The sun can be visible for 24 hours straight ! -___-
Anywhere either North of the Arctic circle during summer, or South of the Antarctic circle during winter.
It depends on where you are. During the summer in the Northern hemisphere, if you are North of the Arctic circle, the answer is 0.
Nothing. It stays right where it is, and it remains invisible and imaginary.
That's the summer solstice, when areas north of the Arctic Circle will have 24 hours of daylight.
They are above the Arctic Circle.
70
Depends on where you're at. A summer closer to the equator will be quite different from a summer close to the arctic circle.
No, you've got that wrong. It's the area Northof the arctic/polar circle that can have 24 hours of daylight during summer.By definition, South of the Arctic/Polar circle is where you Don't get 24h daylight in summer.
The sun is lower in the sky
Land of the Midnight Sun is anywhere located above the Arctic Circle or below the Antarctic Circle. Where during the summer months, the sun shines twenty-four hours a day.
I don't have a simulator.
June 21st is summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, on that day everywhere north of the Arctic Circle experiences 'midnight sun' which happens to places near the top of the world. during this time the sun never sets below the horizon because of the Earths tilt toward the sun. <<>> Reykjavik is almost as far north as the Arctic Circle and although the sun sets for a couple of hours it remains light all night around the summer solstice.