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.
Yes, South Wales is in the Northern Hemisphere.
Northern Hemisphere
India is in the Northern Hemisphere.
The Southern Hemisphere is south of Iowa. Iowa is located in the Northern Hemisphere.
South of the northern hemisphere is the southern hemisphere. There is no hemisphere "south of the western hemisphere" which extends to the South Pole. (East or west of the western is the eastern hemisphere.)
Antarctica, where there would be zero hours of daylight. Anyplace south of the equator will have less than 12 hours of sunlight, and the farther south, the less daylight you will have in late June. June 21 is the Summer Solstice in the northern hemisphere, and the winter solstice in the southern hemisphere.
Winter solstice will come for the northern hemisphere on December 21 in 2014. The region of earth that will have 24 hours of daylight is everything south of the Antarctic Circle.
UK is in the northern hemisphere while south Africa is in the southern hemisphere. during december the suns rays fall directly on the southern hemisphere while northern hemisphere gets slant rays hence UK is colder in december than Africa.
Daylight hours on the winter solstice are shorter than the rest of the year because of the Earths rotational tilt. That tilt faces the northern hemisphere away from the sun. This causes the apparent position of the sun throughout the day to be the furthest south during the year and daylight hours to shorten. At the same time of the year the southern hemisphere is experiencing the exact opposite, the longest daylight hours of the year.
South of the northern hemisphere is the southern hemisphere. There is no hemisphere "south of the western hemisphere" which extends to the South Pole. (East or west of the western is the eastern hemisphere.)
There is no answer to that, because it varies all around the world. So the amount of daylight on a given day in one part of the world, isn't the same in all other parts of the world. In the middle of the northern hemisphere's winter there is no daylight at the North Pole, but there is more and more as you head south ending in there being 24 hours of daylight at the South Pole, where it is the middle of summer. You can also say that there is always daylight somewhere in the world, and therefore there is permanent daylight on Earth, so there is 24 hours of daylight every day.
Yes, South Wales is in the Northern Hemisphere.
Winter in northern hemispere
Northern and also the southern hemisphere.
The day with the most daylight in the southern hemisphere is the summer solstice, which falls between December 20 and December 23 inclusive. The day with the least daylight in the southern hemisphere is the winter solstice, which falls between June 19 and June 23 inclusive.
The Arctic region, anywhere north of the Arctic Circle (approx. latitude 66° 34' N), has the greatest number of daylight hours when it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere. The Antarctic (including almost all of Antarctica), south of the Antarctic Circle (approx. latitude 66° 34' S), has the greatest number of daylight hours when it is summer in the Southern Hemisphere.
India is in the Northern Hemisphere.