Earth gets 24 hours of sunlight each day. There is
always 50% of the Earth illuminated by the sun.
five
That depends where in the world you are. -You didn't tell us that.
An earth day is divided into 24 hours.
Using earth days and hours . . . Mercury . . . 58.6 days = 1,406.4 hours Venus. . . . 243 days = 5,832 hours Earth . . . . . . 1 day = 24 hours Mars . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24.6 hours Jupiter . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.9 hours Saturn . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.66 hours Uranus . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.2 hours Neptune . . . . . . . . . . . 16.1 hours Pluto . . . . 6.4 days = 153.6 hours
10 hours
It depends on your location on Earth.
All 24.
the amount of sunlight each day is about 5.9 hours
Saskatoon receives an average of 2,363 hours of sunlight per year.
2 hours
In the course of a year, every point on Earth has the sun up for half of the time. That would be 1/2 of 365 days or 4,380 hours.
On a good year, typically about 2 or 3 hours annually.
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.
Winter - 10 hours Summer - 13 hours
10 hours a day
about 14 hours
The Sahara receives 3,000 to 4,000 hours of bright sunlight each year. Most of the Sahara only receives around 0.79 inches of rain annually.