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  • This phenomenon would most likely be most visible at the poles (north and south).
  • Living in Iceland, there were times during the "summer" when the sun never actually set, it just moved around the horizon in a weird undulating pattern.
  • From the other perspective, there are locations just beyond the Arctic and Antarctic Circles when the Sun will briefly pop up above the horizon and immediately set again.
  • Yes, in Alaska during the summer the sun sets for about 1 to 2 hours if you call that at the same time.
  • Yes, through super refraction at high latitude. One Sunrise in the North Norwegian, an image of the sun was clearly visible 180 degrees at an altitude of approx 10 degrees setting, as it got closer to the horizon it broke up.
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14y ago

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