Well during the winter the north and south poles can go without see the sun for months, I'll even go so are as to say the even places in Canada can go without see the sun for months. imagine having go to school or to work while it is dark. also it is dark in caves
because the earth is on an axis and the axis isn't straight so ... it changes the light hours and dark hours because there are allways 24 hours cya ;)
It depends on the season. In the summer, none. In the winter, 24. In the spring and autumn, it varies.
It is 24 hours.8am to 8pm = 12 hours.8pm to 8am = 12 hours.2 x 12 = 24.
52% of 24 hours= 52% * 24= 0.52 * 24= 12.48 hours OR 12 hours 28 minutes 48 seconds
Presumably 2.3*24 hours = 55.2 hours.Presumably 2.3*24 hours = 55.2 hours.Presumably 2.3*24 hours = 55.2 hours.Presumably 2.3*24 hours = 55.2 hours.
The duration of In a Dark Place is 1.58 hours.
No
Yes.
gray day
Every place on earth has 24 hours in a day.
North pole, It's tipping away from the sun and is actually dark 24 hours a day.
because she needs to sleep ;)
A day is 24 hours. To find what fraction of a day 12 hours is, place 12 over 24. It is 12/24 of a day or 1/2 of a day simplified.
Every place on Earth that's north of the Arctic Circle or south of the Antarctic Circle has more than 24 hours of light and more than 24 hours of dark sometime during the year. The closer to the pole, the more longer than 24 hours they are. Right at the north and south poles, you get six months of sun-up and six months of sun-down in a year.
24 hours
There is a place in Clear Lake called Kids 24-Hours!
It doesn't! Its light for 24 hours. In Antarctica Christmas is in summer!