@infobeautyaward take note of this beauty for next years awards!
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Prikaži ovu nitHvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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It's a curious effect that my brain wants to believe that some of the polar areas get *more* than 24 hours of daylight as the chart hits against the boundary ;-)
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It just means that the sun at its lowest point is well abowe the hotizon
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Crazy how fast the poles go from 0 hours of sunlight to 24 hours, and back.
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Maybe it could be "fixed" adding the sun intensity in the chart, for example drawing a brightly or dark yellow.
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What I experienced when I visited the North Cape in Norway: there was 24/24 daylight, but nature had decided that day/night rhythm should still be working. So owls and bats where flying at 'night'.
Hvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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Nice animation. As we rapidly approach the time when we loose all sunlight for 2 months, my first instinct was to start pushing some back up in the animation

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Same here.
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Um, why is only half of Earth shown. If you could animate the yellow bars, it would be great to spin Earth so that, you know, Australia!
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Yes, but it would need a second timescale. If it was spinning at the rate consistent with the progress of time in the graph, it would look exactly as it does.
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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