Want this question answered?
It depends on your location on Earth. At the south pole, there are 0 hours of daylight on June 21... until ~13,000 years from now when the Earth's axis of rotation will precess to give it summer in June.
tropics
They only have more daylight hours in the summer because of the tilting of the earth on its axis.
December
about 42.16 earth years at the poles Ignore the retard below me, it's 21 Earth hours. ---- i dont no its something something
It depends on your location, in some places they are
There are 1407.5 hours of daylight on Mercury which is 56.646 earth days!!
March 20 and September 23 are the two equinox days when there are 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness at any place on the Earth.
9hrs
Rotation of the Earth.
To save the hours of daylight
if the axis is over 90 degrees to the norh as it is in the summer
Because the earth axis changes its position toward the sun!
Yes.
The following is a hypothesis: "The number of eggs a chicken lays is affected by the hours of daylight." In this hypothesis, the independent variable is the hours of daylight.
sominers
The average daylight hours vary depending on the season and location. In general, locations closer to the equator experience more consistent daylight throughout the year, with around 12 hours of daylight per day. In contrast, regions closer to the poles can have extreme variations in daylight hours, with periods of continuous daylight in the summer and continuous darkness in the winter.