Yes, anywhere that is greater than 66.5 degrees latitude North or South experiences 24 hrs of darkness during the winter. They also experience 24 of daylight in the summer. (Earth is on 23.5 degree angle which is what accounts for that (90-23.5).)
Edit: For clarification, 24 hrs of darkness on the Winter solstice (which in Northern Hemisphere is Dec 21; for Southern hemisphere June 21). North Pole and South Pole will dark the longest (I believe for 3 months of the year), and places in between will vary on length of darkness...the further north/south, the longer the darkness.
2006-07-09 05:45:28
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends on your definition of "night."
On December 21 (or 22 depending on the year - the winter solstice) every point on earth north of the arctic circle at 66° 33' 39" north (it varies slightly due to wobbling of the earth's axis of rotation) does not receive any direct sunlight. On the arctic circle on the winter solstice, the sun would be just below the horizon for one day. The further north you go, the longer the lack of direct sun.
The same things happens in the southern hemisphere on June 21/22.
But that doesn't mean its totally dark, because you still have light from the sun refracted back to the earth's surface in the atmosphere so its never completey dark.
Every place on earth receives the exact same amount of sunlight in one year.
2006-07-09 05:22:05
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answer #2
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answered by minefinder 7
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Yes. The Winter Solstice in the Arctic Circle and the Summer Solstice in Antarctica. Vice-versa for 24 hours of daylight.
2006-07-09 04:36:33
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answer #3
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answered by TexasRed 3
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Many parts of Northern Alaska. About 2 months when it is 24 hours of darkness. By the flip side, during the summer, there is a period of about 2 months when there are 24 hours of daylight.
2006-07-09 04:36:45
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answer #4
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answered by 2007_Shelby_GT500 7
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There's no place on earth where you have a 24 hour night.
Learn why, from the tutorial for which I've given you a link below.
2006-07-09 04:40:28
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Sure. In more than one place on earth and on more than one day in the year.
June Soltice - At the South pole the Sun never rises, always staying 23.5° below the horizon.
December solstice - At the North pole the Sun never rises, always staying 23.5° below the horizon.
2006-07-09 04:39:32
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answer #6
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answered by csasanks 2
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that is a complicated question. maximum individuals on right here understand our bible yet physics and earth technological know-how ........... properly, that is yet another tale. lol I regarded up slightly about it. that is a passage from a piece of writing i chanced on that tells precisely how lengthy an afternoon became even as the earth became first created. "Tracing those tiny milliseconds decrease back for 4.5 billion years promises as a lot as an extremely significant era of time for a image voltaic day. I easily have determined that the day/evening rotation became sixty 3,000 seconds shorter than the hot 86,four hundred seconds that is in the present day. this can placed the Earth's rotation at about 6.5 hours in accordance to day/evening cycle, even as it became created, 4.5 billion years in the past. So an afternoon became no longer 24 hours which we knew, it became 6.5 hours. obviously by employing the time the first human beings developed this became longer yet how a lot longer? i do not understand yet I easily have a droop, that ought to reply to our question as to why the bible says human beings lived 900 years decrease back then. My wager is they weren't years equivalent to ours if the days weren't equivalent to ours. Now, in case you want my opinion........ lol in yet another position contained in the bible it says, "an afternoon to the Lord is as 1000 years and 1000 years as an afternoon." So i trust the 6 "days" of advent were 1000's or maybe 1000's of thousands or three hundred and sixty 5 days days. i trust God set up evolution, a wonderous device by employing which He made living issues from different living issues. thanks for asking this sort of provocative question my atheist chum. you're truly a tolerant individual listening to many distinct human beings's perspectives which at the instantaneous are not inevitably your own. it extremely is a sturdy high quality to have.
2016-11-06 02:21:34
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answer #7
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answered by ? 4
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The poles, both North and South, during winter.
2006-07-09 04:36:50
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answer #8
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answered by williegod 6
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Yes I believe Alaska does I think they have about six months of darkness.
2006-07-09 04:39:11
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answer #9
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answered by p h 1
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Yes, at the polar extremes depending on the time of year.
2006-07-09 04:37:00
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answer #10
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answered by Dazza 4
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