Instant · Precise · Universal
28 units available
6 categories total
To convert synodic months to days: multiply by 29.53059. To convert to calendar months: multiply by ~0.970.
1 synodic month ≈ 29.53059 days ≈ 708.73 hours. Longer than a sidereal month (27.32 days) because Earth also moves in its orbit.
For example, 1 Month (Synodic) (mo (syn)) = 29.61144209 Day (Sidereal) (d (Sid)).
| Month (Synodic) (mo (syn)) | Day (Sidereal) (d (Sid)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 2.961144209 |
| 0.5 | 14.80572104 |
| 1 | 29.61144209 |
| 2 | 59.22288418 |
| 5 | 148.0572104 |
| 10 | 296.1144209 |
| 25 | 740.2860522 |
| 50 | 1480.572104 |
| 100 | 2961.144209 |
| 500 | 14805.72104 |
| 1000 | 29611.44209 |
The synodic month is the time between two successive new moons — approximately 29.53059 days (2,551,442.976 seconds).
1 synodic month ≈ 29.53059 days ≈ 708.73 hours. Longer than a sidereal month (27.32 days) because Earth also moves in its orbit.
To convert synodic months to days: multiply by 29.53059. To convert to calendar months: multiply by ~0.970.
Islamic calendar months, tidal cycle predictions, menstrual cycle correlations, and astronomical event planning.
The synodic month is ~2.2 days longer than the sidereal month because the Moon must 'catch up' to the same Sun-Earth-Moon alignment as Earth orbits.
Confusing synodic month with calendar month. The synodic month is ~29.5 days, shorter than most calendar months.
Watch the Moon for a full cycle from new moon to new moon — that's one synodic month (~29.5 days).
The sidereal day is the time for Earth to rotate once relative to distant stars — approximately 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds (86,164.0905 seconds).
1 sidereal day ≈ 23 h 56 min 4.09 s = 86,164.09 s. About 3 min 56 s shorter than a solar day.
To convert sidereal days to solar days: multiply by 0.99727. To hours: multiply by 23.9345.
Telescope pointing and tracking, satellite ground track calculations, and astronomical observation scheduling.
Because of the ~4-minute difference, the night sky shifts gradually — the same star appears at the same position about 4 minutes earlier each night.
Equating sidereal day with solar day. The ~4-minute difference accumulates — after 6 months, sidereal noon is at solar midnight.
Imagine Earth spinning AND orbiting: after one full spin (sidereal day), Earth has moved in its orbit, so the Sun hasn't quite returned to the same position — that takes ~4 more minutes.



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