The 'light of day' in Antarctica can come from the sun, the moon, and the Southern Hemisphere of stars that surround planet earth.
June 21- summer solstice. i bekeive it is always day in antarctica
In Antarctica or the Arctic, one or the other, when it's the summer and it's light all day.
Like every continent, Antarctica gets light from the sun, the moon and the stars.
A day in Antarctica lasts 24 hours.
There are daily changes in the light and dark patterns in Antarctica. The earth still spins and the height of the sun, moon and stars relative to the horizon changes each day. A day without a sunrise, or a day without a sunset simply means that the changes in light and dark patterns are different from other locations north of 66 degrees S, the Antarctic Circle.
A day in Antarctica is 24 hours -- the same as the length of a day anywhere on earth.
Antarctica's shortest days are in winter, when there are only a few hours of light in a day. However, during the summer, the days become very much longer, and there are only a few hours of night.Another AnswerDepending on where you are in Antarctica, you can have a day with no sunset and a day with no sunrise, in summer and winter, respectively. Anywhere south of 60 degrees South Latitude, this is true.
The pink you see in Antarctica is a refraction of the available light. There is no natural 'pink snow' in Antarctica.
Antarctica -- some say -- is the most beautiful place on earth. Every moment of every day with its changing landscape, changing light, changing weather -- each is a tourist delight in its own way.
Depending on where you are on the continent, you can experience 24 hours of sunlight each day during the summer months.
A day -- during any month in Antarctica -- is 24 hours long.
1 day = 24 hours in Antarctica. Also everywhere else.