Midnight sun
Midnight sun 1---688
This photo was taken at 12 p.m. in Norway and shows the sun that never sets there
This phenomenon is called the midnight sun... where the inhabitants of the Arctic Circle and part of its south live. There is also the phenomenon of the midnight sun, as the sun remains there throughout the day due to the tilt of the Earth’s axis these days at 23.5 degrees.
This phenomenon continues for several months, and in some areas only a few days, depending on the region’s distance from the Arctic Circle
The midnight sun is a natural phenomenon that occurs in the summer months in places located north of the Arctic Circle or south of the Antarctic Circle. When the sun is still visible at local midnight time. In the Arctic, the sun remains shining for six months between March 20 and September 23. In Antarctica, the sun remains above the horizon between September 23 and March 20. Continuous sunshine period diminished as we move away from the poles. The midnight sun appears for only a few days around June 21 at the imaginary line called the Arctic Circle; While it continues to appear for a day or two around December 21 at another imaginary line known as the Antarctic Circle. The midnight sun is generated by the Earth's axis tilting in one direction as the Earth rotates around the sun. One pole tilts toward the sun for six months, while the other tilts away from the sun, which also rotates around its axis. This movement causes the sun to rise and set at regular intervals. Causing day and night throughout the earth.
Areas such as the northern parts of Sweden and the northern cities of Alaska and Canada as well as parts of Iceland, Greenland and Russia are suitable for seeing the midnight sun in this period.


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