Antarctica, the Arctic, and the state of Alaska
No country, but a small part of Antarctica will. Only the North and South Pole have a 6 month period of continuous daylight and nearly 6 months of night. Parts of some countries extend above the Arctic Circle and can have more than 24 hours of sunlight in summer (midnight sun), and more than 24 hours of night during the winter (polar night). Svalbard, Norway has a 5-month period from April to September when the Sun never sets, only circles the horizon.
Russia, with 6,601,668 square miles.
Canada
1 light year is approximately 63,241 AU. Therefore, 4.7 light years is about 297,116 AU.
Well, this is the only country in which has states. So, in our country, there are 50 states.
Probably the north or south pole but I'm not sure
yes..... because it is to do with the way the earth is on its axis
There is no definitive answer to this question, but during the winter it is light for 1-2 hours per day and during the summer it is almost always light.
It's dark all day because of the earth's tilt on the axis
Alaska
Yes, Antarctica stays dark for about 6 months all day long, then after that there is daylight for 6 months because of its angle toward the sun.
Denmark
Fairbanks Alaska has 11 months of darkness per year, and 5 months of light/dark mix the rest of the year. Except during leap year, when Fairbanks only has 9 months total, and 7 of them are non-stop light, to make up for the eleven months of darkness.
In actuality, no. But it seems like it, the sun comes up at 11:00 am and sets at 2:30 pm, you think it is dark for 6 months. Starting the last part of September it starts getting dark earlier until about mid May. Then it stays light 23 hours.
yes my cousin lived in anchorage for two years and the had 6 months of light and 6 months of darkness
Alaska for 6 months
You can get depression in the winter called Seasonal Affective Disorder as it is dark most of the day and sleep problems in the summer due to bright light for most of the day.