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its need of nature which makes sun shine daily
Sunrise is the start of the sun for that day, and sunset is the end of the sun for that day. If you have the sunrise and sunset hours, you can calculate how many hours the sun shine in a day by following formula: sunset - sunrise.Example: sunset 8 am; sunset 5 pm.Since 5 pm is also known as 17:00 hours and 8 am as 8:00 hrs(17:00 hours = noon which is 12:00 + 5:00 = 17:00)You can calculate: 17:00 - 08:00 = 9 hours.
Yes because if the sun didn't shine it won't be bright
it will be dark
Between 0 and 24 hours per day. That depends on where you are and when you do your measurement. Far enough north of the polar circle there are weeks when the Sun never "sets" during the summer and when it never "rises" during the winter.At the equator on the equinox the theoretical sunshine duration is 12 hours.
No, it is not a fact that the sun will shine for 36 hours on the 17th of October 2010. The amount of sunlight a particular location receives in a day is determined by the Earth's rotation and the time of year, and it is not possible for the sun to shine for 36 continuous hours in a single day.
Around the north pole in the (northern hemisphere) summer.
In the Tundra the sun shines 24 hours a day. The weather is cold even in the summer months. The Tundra has little plant life because of the dry conditions. The Tundra is like a snow desert.
its need of nature which makes sun shine daily
Sunrise is the start of the sun for that day, and sunset is the end of the sun for that day. If you have the sunrise and sunset hours, you can calculate how many hours the sun shine in a day by following formula: sunset - sunrise.Example: sunset 8 am; sunset 5 pm.Since 5 pm is also known as 17:00 hours and 8 am as 8:00 hrs(17:00 hours = noon which is 12:00 + 5:00 = 17:00)You can calculate: 17:00 - 08:00 = 9 hours.
In the summer (which lasts only 6 to 10 weeks), the tundra has sunlight 24 hours a day. The rest of the year, there is very little sun.
Yes because if the sun didn't shine it won't be bright
Yes
24 hours in summer, in winter no sun at all
EVERYDAY!!
Earth has day and nights because the sun can only shine on one part of the Earth at a time, resulting in one half of the Earth in darkness, and one half of the Earth with light. The days and nights last only 12 hours because the Earth rotates around the sun once every 24 hours. Half of the time, the sun will shine an a particular spot on the Earth, the other half of the time, the sun will not shine causing darkness.
The tilt of the axis of the Earth.