Geography, asked by nehanbhute2007, 1 month ago

The phenomena of dawn and dusk is experiences more in which regions?​

Answers

Answered by RiyaMishra02
2

In the Arctic and Antarctic regions, twilight (if there is any) can last for several hours. There is no astronomical twilight at the poles near the winter solstice (for about 74 days at the North Pole and about 80 days at the South Pole)

Answered by sangeeta7paulsl
0

Answer:

  • At the Arctic Pole, the night sun can be seen for six months at a time, continuously and without a break.
  • The farther you move south, the lower time the night sun is visible in Northern Norway, it can be seen from late April until August.
  • As you move down from the Arctic, the strength of the night sun begins to weaken too. At the pole, the night sun will shine as brightly as if it were noon.
  • In Norway, the sun is dappled, more like the early evening before gradationally cheering again for the following day. Thus, although there’s no distinction between one day and the coming and it remains light, there's a visible change in the brilliance.
  • During the summer months when the semicircle is listed towards the sun, the poles experience sun for the full 24 hours.
  • The further down from the pole you travel, the more adulterated the effect of the sun becomes.
  • This is why European countries which aren’t as northerly as Norway no way get to witness the golden night- times of the night sun.

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