The first day of summer is the longest day in the northern hemisphere. The first day of winter is the shortest.
Yes. Longest day of the year in one hemisphere, and shortest day of the year in the other hemisphere. So our summer solstice on June 21 is the longest day in Europe or America, but the shortest day for the Australians.
There is none. They are all the same length
The longest day of the year, known as the summer solstice, typically falls on June 21 or 22 in the Northern Hemisphere. However, the exact date can vary slightly each year due to the Earth's elliptical orbit and leap years. In the Southern Hemisphere, the longest day occurs around December 21 or 22. Thus, while it usually happens around the same dates, it is not always on the exact same day each year.
All years have 365 and a quarter days. As we don't count the quarter day every 4 years we add one day to Feb making it have 29 days and the year 366 days. But all years are the same length.
Every year
But they are on the same day every year, for example mine is always on the 17th day of the month.
New Years Day is on the first day of the year, January 1st!
every leap year has the same leap day which is febuary 29
It WAS just on Tuesday, February 14th. Same day, same month every year.
The longest day in any year is the summer solstice. In 2011, this will occur on June 21 in the Northern hemisphere and December 22 in the Southern hemisphere.
the longest