Depending on where you are on the continent, you can experience 24 hours of sunlight each day during the summer months.
Whatever answer I give you will be wrong in 12 hours. The Earth spins on its axis every 24 hours, so each side of the planet gets about 12 hours of day light per day. (Less in winter, and more in summer, due to the 23 degreetilt of the axis.)
Actually, summer lasts for three months in Antarctica and begins on December 21 each year.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
Spain has 14 hours of sun light
Typically, summer is the season with the most hours of sunshine due to longer daylight hours and clearer skies. This varies depending on the region and can be influenced by factors such as latitude and climate.
The answer is given after the list of "these" days.
Each light and each color is individually set. You would need to contact the street department for that area to get the specific information.
24 hours just like everywhere else. If you mean how much daylight does Anchorage get each day, it varies depending on the time of year. If you were to visit in the summer at the height of the tourist season, say July 4th, you would experience 24 hours of light. Several hours of this time would be much like twilight, not intense sunlight but easily light enough to see very well. The actual sunlight would be around 20 hours or so.
Load shedding in Maharashtra is an effort to ration out electricity so that consumers have similar access. Load shedding involves cutting off the electricity in certain parts of the area for a specific number of hours each day.
to feminize it you must give it 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness each day.
it is about each girls summer