This will depend on the month and the latitude. Canada extends from 49 degrees north, all the way up to above the arctic circle.
Every place on Earth, when averaged out over a year, gets 6 months of daylight and 6 months of darkness. At the equator this daylight and darkness is spaced out in about 12 hour intervals (day and night). However, because of the tilt of the Earth's axis of spin, as one move towards the poles the length of night and day changes with the seasons until when you reach the poles, daylight lasts for 6 continual months and darkness lasts for 6 continual months. Alaska is near the North pole, so during summer the days are very long.
it varies
Because God is sometimes happy therefore there is 24 hours of daylight and then sometimes God is sad or angry and therfore there is 24 hours of night.
1,350 hours = about 1.85 months (1.84808875 months)
8,000 hours = about 11 months (10.9516371 months)
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.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
more 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.
6 months of daylight = 4380 hours
During daylight hours.
London is further north on the planet than the USA, so during the summer months, the sun sets later in London than anywhere in the USA, but during the winter months, it would set earlier. So, compared to the USA, London has more summer hours of daylight, but less winter hours of daylight.
Depending on where you are on the continent, the months can be from March to September. At the South Pole, for example, there is no sunrise during any of the listed months.
There is no time difference. Ontario is on EST, except during daylight savings hours when it is on EDT.
Koh -e- murree
Yes. It occurs every year in Antarctica. Antarctica experiences months of continuous daylight, and then months of continuous night.
The time in Toronto is UTC-5 during Standard Time and UTC-4 during Daylight Saving Time, so during Standard Time subtract 5 hours from UTC and during Daylight Saving Time subtract 4 hours from UTC. Daylight Saving Time in Canada begins on the 2nd Sunday of March and ends on the 1st Sunday of November.