No. Arizona does not use daylight savings time.
change your clock
All of the equator has daylight- every day.
Yes. Around the time of the summer or winter solstice, the variation in day lengths from day to day is small - by only a few seconds or so. After a solstice, heading towards the following Equinox, the rate of change gradually increases, up to around 4 minutes a day around the Equinox. If you plotted the lengths of day in daylight hours versus day of year, it would look like a sine wave with a peak at the summer solstice and a trough at the winter solstice.
1966
November 1st
Complex question. Use this link to go find out, it varies on what month and day it is, the change in the tilt of the earth causes the seasons. http://www.jgiesen.de/daylight/
I believe they moved it to the first Sunday in November.
Hawaii does not do Daylight Saving Time- it is so far South, that changing seasons makes little change to length of day/night.
No. Arizona does not use daylight savings time.
perpetual daylight is act of the earth in day time
daylight: Day, light,
The word is daylight.
Daylight has two syllables. The syllables are day-light.
change your clock
In terms of the amount of minutes of daylight, that changes every day, so it certainly does change in a week. Days still have 24 hours though, except when the hour goes forward and back.
All of the equator has daylight- every day.