Europe
The summer solstice has the longest daylight hours. It occurs on July 21 or 22.
It doesn't! Its light for 24 hours. In Antarctica Christmas is in summer!
the South Pole
Every place gets most light during its summer season, in the northern hemisphere it starts in June.
Europe
No. There are places on the Antarctic continent when there are 24 hours of sunlight -- but during the summer.
Depending on where you are on the continent, you can experience 24 hours of sunlight each day during the summer months.
Depending on where you are on the continent, you will experience no sunsets during the late spring and summer seasons, or only a few toward fall, which begins March 21.
There is no definitive answer to this question, but during the winter it is light for 1-2 hours per day and during the summer it is almost always light.
in the summer longer days in winter the days grow shorter
During the summer months, one hemisphere is tilted towards the sun, causing the sun to be higher in the sky and the days to be longer. This is due to the Earth's axial tilt and its orbit around the sun. The tilt results in more direct sunlight and longer daylight hours during the summer in that hemisphere.
During late fall, summer and early spring, there are no sunsets on most of Antarctica.
During the summer there's twenty-four hours of day light which awesome. During the winter it's dark enough to see the aurora borealis which is gorgeous.
it varies but we get about 8 hours daylight in winter extending to about 16 hours in summer
The North pole
The summer solstice has the longest daylight hours. It occurs on July 21 or 22.