In the polar regions the sun never sets or rises ever.
Further away from the equator, they'd get more pronounced. A bigger area would never get night during summer, and never day during winter.
During summer, the days are long and the nights are short. During winter, the days are short and the nights are long.
Almost never. The Gold Coast will get occasional coastal mists during Autumn and Spring, but almost never in Winter or Summer.
the letter u. sUmmer and aUtUmn but no u in winter
Antarctica is polar and faces toward and away from the sun during different seasons.
Days are currently getting shorter in all of the northern hemisphere because we are past the summer solstice continuing to the winter solstice. The tilt of the earth causes days to get longer in the summer and shorter in the winter. The further north or south you are the more extreme these changes are. (near the poles there is a period of a few months where the sun never rises in winter, and never sets in summer)
The trading city of Tromso (about 50000 inhabitants) in northern Norway where the sun is visible continuously from late May to late July, while regions nearest to the other pole experience continuous night during that same period.
Due to the inclination of the earth's axis of rotation, regions nearest to one pole experience continuous day for some months, for example, the trading city of Tromso (about 50000 inhabitants) in northern Norway where the sun is visible continuously from late May to late July, while regions nearest to the other pole experience continuous night during that same period.
The sun never moves although it might seem to hang low it's just the position of the earth.
antarctica, Africa
Antarctica has just two seasons: summer and winter. Antarctica has six months of daylight in its summer and six months of darkness in its winter. The seasons are caused by the tilt of Earth's axis in relation to the sun. The direction of the tilt never changes. But as the Earth orbits the sun, different parts of the planet are exposed to direct sunlight. During summer, Antarctica is on the side of Earth tilted toward the sun and is in constant sunlight. In the winter, Antarctica is on the side of Earth tilted away from the sun, causing the continent to be dark. During the Southern Hemisphere summer (Dec 21 to March 22), the Antarctic continent south of the Antarctic Circle experiences at least one 24 hour period of daylight. At South Pole, there is no sunset for six months. During the Southern Hemisphere winter (June 21 to Sept 22), the Antarctic continent south of the Antarctic Circle experiences at least experiences one 24 hour period of darkness. At the South Pole, there is no sunrise for six months.
As of the 2008 Summer Olympics, Sri Lanka has never participated in the Winter Olympics.