The length of day alone does not provide enough information to determine latitude. The length of day varies with latitude, but other factors such as time of year and location also influence it. To find latitude, you typically need additional information like the altitude of the sun at noon or the angle of the shadows cast by objects.
I need to know the latitude of places where the sun is overhead on any particular day. The information is needed to enable me to find latitude.
At 41 degrees north latitude, the amount of daylight gained per day varies throughout the year. Around the summer solstice in June, there can be up to an additional 3-4 minutes of daylight gained per day. Conversely, around the winter solstice in December, the length of daylight can decrease by around 3-4 minutes per day.
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As you move away from the equator towards the poles, several things change with latitude. These changes include temperature, day length, and the angle of sunlight, all of which can affect weather patterns and ecosystems in different regions.
The length of a day in the desert is the same as anywhere else on Earth, approximately 24 hours. The desert may experience longer daylight hours due to its location closer to the equator, which can lead to longer periods of sunlight during certain times of the year.
Everywhere: the length of the day is always 24 hours irrespective of latitude & longitude since the angular rotation of the planet is 360º per 24hours. The DAYLIGHT length changes seasonally and proportionally to latitude, but the DAY length is constant.
i dont know yet
The length of the day varies depending depending on latitude and season (Winter, Fall, etc.)
The length of day and night depend upon the season of the year and the latitude of the desert. Over a year it averages 12 hours of day and 12 hours of night.
If you mean the length of the day, yes - that is the same around the Earth. The Earth rotates as a rigid body. If by day length you mean hours of sunlight. On the same lines of latitude day length will be the same, but due to the wobble in the rotation of the earth, day length is different along lines of longitude.
The length of the day or night in a desert depends upon the location (latitude) of the desert and the season of the year.
I need to know the latitude of places where the sun is overhead on any particular day. The information is needed to enable me to find latitude.
1 degree longitude or latitude? What day of the year? Middle of winter, 1 degree latitude, no daylight. But middle of summer same place, 24 hours.
The length of a day is constant, no matter what the season and is fixed at 24 hours. The amount of daylight that a location receives during winter is dependent on its latitude.
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The length of day and night on Earth are not always equal. The amount of daylight and darkness varies depending on the time of year and the latitude of a location. This difference is more pronounced the closer you are to the poles and during the equinoxes.
Amounts of daylight vary by latitude, so there is no single answer. After reviewing some data from Encarta based on the amount of sunlight on the 15th of each month, I have found there to be 4,518h 5m of daylight in a year along the 40 degree latitude in the Northern Hemisphere. This number is a rough estimate, but should provide some insight to your question.