Zero. At the north pole, the sun sets around September 23,
and it doesn't rise again until March 21.
Around the north pole in the (northern hemisphere) summer.
That completely depends on how far you live from the equator. If you live at the north or south pole, then there are six months in the year when the sun never sets. That's 262,966 minutes of continuous sunshine.
France. 0 degrees (east) is the Greenwich meridian which runs from the North Pole, through London, to the South pole. 45 degrees north is hlafway between the equator and the North Pole.
north pole and south pole
Latitude goes from zero degrees to 90 degrees north or south. The north pole is at 90 degrees north; the south pole is at 90 degrees south.
north pole
On a solstice, it is only at the equator that the hours of light and dark are equal. At other parts, they would be different with one of the Poles experiencing 24 hours of daylight and the other Pole experiencing no daylight. If it is the June solstice, then it is the North Pole with 24 hours of daylight and the South Pole with none, while it is the opposite in the December solstice. It is at the equinox that the amount of daylight and darkness hours are equal around the world.
4383 hours.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
Winter in northern hemispere
21st of June.
24 hours
There is a very minimal amount of daylight in the North Pole. By the equator, there is much more sunlight and a much more warmer climate.
90° north latitude (the north pole) and 90° south latitude (the south pole)
On June 21, the arctic circle, which is located at 66.5 degrees north latitude, through the north pole at 90 degrees, has 24 hours of daylight. On December 21, the antarctic circle, which is located at 66.5 degrees south latitude, through the south pole at 90 degrees, has 24 hours of daylight.
At the south pole, December is the middle of a continuous period of light that began on September 21 and lasts until March 21. Since December has 31 days, there are 744 hours of daylight there in December.
It depends on your location on Earth. At the south pole, there are 0 hours of daylight on June 21... until ~13,000 years from now when the Earth's axis of rotation will precess to give it summer in June.