the difference in the duration of day and night increases as one moves from
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Place to place is the answer
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Hey here is your answer....
At the equator the sun is always pretty high in the sky, so the time it takes from rising to setting doesn’t vary all that much. At the poles, depending on whether it is summer or winter, the sun is either just above the horizon or just below the horizon. One way it is always day and the other it is always night. This in turn is due to the fact that the poles of the earth are tilted relative to the plane the earth orbits the sun (but always point the same way as the earth moves around the sun) so some times the north pole points toward the sun, some times the south pole does.
Hope this will help you....
At the equator the sun is always pretty high in the sky, so the time it takes from rising to setting doesn’t vary all that much. At the poles, depending on whether it is summer or winter, the sun is either just above the horizon or just below the horizon. One way it is always day and the other it is always night. This in turn is due to the fact that the poles of the earth are tilted relative to the plane the earth orbits the sun (but always point the same way as the earth moves around the sun) so some times the north pole points toward the sun, some times the south pole does.
Hope this will help you....
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