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28 units available
6 categories total
To convert millennia to years: multiply by 1,000. To centuries: multiply by 10.
1 millennium = 1,000 years = 100 decades = 10 centuries ≈ 365,250 average days.
For example, 1 Millennium (mil) = 8783984.181 Hour (Sidereal) (h (Sid)).
| Millennium (mil) | Hour (Sidereal) (h (Sid)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 878398.4181 |
| 0.5 | 4391992.09 |
| 1 | 8783984.181 |
| 2 | 17567968.36 |
| 5 | 43919920.9 |
| 10 | 87839841.81 |
| 25 | 219599604.5 |
| 50 | 439199209 |
| 100 | 878398418.1 |
| 500 | 4391992090 |
| 1000 | 8783984181 |
A millennium is a unit of time equal to 1,000 years, or approximately 365,250 days (31,536,000,000 seconds based on 365-day years).
1 millennium = 1,000 years = 100 decades = 10 centuries ≈ 365,250 average days.
To convert millennia to years: multiply by 1,000. To centuries: multiply by 10.
Archaeological dating, geological time references, long-term environmental projections, and civilization-scale history.
The 'Y2K bug' at the turn of the millennium cost an estimated $300 billion to fix worldwide. Writing was invented about 5 millennia ago.
Like centuries, the 3rd millennium began Jan 1, 2001, not 2000 — though the popular celebration was in 2000.
Think of milestones: ~10 ka = agriculture, ~5 ka = writing, ~2.5 ka = classical civilizations, ~0.5 ka = printing press.
The sidereal hour is 1/24 of a sidereal day — approximately 3,590.17 seconds (59 minutes and 50.17 seconds in solar time).
1 sidereal hour = 3,590.17 solar seconds ≈ 59 min 50.17 s in solar time. 24 sidereal hours = 1 sidereal day.
To convert sidereal hours to solar seconds: multiply by 3,590.17. To solar hours: multiply by 0.99727.
Right ascension in celestial coordinates is measured in hours (0–24 h of sidereal time), directly using sidereal hours.
Right ascension is measured in hours: 1 h of RA = 15° of sky. The entire sky is 24 sidereal hours in rotation.
Treating sidereal hours as exactly 60 solar minutes. The ~10-second difference matters for precision tracking.
If you use a star-tracking telescope, it rotates once per sidereal day (23h 56m). Each sidereal hour, it covers 15° of sky.



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