Because the tilt of the earth prevents sunlight reaching the far north during the winter months.
60 minutes per hour, 24 hours per day, 31 days in December so the answer is -60 x 24 x 31 = 44640 minutes
It's 48 Hours because: There 24 Hours in a day so i did 2x24 or 24+24 =48 hours
24 hours = 1 day so 5 lots of 24 hours is five days. So the answer is five.24 hours = 1 day so 5 lots of 24 hours is five days. So the answer is five.24 hours = 1 day so 5 lots of 24 hours is five days. So the answer is five.24 hours = 1 day so 5 lots of 24 hours is five days. So the answer is five.
8 hours. The earth rotates 360o in 24 hours. Therefore 120o is 120/360 of 24 hours: 120/360 x 24 hours = 1/3 x 24 hours = 8 hours.
30 seconds = 30/60 minutes = 0.5/60 hours = 0.5/(60 x 24) of 24 hours = 0.00034722 of the 24 hours Another approach: 1 day = 24 hours = 86400 seconds 30 seconds = 30/86400 of 24 hours = 0.00034722 of the 24 hours
24 hours = December 2148 hours = December 2272 hours = December 23
Because God is sometimes happy therefore there is 24 hours of daylight and then sometimes God is sad or angry and therfore there is 24 hours of night.
No, you'd have 24 hours of sunlight.
If it's dark for more than 24 hours around the time of the December solstice where you are then you are within 23.5° of latitude from the north pole. Since the tilt of Earth's rotational axis with respect to the plane of Earth's orbit is about 23.5°, even at local noon you are still tilted too far from the illuminated half of the planet to see the sun. The line on a globe north of which the entire area is dark at the time of the December solstice is called the Arctic Circle.
24 hours in summer, in winter no sun at all
No
Yes.
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.
On December 24th in the North Pole-it is completely dark. No sun.
There are 31 days in December, therefore there are 31 x 24 = 744 hours in the month.
On a solstice, it is only at the equator that the hours of light and dark are equal. At other parts, they would be different with one of the Poles experiencing 24 hours of daylight and the other Pole experiencing no daylight. If it is the June solstice, then it is the North Pole with 24 hours of daylight and the South Pole with none, while it is the opposite in the December solstice. It is at the equinox that the amount of daylight and darkness hours are equal around the world.
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.