Different latitudes have different daylight hours.
The 2014 summer solstice in New York will see the sun rise at 5:24 a.m. on June 21 and set at 8:30 p.m. after 15 hours, six minutes of daylight.
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June 9 is not a day in Summer, in either of the Earth's hemispheres.
Every day has 24 hours. Since 1 hour = 60 minutes, (24 hr)*(60 min/hr) = 1440 min. The exception to the 24 hours is that every once in awhile, they add a 'leap second' to the day, so that the atomic clocks stay in sync with the Earth's rotation. If you are referring to minutes of daylight on the Summer Solstice (day with the most daylight hours), then I'm sure there are tables out there to find this information, but it will vary by location. In areas near the Arctic Circle they have daylight nearly all day in the Summer time, for example.
in the area where trees are not there
It depends on the season. In the summer, none. In the winter, 24. In the spring and autumn, it varies.
We more sun in summer, and more dark in winter.