Approximately six months
An old Youngman joke .... A doctor gave a man six months to live ... he couldn't pay his bill ... so he gave him another six months.
Six months is about 15,778,476 seconds.
It is 6.
That's just a few days more than six months.
If the earth stopped rotating, then at every point on earth, the sun would be up in the sky for six months, and then down for six months. We would most likely have very hot days six months long, and very cold nights six months long, with a lot of wind most of the time. It might also be hard to sleep until we got used to it.
There is no place on the surface of the earth that goes more than six months without a sunrise. At the North and South Poles, the sun remains below the horizon for six months, and then remains above the horizon for the next six months.
If the Earth stopped spinning completely, there would be just one day and one night a year. Six months of daylight would be followed by six months of night. ... The spinning of the Earth is also partially responsible for the Earth's magnetic field. No spin means no magnetic field HOPE THAT HELP!
This phenomenon occurs in no country on Earth. At the poles, however, the sun rises and sets once each year. There are no countries at the poles.
Poles experience about six months of day and six months of night due to the tilt of Earth's axis. When a pole is tilted towards the Sun, it experiences continuous daylight as the Sun remains above the horizon for an extended period. Likewise, when the pole is tilted away from the Sun, it results in continuous darkness for an extended period.
Yes but only at the north and south poles
Yes, each would last six months.
Regions near the poles, such as the North and South Poles, experience six months of continuous daylight during their respective summer seasons and six months of continuous darkness during their winters due to the Earth's axial tilt and orbit around the sun. This phenomenon is known as the midnight sun in summer and polar night in winter.
Diurnal cycle
Six Months in Mexico was created in 1888.
Six Months of Darkness Six Months of Light - 1997 was released on: USA: 22 September 1997 (Long Island Film Festival)
It is based upon the tilt of the earth's axis. At the top of the earth (North Pole), the earth receives either very little light or too much light. Near the north pole, they receive 6 months of darkness followed by 6 months of light. Keep in mind that this is not total darkness or total sun for these months but the months get gradually darker or lighter as the season progresses.