The only place where clocks are advanced two hours for Daylight Saving Time is Troll Station, Antarctica.
They only have more daylight hours in the summer because of the tilting of the earth on its axis.
On a solstice, it is only at the equator that the hours of light and dark are equal. At other parts, they would be different with one of the Poles experiencing 24 hours of daylight and the other Pole experiencing no daylight. If it is the June solstice, then it is the North Pole with 24 hours of daylight and the South Pole with none, while it is the opposite in the December solstice. It is at the equinox that the amount of daylight and darkness hours are equal around the world.
The number of days of daylight depend not only on the date, but also on your geogrpahical lotation, specifically your latitude.
The only places which have 6 months daylight and 6 months night are the North and South poles.
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.
They get shorter, because of the Winter Solstice. The winter solstice is when the shortest amount of day light hours acccure, and that day is on December 21. There is only 8 to 9 hours for a winter solstice.
The only place where clocks are advanced two hours for Daylight Saving Time is Troll Station, Antarctica.
Oslo, Norway experiences only about 6 hours of daylight in December due to its high latitude. The winter solstice occurs near the end of December, resulting in the shortest day of the year with limited daylight hours.
The planet Earth has an axial tilt of 23 and a half degrees, relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the plane of the ecliptic). Thus, during the winter in England, the Earth is tilting away from the sun, and during the summer it is tilting toward the sun.
None. Every country has the same length day. The only time a day is ever 23 hours is when the first day of daylight-saving begins, and then it is brought forward 1 hour, technically making it the only 23-hour day of the year. Then when it returns to normal time at the end of daylight saving there is a 25-hour day to compensate.
Depends on your latitude. At the Pole itself, 90oS, you will have no sun at all between the winter-bounding equinoxes. At the Antarctic Circle, at the autumn equinox, you will have only a day or so without sun in the southern winter, and you'll have almost continuous daylight in the southern summer. BUT in neither case will it be completely dark during the winter, for the moon will still shine!
July-June has the longest day of the year,but it has only 30 days. So I would say July has the most hours of daylight.
They only have more daylight hours in the summer because of the tilting of the earth on its axis.
Only above the Arctic and Antarctic Circles experience 24 hours of daylight at any point. Being near the equator, the sun angle and hours of daylight don't change much throughout the year.
Solar Energy is only reliable for daylight hours.
Day and night are only equal on the winter and summer equinox.