The same calendar date exists for practically all of the world when it just before or just after midnight at the International Date Line (UTC +12). Except during Daylight Savings Time, this is at 7 AM in New York and other locations in the US Eastern Time Zone (UTC -5)
no
I'm not sure what you are asking, but if the question is, "Is there a time when the entire earth is on the same date," the answer is no: At the stroke of midnight, Greenwich Mean Time, the date turns over to the next day on the calendar in that part of the world (the Greenwich time zone, or GMT 0).
No, the sun can only caste sunlight (daylight) over the surface of the globe (earth) that is facing towards it at any one time.
New York is in the same time zone with Washington DC, and it's three hours ahead of Washington State.
The Earth is globe shaped, and the Sun can't illuminate the World at the same time. Therefore, the time is different as the World rotates. If the time was the same all over the World, when it was noon in daylight, it would be noon in darkness on the other side of the World. Standard time is maintained by making allowance for this differential using the Prime Meridian (zero longitude).
no
no
No, it is not day all over the world at the same time due to the Earth's rotation on its axis, which creates day and night. Different parts of the world experience daylight and darkness at different times. This is why we have different time zones to account for the variations in local times around the world.
Yes, New York and Miami is in the same time zone.
No, since our planet is spherical (ball-shaped) and we have only one sun, only half of the planet can be illuminated by the sun at any one time.
1953 over the Brooklyn Dodgers.
no, around the world most areas have diffrent time zones.
no, around the world most areas have diffrent time zones.
You should call at 6 PM Massachusetts time. New York is in the same time zone as Massachusetts (Eastern Time).
your question is confusing....No? The sun is rising somewhere every minute of every day, and the sun is setting somewhere every minute of every day. At any given time, sunlight is reaching half of the world.
NO because mostly every county has a diffrent time of day an night
I'm not sure what you are asking, but if the question is, "Is there a time when the entire earth is on the same date," the answer is no: At the stroke of midnight, Greenwich Mean Time, the date turns over to the next day on the calendar in that part of the world (the Greenwich time zone, or GMT 0).