Depends on how close Barrow is to the North Pole!! With the vernal equinox - I'd have to say close to 6 hours....creeps up to 12 by June...
Juneau, Alaska is approximately 2 hours and 45 minutes way from Barrow, Alaska when flying by plane. There is about 1,102 miles between the two locations.
During the summer in the northern hemisphere, the farther north you go the longer the sunlight lasts during a day. Traveling north, you will reach a point where the sun will not set but rather appear to travel in a circle because of the rotation of the earth . The closer you get to the pole the more sunlight there is. In Barrow Alaska, at 2:58am on the 10th of May, 2008 there was a sunrise. The sun did not set until August the 2nd at 2:03 am. The sun stayed visible in the sky in Barrow Alaska this year for 85 consecutive days. That's 2,040 hours. The reverse will happen this winter when the sun is below the equator. There will be months of darkness in Barrow Alaska. When the sun is high in the sky in the northern hemisphere it is low in the southern hemisphere, so they get darkness when the north has light and they get light when the north has dark.
Barrow, Alaska experiences the longest daylight hours in the state due to its location above the Arctic Circle. During the summer months, the sun does not set for several weeks, leading to continuous daylight.
Most of the sunlight is during summer but during winter it probably averages 3-4 hours of sunlight a day.
In the United States, June typically has the most hours of sunlight. This is because June marks the summer solstice, which is the longest day of the year in terms of daylight hours.
In Barrow, Alaska today, the sun rises at approximately 1:31 AM and sets at around 1:35 AM due to being located above the Arctic Circle. This results in a period of continuous daylight during the summer months.
24 hours just like everywhere else. If you mean how much daylight does Anchorage get each day, it varies depending on the time of year. If you were to visit in the summer at the height of the tourist season, say July 4th, you would experience 24 hours of light. Several hours of this time would be much like twilight, not intense sunlight but easily light enough to see very well. The actual sunlight would be around 20 hours or so.
Alaska, specifically locations north of the Arctic Circle, experience the longest summer days in the USA due to the midnight sun phenomenon. In cities like Barrow or Utqiaġvik, the sun does not set for several weeks during the summer solstice, resulting in extended daylight hours.
the earth has a tilted axis and during the winter solstice north America is tilted away from the sun so the northern hemisphere gets less sunlight
North of the Antarctic Circle, geographies experience a mix of hours of sunlight and hours of no sunlight. At the Antarctic Circle, there is at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset per year. At the Equator, these periods are about 12 hours each.
True, Fairbanks on average has 20+ hours of sunlight in June, Miami has roughly 13.5 hours of light.