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Person re-identification (Re-ID) under extremely low-light conditions suffers from severe image degradation, which significantly impairs the extraction of identity-discriminative features. Existing methods struggle to recover semantic information that is obscured under poor illumination. To better understand this problem, we conduct a comprehensive analysis of the semantic modeling behavior of Re-ID models in low-light settings. For the first time, we investigate the norm distributions of Query (Q), Key (K), and Value (V) vectors within the attention module and observe that, as illumination decreases, the norm of Query vectors in pedestrian regions drops significantly. This leads to dispersed attention and degraded feature representations. To address this issue, we propose a novel framework named Norm-Ratio Attention and Semantic Recovery Distillation Network(NRSRD), which consists of two key components: a Norm-Ratio Attention Module (NRA) and a Semantic Recovery Distillation Module(SRD). The former dynamically adjusts attention responses based on the ratio of K/Q vector norms, enhancing structural region perception while suppressing background interference. The latter transfers discriminative semantic knowledge from high-illumination auxiliary data to the low-light model, compensating for the semantic degradation caused by poor lighting. Extensive experiments on multiple publicly available low-light Re-ID benchmarks demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed method.