Along the equator every day of the year has 12.1 hours from sunrise to sunset and 11.9 hours from sunset to sunrise.
Who could know? There are many mysterious things in this world. Or you could just work out how many days there are in the Winter Months (mainly considered November+December) work out how many hours are in there etc!
The only places which have 6 months daylight and 6 months night are the North and South poles.
That would depend on where in the world you are. If you were at the North Pole there would be 24 hours of daylight, while at the South Pole there would be no daylight. At points in between the two poles the amount of daylight would be different. At the equator the amount of daylight hours would be about 12 hours.
No, it is not. In fact, when the Northern hemisphere is having longer days, the Southern hemisphere is having shorter days (and conversely).
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.
Yes - at the summer and winter equinox
It depends on where you are in the world; the more North you are, the less daylight time there will be. At the North pole, there is no daylight at all, and at the South pole, there is no night at all. And at the equator it always stays 50% daytime and 50% night time.
There is no answer to that, because it varies all around the world. So the amount of daylight on a given day in one part of the world, isn't the same in all other parts of the world. In the middle of the northern hemisphere's winter there is no daylight at the North Pole, but there is more and more as you head south ending in there being 24 hours of daylight at the South Pole, where it is the middle of summer. You can also say that there is always daylight somewhere in the world, and therefore there is permanent daylight on Earth, so there is 24 hours of daylight every day.
Who could know? There are many mysterious things in this world. Or you could just work out how many days there are in the Winter Months (mainly considered November+December) work out how many hours are in there etc!
12
The only places which have 6 months daylight and 6 months night are the North and South poles.
yes
That would depend on where in the world you are. If you were at the North Pole there would be 24 hours of daylight, while at the South Pole there would be no daylight. At points in between the two poles the amount of daylight would be different. At the equator the amount of daylight hours would be about 12 hours.
You can find tables of world daylight hours from various sources, including websites that provide weather information, astronomy resources, or time zone data. Websites like timeanddate.com or the World Clock section of time.is offer tables of daylight hours for different locations around the world.
If your time is roughly between 6am and 6pm then your part of the world is in daylight. The part that is not having night. The earth revolves on its North Pole - South Pole axis once every 24 hours. As it moves around, the sun is able to shine on one half of it at a time. The earth is moving all the time, so the part of the world in daylight is also moving all the time/
no, because diffefernt parts of the world receive different amounts of sunlight because the earth is tilted on it's axis.
The amount of daylight on August 1st will depend on where you are in the world. In Indiana on August 1st, there will be 14 hours and 10 minutes of daylight, which will translate to 850 minutes of daylight.