two, but it isn't usually cold.
It is one 24 hour period of no sunrise at the Antarctic Circle, when the Arctic Circle experiences the same period of no sunset.
24hour a day
The sun does not set at all north of the Arctic Circle on the day of the June solstice.
It depends on where you are and what season it is. If you are at the equator then there is 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night. If you are above the arctic circle then during the winter there is 24 hours of darkness each day, this will occur on Dec. 21st. If you are further above the arctic circle the darkness can last for months. During the summer there will be 24 hours of daylight on June 21st, and again this can last for months if you are very far north. The same is true for the South pole as well.
Alberta is not far enough north to have a day with 24 hours of sunlight -- that only occurs north of the Arctic Circle, in the three northern territories of Canada.
I think it's about 2 minutes a day in Canada. Anyhow it dpens on where you are on the GLobe! How many minutes in Maine
If you are referring to the time between sunrise and sunset, everywhere north of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic Circle has at least one day per year on which the sun never rises. For places between the Arctic Circle and the Antarctic Circle it is the day of the winter solstice, which falls between December 20 and December 23 inclusive in the northern hemisphere and between June 19 and June 23 inclusive in the southern hemisphere. If you are referring to the time from "midnight" to "midnight", it is the 23-hour day on which daylight saving time or summer time begins.
24 hours
Anywhere in the polar regions; north of the Arctic Circle, or south of the Antarctic Circle. The duration of the continual daylight or night depends on how far across the circle you are. If you lived just north of the Arctic Circle, there might be a two-or-three day period around December 21 when the Sun would not-quite-rise, and a couple of days around June 21 when the Sun would not quite set. At the poles, the Sun comes up at the spring equinox and goes down at the fall equinox; one "day" that lasts a year.