the earth has a tilted axis and during the winter solstice north America is tilted away from the sun so the northern hemisphere gets less sunlight
It depends on where in Alaska you are. The northern part has the most sunlight, 24 hours. The eastern, southern, and western all have about 18 to 22 hours of sunlight in the summer.
Alot of the time, weather could be cloudy in summer.
it just depends on where you live and the season. in the intior of Alaska in the winter, around Xmas, there is only a couple of hours. in the summer it is almost always sunny
usually not much, but it depends on the year.
Yes, Alaska is really warm in the summer.
depends on what part you are in
Apple prime
Where the sun shines it is referred to as daytime. However, this is not true in some areas of the world which have light for 24 hours over many months, for example, in Alaska.
Most of Alaska is 17 hours behind Japan from the 2nd Sun. of Mar. until the 1st Sun. of Nov. and 18 hours behind Japan the rest of the year.
12 hours
The planet Uranus is 2.7 light hours from the sun.
Spain has 14 hours of sun light
Its not always dark in Alaska. Below I have attached the month and how many hours of light we get during that month. What affects this though, is Alaska's location on the globe. It is tilted tword the sun part of the year and away from the sun the other part. Jan - 7.0 hours Feb - 9.1 hours Mar - 11.8 hours Apr - 14.7 hours May - 17.5 hours June - 19.5 hours July - 18.5 hours Aug - 15.8 hours Sep - 13.0 hours Oct - 10.1 hours Nov - 7.2 hours Dec - 5.5 hours This does not change over night when the month changes though. It changes a few minutes every night. -------------------------------------------------------- It should be noted that the amount of daylight/nighttime hours does vary depending on each location's proximity and relativity to the Arctic Circle. Some parts of Alaska, in fact, have a full 24 hours of daylight for up-to 85 consecutive days each year. For more information regarding regional light/darkness in Alaska visit this article provided by the Alaska.com website.
Melbourne is Australia's least sunny city. Melbourne averages 2,200 hours of sun light annually or about six hours of sun light per day.
On average Uranus is about 19.2 AU from the Sun, this equates to about 160 light minutes or 2.6 hours
Alaska of coarse
The answer is given after the list of "these" days.
In Alaska there are two sun rises, because of how it sits on the Earth.
On December 25, all of Antarctica experiences 24 hours of sunlight.