Night does not have a specific start time. It refers more to a lack of sunlight rather than a time. Though in the high and low latitudes it may even be broad daylight even at 'night'.
All locations on Earth will experience 12 hours of daylight on the equinoxes. Area where it is spring or summer will experience more than 12 hours of daylight while places where it is fall or winter will experience fewer. The Equator always experiences 12 hours of daylight.
North pole, sometimes n the year they have just sunlight all the time
Every point along the equator gets a little more than 12 hours of daylight every day.
Not all of it -- only a tiny region near the South Pole experiences 6 months of continuous daylight followed by nearly 6 months of continuous night. The North Pole has a similar division between day and night, each lasting one half of the year. However, practically all of Antarctica experiences at least 24 hours of continuous day or night, and weeks or months of continuous day or night occur in various locations. *Because of the width of the solar disc, and refraction by the atmosphere, there are about 2 or 3 more days of daylight per year than there are of night.
6 hours
No, generally speaking, a region of the world has more dark hours than daylight hours in the winter. The ratio of dark to daylight has to do with that region's geographic latitude. The differences become extreme as you approach the polar regions.
Night does not have a specific start time. It refers more to a lack of sunlight rather than a time. Though in the high and low latitudes it may even be broad daylight even at 'night'.
they recieve more solar energy than the poles do
No country, but a small part of Antarctica will. Only the North and South Pole have a 6 month period of continuous daylight and nearly 6 months of night. Parts of some countries extend above the Arctic Circle and can have more than 24 hours of sunlight in summer (midnight sun), and more than 24 hours of night during the winter (polar night). Svalbard, Norway has a 5-month period from April to September when the Sun never sets, only circles the horizon.
All locations on Earth will experience 12 hours of daylight on the equinoxes. Area where it is spring or summer will experience more than 12 hours of daylight while places where it is fall or winter will experience fewer. The Equator always experiences 12 hours of daylight.
Use it after you give broad subject matter. For example, (haha) "Being alone at night can be dangerous. For example, robberies occur much more often at night than in daylight."
more hours of daylight
No, in female ferrets estrous is control by the amount of light or daylight they are exposed to. Female Ferret "Jills" are "seasonally polyestrous" which means they have multiple heat cycles, in spring and summer.The ferret is a photoreceptive breeder. Breeding season is triggered by photoperiod, the length of daylight hours, it's when there is more daylight than night or the ratio of daylight hours to night time hours to cause physical changes in their bodies.
The last Saturday/Sunday night in March; the last Saturday/Sunday night in October (which means that Daylight Saving Time lasts longer than "normal" time). These dates have been set once and for all, next year we'll do the same thing once more.
There are more hours of daylight in a day during summer than there are in winter.
Yes. Daylight temperatures on the moon are significantly warmer than those at night.