Instant · Precise · Universal
28 units available
6 categories total
To convert months to days: multiply by 30.44 (average). To convert to weeks: multiply by 4.35 (approximate).
1 average month ≈ 30.44 days ≈ 4.35 weeks ≈ 730.5 hours ≈ 2,629,800 seconds.
For example, 1 Month (Average) (mo) = 732.5000507 Hour (Sidereal) (h (Sid)).
| Month (Average) (mo) | Hour (Sidereal) (h (Sid)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 73.25000507 |
| 0.5 | 366.2500253 |
| 1 | 732.5000507 |
| 2 | 1465.000101 |
| 5 | 3662.500253 |
| 10 | 7325.000507 |
| 25 | 18312.50127 |
| 50 | 36625.00253 |
| 100 | 73250.00507 |
| 500 | 366250.0253 |
| 1000 | 732500.0507 |
The average month is a unit of time equal to approximately 30.44 days (2,629,800 seconds), representing 1/12 of a Gregorian calendar year.
1 average month ≈ 30.44 days ≈ 4.35 weeks ≈ 730.5 hours ≈ 2,629,800 seconds.
To convert months to days: multiply by 30.44 (average). To convert to weeks: multiply by 4.35 (approximate).
Billing cycles, rent payments, project milestones, medication tracking, and age calculations (especially for infants).
The mnemonic '30 days hath September' dates to the 13th century. February's 28 days result from Augustus taking a day for August from February.
Treating all months as 30 days. For precise calculations, always account for actual month lengths.
The knuckle trick: make fists, count across knuckles (bumps = 31 days, valleys = 30 or fewer). Start with January on the first knuckle.
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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