24 hours of darkness occur only above the Arctic and Antarctic circles during winter.
Winter has the longest hours of darkness. Remembering of course that winter is at different times of the year depending on which hemisphere, the north or south, you live in.
It depends on the season/day of the year.......it also depends on where you live.
June 21
960 hours of daylight in the season of Spring.
no any country in the world there have no night There is nowhere on Earth that never has night time whatsoever, when the Northern hemisphere tilts towards the sun, areas above a latitude of 66.5 degrees N (more commonly referred to as the Arctic Circle) experience several days without an intervening 'night' in between. However, when the Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun in winter, the same areas above the Arctic Circle experience 24 hours of darkness for several days!
Winter has the longest hours of darkness. Remembering of course that winter is at different times of the year depending on which hemisphere, the north or south, you live in.
That depends on where exactly you are, and on the season.
Winter.
24 hours of darkness.
It depends on the season/day of the year.......it also depends on where you live.
The Southern Hemisphere would be pointed away from the sun in order for the South Pole to experience 24 hours of darkness -- which occurs at the pole every day between about March 21 and September 21.
The duration of Out of Darkness is 1.67 hours.
The duration of After Darkness is 1.73 hours.
march
There are eight sets of 3 consecutive numbers in 12 hours.
It depends on where you are and what season it is. If you are at the equator then there is 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night. If you are above the arctic circle then during the winter there is 24 hours of darkness each day, this will occur on Dec. 21st. If you are further above the arctic circle the darkness can last for months. During the summer there will be 24 hours of daylight on June 21st, and again this can last for months if you are very far north. The same is true for the South pole as well.
The season in the southern hemisphere during which the daytime hours are longestis the Summer season ... specifically the first day of Summer, on December 21.