They aren't. A day is 24 hours long and a year is 365 days long, which is 8760 hours in a year.
The equator.
the same day everyone else does. The year is the same length everywhere on earth.
Well, their day length is 5,832 hours and their year is 225 days
At the equator, the length of day remains relatively constant throughout the year, with approximately 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness. This is due to the tilt of the Earth's axis in relation to the sun, resulting in consistent day length.
Because the Moon Turns Slower Then The Earth.
A day and a year on the moon are the same length because the moon rotates on its axis at the same rate that it orbits around the Earth, causing one side of the moon to always face us. This synchronous rotation results in a day (one full rotation) on the moon taking the same amount of time as a complete orbit around the Earth (a year).
No, the length of day and night varies throughout the year due to the tilt of the Earth's axis as it orbits the sun. This results in the changing seasons and varying lengths of daylight and darkness.
If you mean the length of the day, yes - that is the same around the Earth. The Earth rotates as a rigid body. If by day length you mean hours of sunlight. On the same lines of latitude day length will be the same, but due to the wobble in the rotation of the earth, day length is different along lines of longitude.
A day on the Moon (about 29.5 Earth days) is the same length as a year on Earth (365.25 days) because of a phenomenon called synchronous rotation. The Moon's rotation period is the same as its orbit around Earth, causing one side of the Moon to always face Earth, leading to equal lengths of day and year.
The SAME? No. "ABOUT" the same? Well, close; a Mars day is a little less than 25 hours.
The length of the day in th US is the same as the length of the day anywhere else in the world, roughly 24 hours.
March 20/21 and Sep 22/23 of each year