Only above the Arctic and Antarctic Circles experience 24 hours of daylight at any point. Being near the equator, the sun angle and hours of daylight don't change much throughout the year.
yes
well you would be standing on the sun were the summer is.
24 hours, the sun never sets.
Depends on where you are in Canada and what time of the year it is. You could get to places where there are 24 hours of daylight and six months later there is no daylight at all. So you can find it at any of the times in between at some point in Canada at different times of the year.
That's the summer solstice, when areas north of the Arctic Circle will have 24 hours of daylight.
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In summer generally, there are 24 hours of daylight; in winter there are generally zero hours of daylight.
Iceland in the summer
Most everywhere on the continent, this number is 24 sunny hours out of 24 hours in a day.
well you would be standing on the sun were the summer is.
On the Antarctic continent, depending on where you are, you will have at least one 24-hour period of no daylight in winter and at least one 24-hour period of no sunset in summer.
It could be anywhere from 12 to 24 hours depending on what day and what latitude.
well you would be standing on the sun were the summer is.
well you would be standing on the sun were the summer is.
24 hours, the sun never sets.
That would depend on where in the world you are. If you were at the North Pole there would be 24 hours of daylight, while at the South Pole there would be no daylight. At points in between the two poles the amount of daylight would be different. At the equator the amount of daylight hours would be about 12 hours.
There are 24 hours in any day of the year! If the question refers to daylight hours, then the location is required.
No, you've got that wrong. It's the area Northof the arctic/polar circle that can have 24 hours of daylight during summer.By definition, South of the Arctic/Polar circle is where you Don't get 24h daylight in summer.