forever the north pole has no sunlight
I have been to the South Pole and from the locals it never gets "real sunlight". They say that it is always the reflection of the sun. I have studied there theory and it is true. So the answer to your question is NONE.
34 days. Roald Amundsen reached the South Pole first on 14th of December, 1911. Amundsen reported that he saw no sign of Scott. Scott reached the South Pole on 17th of January, 1912, acknowledging in his diary that Amundsen had got there a month earlier.
North and south pole
Yes, there is a region near the Moon's south pole called the "South Pole-Aitken basin" that contains a large crater which is always in shadow. This permanently shadowed region is thought to hold deposits of water ice and other volatile substances that have been preserved for billions of years.
Hate to tell you this, but Richard Evelyn Byrd arrived at Antarctica some 17 years after Roald Amundsen had reached the South Pole. Byrd's first expedition to the South Pole happened in 1928, Amundsen had beaten Scott to the Pole in 1911.
approximately 180 days
The south pole experiences a phenomenon called polar night, during which there is continuous darkness for about six months. This means that the south pole experiences no sunlight for roughly half of the year.
Sunrise at the South Pole is on about the 21st of September every year. Sunset is on about the 22nd of March the following year. The reverse is the case at the North Pole. So a polar day is about 6 months and a polar night is also about 6 months.
The South Pole is many miles inland. The discovery was a ship. It never visited the South Pole
In the winter
my name is joe
The south pole receives the most sunlight in December.
The sunlight hits the equator at a direct angle. Sunlight glances off the south pole at an angle, so less of it is absorbed.
south pole
Sunrise at the South Pole is on about the 21st of September every year. Sunset is on about the 22nd of March the following year. The reverse is the case at the North Pole. So a polar day is about 6 months and a polar night is also about 6 months.
Sunrise at the South Pole is on about the 21st of September every year. Sunset is on about the 22nd of March the following year. The reverse is the case at the North Pole. So a polar day is about 6 months and a polar night is also about 6 months.
When the North Pole has summer, the South Pole has winter. This is because the Earth's axis is tilted, causing one pole to receive more direct sunlight (summer) while the other pole receives less direct sunlight (winter).