No it only happens south of 48½ degrees north latitude.
No.
Wikipedia sez: "Astronomical twilight is defined to begin in the morning, and to end in the evening when the center of the Sun is geometrically 18 degrees below the horizon." London, England is at 51 degrees north latitude. At midnight in the June Solstice, the Sun is at a declination of 23.5 degrees (approximately), so the over-the-pole angular distance is (90-51) + (90-23.5) degrees, or 105 degrees. The horizon is 90 degrees, so the Sun is 15 degrees below the northern horizon at midnight on June 21. So, no, it won't meet the definition for "darker than astronomical twilight".
Yes, it can snow anywhere in England when the weather is right.
please answer this question as i really need to know by tomorrow.. :) This guy is supremely dumb, he commented a question on a answer. He must be a dumb American. P.S-England Rules
Seattle is -8 hours behind England. At 9am in Seattle, it would be 5pm in Birmingham (or anywhere else in the UK as it has one timezone).
Astronomical twilight does not end on nights near the summer solstice in Southampton, England.
No because the latitude is 55 degrees N so the Sun never goes more than 11½ degrees below the northern horizon, so nautical twilight and astronomical twilight do not end.
No, astronomical twilight does not end near the summer solstice when observed from Greenwich, England. On the summer solstice, which is around June 21st, astronomical twilight usually ends in the early morning hours before sunrise.
No.
In England (I'm not sure about anywhere else) it came out on the 19th of December 08 xx
Wikipedia sez: "Astronomical twilight is defined to begin in the morning, and to end in the evening when the center of the Sun is geometrically 18 degrees below the horizon." London, England is at 51 degrees north latitude. At midnight in the June Solstice, the Sun is at a declination of 23.5 degrees (approximately), so the over-the-pole angular distance is (90-51) + (90-23.5) degrees, or 105 degrees. The horizon is 90 degrees, so the Sun is 15 degrees below the northern horizon at midnight on June 21. So, no, it won't meet the definition for "darker than astronomical twilight".
No. For any location in England, on June 21, the Sun is never more than 18 degrees below the horizon, which is the definition of "astronomical twilight". If by "Great Britain" you mean to included British colonies and possessions, then yes; places like Gibraltar and Bermuda are far enough south so that the do experience complete darkness at night.
None of them, because it's Twilight.
19th December
London, England
in England somewhere
I dont know the exact date of release in England. You can find the date on the official Twilight movie website. www.Twilightthemovie.com