The hemisphere experiencing summer when the Antarctic Circle has 24 hours of darkness is the Northern Hemisphere. This is because when one pole is tilted away from the sun, the other pole is tilted towards it, resulting in longer days and warmer temperatures in the opposite hemisphere.
During the summer at the Tropic of Capricorn, the region that experiences 24 hours of darkness is the Antarctic Circle, located around the South Pole. This phenomenon is known as the Antarctic Polar Night and is due to the tilt of the Earth's axis away from the Sun during that time of year.
I'm not positive, but I think it's the June Solstice.
the tilt of the earth's axis
Never.The Antarctic Circle marks the latitude on planet earth south of which at least one 24-hour period has no sunrise or no sunset.All latitudes north of the Antarctic Circle experience one sunrise and one sunset each day...until the latitude of the Arctic Circle, where the reverse occurs.
The Arctic Circle is situated around the North Pole and marks the boundary where the sun stays above the horizon for 24 hours during the summer solstice. The Antarctic Circle is located around the South Pole and experiences the opposite, with 24-hour darkness during the winter solstice. The Equator, in contrast, is an imaginary line around the Earth's middle, where the sun is directly overhead at noon and daylight and darkness hours are more consistent throughout the year.
The Antarctic Circle
North of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic one, the periods of daylight and darkness both vary from zero to six months, during the course of a year.
This phenomenon occurs because the Earth tilts away from the sun, and this is the day where the extent of that phenomenon is shortest: one 24-hour period.
When the Arctic Circle experiences 24 hours of darkness, the hemisphere that experiences summer is the Southern Hemisphere. This is because the tilt of the Earth's axis causes opposite seasons in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
Areas north of the Artic Circle
Areas north of the Artic Circle