I am working on a College Trig project where we have to find daylight hours for certain cities around the world...I found a website where you click on the first letter of the city you're looking for, and then choices come up, you chose the city you want and a table of daylight hours, temperatures, etc. comes up on a chart. the website is www.bbc.co.uk/weather/world/city_guides
The following is a hypothesis: "The number of eggs a chicken lays is affected by the hours of daylight." In this hypothesis, the independent variable is the hours of daylight.
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.
Sunrise and sunset is further apart during the longer daylight hours of summer.
Regions near the equator where daylight hours remain relatively consistent throughout the year may find Daylight Saving Time unnecessary. Countries with minimal seasonal variation in daylight, such as those closer to the equator, have less need for adjusting the clocks to save daylight. Areas with a consistently steady pattern of daylight hours can operate efficiently without the time changes associated with Daylight Saving Time.
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.
Table Mountain is in Cape Town, South Africa.
Complex question. Use this link to go find out, it varies on what month and day it is, the change in the tilt of the earth causes the seasons. http://www.jgiesen.de/daylight/
Travel and eat. They may find a place to sleep for a little bit before travelling and eating again.
on a table in the garage
As of October, 2010, World #11. Ittf.com is where you can find info about international table tennis.
This is an old backpacker trick. This only works for adults though as children's hands are too small. Find the horizon, and now place your right hand palm facing you so the bottom edge(ie your pinky) is parallel with the horizon. Now place your left hand on top of your right, and keep doing this until one hand covers the sun. The number of hands required to do this is generally equal to the number of hours of remaining daylight.
I don't think the time is any difference but you can find out by your phone just go to world clock if you don't know how to go to that or you don't have that tool on your cellphone go on Google and type world clock