There is no such place on Earth.
The closest thing to it, I suppose, is the Earth's north and south poles, where
the sun stays up in the sky for six months at a time. But then, it sets and stays
down for the next six months.
For every point on Earth over the course of a year, the sun is up for 50% of
the time, and down for the other 50% of the time. It's just the length of the
up- and down- chunks that changes, depending on where you are.
All planets that rotate in our solar system will see apparent sun rise and sun set There are no planets that are stationary not to view the apparent sun rise and sun set.
Yes, the sun and moon rise and set every day due to the rotation of the Earth on its axis. This daily cycle results in the apparent movement of the sun and moon across the sky, causing them to rise in the east and set in the west.
The sun rise's in the East ans set's in the west.
The reason it is said that the sun appears to rise in the east and set in the west is that it doesn't actually rise or set. From our vantage point, it appears that the sun is moving across the sky when in reality, it is the rotation of our own planet that causes the transition from night to day and so on.
This is incorrect. The earth is what moves, causing the appearance of the sun moving.
In summer the sun never sets and in winter the sun never rise. the days are very long as the sun will never set completely nor rise completely. Hope this is a satisfactory answer.
In the polar regions the sun never sets or rises ever.
the sun never set on the british empire because britain had many colonies around the world.
Rise in the East and set in the West.
All planets that rotate in our solar system will see apparent sun rise and sun set There are no planets that are stationary not to view the apparent sun rise and sun set.
At some time or the other, yes.
The sun never sets. The earth rotates, creating the illusion of the sun setting.
no and no
Austria....
NEVER!!
Within a few hundred miles of the South Pole, the Sun will not set, because it didn't rise! It will be dark from now until mid-September. Within a few hundred miles of the North Pole, the Sun will not rise - because it didn't SET, and they (the polar bears) will have "midnight sun" until mid-September.
Yes, the sun and moon rise and set every day due to the rotation of the Earth on its axis. This daily cycle results in the apparent movement of the sun and moon across the sky, causing them to rise in the east and set in the west.