No.
Now that the Winter Solstice has passed (the Solstice was on December 21) the days will be getting a little longer each day from now until the Summer Solstice on June 21.
Each day of the year otherwise there would be no daylight
North of the arctic circle, or south of the antarctic circle
That would depend on where you live, and which part of autumn you mean. The definition of "autumn" is the period between the autumnal equinox and the winter solstice, so the number of hours of daylight would be "less than 12, and decreasing". On September 22, the number of hours of hours of daylight would be only a minute or so less than 12 hours, while on December 19 the length of the day will be somewhere between 11.9 hours and zero, depending on your latitude.
Everywhere: the length of the day is always 24 hours irrespective of latitude & longitude since the angular rotation of the planet is 360º per 24hours. The DAYLIGHT length changes seasonally and proportionally to latitude, but the DAY length is constant.
15.7 orbits per day at 17,227 MPH 24/16 is 1hour 30 minutes per orbit approximately
Same as the rest of the planet - about four minutes per day.
6 minutes
Approximately 4 minutes per day up to the summer solstice... then the day reduces by 4 minutes to the winter solstice.
No matter where you are on the planet - the day lengthens by four minutes each day, after the winter equinox, up to the summer solstice.
Every Day the Earth gains more time. It is only about three minutes that are gained each day, after the winter solstice.
56 minutes.
At 41 degrees north latitude, you gain some length of daylight every day from December 21 until June 21, and you lose some length of daylight every day from June 21 until December 21. The number of minutes difference from one day to the next also changes. It's greatest on March 21 and on September 21, and when you get to June 21 or December 21, it's almost nothing.
AwnserOnly 30 Minutes a Day.An hour To Lose weight.
After December 21, the state of MA gains approximately 2-3 minutes of daylight per day as the days start to get longer leading up to the summer solstice in June.
The amount of daylight gained between December 21 and December 22 is measured in seconds. By the first week in January, it may be as much as a minute. From February 1 to February 2, 2 minutes, and by March 21, 4 minutes per day. Then it begins to decrease until June 21, when the difference goes back to zero.
You gain or lose approximately 4 minutes per day due to the Earth's slightly elliptical orbit around the Sun, causing our planet's axis to tilt. This results in variations in the length of a solar day throughout the year.
60 minutes per hour * 24 hours per day = 1440 minutes per day