Yes.
Summer begins in the Southern Hemisphere on December 21: Antarctica is in the Southern Hemisphere.
Yes, fall begins on March 21 each year.
no, not in the summer
Yes. Summer begins in the Southern Hemisphere on December 21 and fall begins on March 21.
Northern
When we living in the north have winter. The Antarctic summer goes together with Australia's or South America's summer.Late September through late March.
Antarctica is polar and faces toward and away from the sun during different seasons.
Nothing. It stays right where it is, and it remains invisible and imaginary.
Antarctic summer is the busiest season on the continent.
Yes, it is warmer in the summer in the desert than in the winter. Some deserts, however, might be described as less cold in the summer. The Antarctic Desert is a good example.
Days are cold, windy and sunny 24/7, because there are no sunsets in summer over most of the Antarctic continent.
In Antarctic summer, because the sun warms the geography.Below the Antarctic Circle -- latitude 66° 33′ 39″ (or 66.56083°) south of the equator -- all geography experiences at least one 24-hour period of no sunset during summer. At the South Pole, there is no sunset for about six months.
Pearlwort bloom when there is sunlight, and generally in the Antarctic Peninsula there is sunlight all year. There are periods when the sunset and the sunrise are close together -- summer, and this is when the Pearlwort is most successful in blooming.
During the warmest part of summer, parts of the Antarctic Peninsula may experience brief periods of temperatures just below freezing. That's relatively warm, but not to be considered 'hot'.