24 hours, then the moon also stays up for 24 hours.
The time the sun stays in the sky varies depending on the time of year and your location. At the equator, day and night are roughly equal, while closer to the poles, the sun can stay in the sky for up to 24 hours during the summer months.
In Antarctica, the sun disappears below the horizon during the winter months due to the tilt of Earth's axis. This phenomenon, known as polar night, can last for up to six months in Antarctica. During this time, the sun does not rise above the horizon, leading to continuous darkness.
The arctic poppy has a very short "growing season" they appear in Antarctica from June to July. These flowers are cup-shaped and face up to the sun, so the sun's rays are directed towards the centre of them. They stay warmer than the air around them. Also it is covered with extremely fine black hairs to keep it warm
Because the poles tilt towards the sun in summer the North and South Poles have six months when the sun is visible day and night.
Not very much because of the long nights during the Antarctic winter. When the sun returns it starts to heal the ozone layer up. Within a month of the sun's return, we see things are back to normal.
they can stay awake for a very very very very long time!!
seriously? Like 8 hours?
Sunlight reaches Antarctica, when the northern hemisphere is in winter. In the Antarctic summer the sun does not set. Instead, it loops around the horizon.
It is up 24 hours a day and in winter it isn't up at all!
Yes. In fact, for up to six months at the South Pole, every summer, Antarctica experiences at least one 24-hour period of sunlight each day.
There is no place on earth where the sun is always up.
If you are exposed to too much sunlight,you might get sunburn, or if you stay in the sun too long after you get sunburn, you might end up with skin ca.ncer
The northpole :)
yes dolphins can stay up long because they are like mamals
The time the sun stays in the sky varies depending on the time of year and your location. At the equator, day and night are roughly equal, while closer to the poles, the sun can stay in the sky for up to 24 hours during the summer months.
Since it's the second day of summer in Antarctica, the sun is up until about February. When the sun sets and remains below the horizon for months, astronomers will study the southern hemisphere of stars in our gallaxy.
Don't count me on this, but in the summer the sun stays up VERY late, only about 4 hours of darkness up where i was. so I'm assuming it would be the opposite in the winter, so about 4 hours perhaps.