I don't have a simulator.
about 6.38 degrees
The Arctic circle.
That depends on your latitude. The Arctic is all of the area north of the Arctic Circle, which is 66.56° north latitude. At the Arctic Circle, the sun sets every day, although on the June solstice it just barely sets then immediately rises again as soon as it sets. The farther north you go in the Arctic, the fewer the annual number of sunsets (and sunrises). At the northernmost point, the north pole, the sun rises once a year and sets once a year.
The Arctic region, anywhere north of the Arctic Circle (approx. latitude 66° 34' N), has the greatest number of daylight hours when it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere. The Antarctic (including almost all of Antarctica), south of the Antarctic Circle (approx. latitude 66° 34' S), has the greatest number of daylight hours when it is summer in the Southern Hemisphere.
Either of two intermediate latitude zones of the earth, the North Temperate Zone, between the Arctic Circle and the Tropic of Cancer, or the South Temperate Zone, between the Antarctic Circle and the Tropic of Capricorn.
The Arctic Circle is at 66 degrees 33 minutes N latitude.
That's close to an approximate latitude for the Antarctic Circle.
The Arctic Circle, a major line of latitude, is located at 66.5 degrees north latitude.
The Arctic Circle is a line of latitude. It has no temperature.
The Arctic Circle is a line of latitude. As of 2012, it is approximately 66° 33' 44" N latitude.
Arctic Circle.
it is a latitude
The Arctic Circle.
Any latitude north of roughly "66.5° North" is north of the Arctic Circle.
No, that latitude is just north of the Arctic Circle, which is at about 66.56° north latitude.
90 degrees of latitude are between the tropic of Capricorn and the Arctic Circle.
The Arctic Circle is the parallel of 66.5 degrees north latitude.