No. Timing of sunrise and sunset are determined by a location's angle with respect to the sun as the Earth rotates. Because the Earth's axis is tilted about 23 degrees as it proceeds around the sun, that angle for any given location on Earth will change by at least 23 degrees per season, so even a spot on the equator will show seasonal variation in day length.
UPDATE: In response to the answers below: The only time the sun is directly above the equator is on the exact moment of the vernal and autumnal equinoxes. At the summer solstice, the sun is overhead the line that delinates the Tropic of Cancer, while at the winter solstice it is over the Tropic of Capricorn. When the sun is not directly overhead of those spots on the equator, there will indeed be slight variation in the length of day and night for those equatorial locations.
And the sun does not rise and set only once a year at the poles. During spring and fall, they actually have pretty much close to 12 hour days and nights. It is only at the extremes of the seasons that regions above the Arctic Circle get no sun for days or perpetual darkness.
2006-08-25 03:40:27
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Regardless of the date, the sun rises and sets in virtually the same place and at virtually the same time (within a couple of minutes year-round) if you are on the equator (disregarding terrain). The only thing that changes is the path the sun takes across the sky (on about June 22, the sun will trace its northernmost path and on about December 21 it will follow its most southerly course).
"haysoos2" is right that the axial tilt of the earth will affect sunrise and sunset times around the earth, but at the equator, that effect is negligible...
So ultimately, if you want to be really anal about it, no...there is no spot on earth where the sun rises and sets at the same time all year...but on the equator it only changes minimally (for example rising at 5:58 am at one extreme and 6:02 am at the other)...in other words, for all intensive purposes the answer is yes...on the equator, the sun rises and sets at virtually (if not precisely) the same time every day.
2006-08-25 06:55:11
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answer #2
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answered by o errante 3
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the theory of parallex sparkling shows the earth is shifting around the sunlight. there is not any equations which comprise the outcome of gravity and yield a static sort. in accordance on your static sort the earth might want to have lengthy gone crashing into the sunlight earlier. exciting that the upward thrust earrings in 4000 3 hundred and sixty 5 days old bristlecone pines do no longer correlate along with your opinion. LOL you basically are bringing up the sorrowful little b.s. critiques expressed in answersin genesis and different such atrocities. those suggestions of yours were debunked for hundreds of years--there is not any international conspiracy of technology. All i visit inform you is that needing it to be so would not make it so. i hit upon it unhappy you'd be intending to misinform human beings and sound like it really is authentic verifiable innovations--at the same time as genuinely all of it has been discredited. EPIC EPIC mendacity FAIL
2016-11-27 20:36:41
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yes. Both the North and South Poles are like that. Keep in mind that there the Sun only rises and sets once every year.
2006-08-25 03:46:16
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Even if the location of the sun at the equator shifts (as it does in every place on earth), the duration of a day is still exactly 12 hours at each day of the year.
So, the time of sunrise and sunset don't vary at each place on the equator.
2006-08-25 03:46:12
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answer #5
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answered by dragolt 3
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Yes, at the Equator. Those countries have pretty much "exactly" 12 hours of sunlight and 12 hours of darkness.
2006-08-25 03:47:00
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answer #6
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answered by Strives to be Something 3
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Somwhere along the Equator. Find a city right on the equator and you'll probably find this situation.
2006-08-25 03:47:25
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answer #7
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answered by Ron B. 7
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Anywhere along the
equator (viz. Quito, Ecuador).
2006-08-25 06:37:15
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answer #8
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answered by Tomaso 2
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