That will depend on the time of year and weather conditions on any given day.
on average 1750 a year
0.0000001
The sun rises at 06.30 hours and sets at 09.30 on a long summer day. That is 16 hours of sun!!
yes
I'm not sure, but I think it's because the sun stays out longer.
The sun stays closer to the horizon, which makes the shadows longer.
if you line in England, draw the sun and lots of rain.
Yes. Late at night in mid-summer, New England is closer to the Sun than Florida is.
The Sun doesn't have seasons the way that Earth does.
Yes. But it's not only in Alaska. The sun will remain over the horizon for all of the Earth that's north of the Arctic Circle for a few summer weeks. It's the flip side of not having any sun at all for a period of winter. Likewise on the Southern hemisphere, Everything South of the Antarctic circle will have continuous sun for a few weeks during their summer.
When it stays in the scorching heat of the sun for too long.
Don't count me on this, but in the summer the sun stays up VERY late, only about 4 hours of darkness up where i was. so I'm assuming it would be the opposite in the winter, so about 4 hours perhaps.
the Earth will continue to revolve around the Sun as long as the Sun stays in the Solar System
It's determined by the season, so the summer has stronger sun's rays than the winter, everywhere in Britain.