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To convert weeks to days: multiply by 7. To convert weeks to hours: multiply by 168.
1 wk = 7 d = 168 h = 10,080 min = 604,800 s. A year has about 52.18 weeks.
For example, 1 Week (wk) = 1.121818e+49 Planck Time (tₚ).
| Week (wk) | Planck Time (tₚ) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 1.121818e+48 |
| 0.5 | 5.609092e+48 |
| 1 | 1.121818e+49 |
| 2 | 2.243637e+49 |
| 5 | 5.609092e+49 |
| 10 | 1.121818e+50 |
| 25 | 2.804546e+50 |
| 50 | 5.609092e+50 |
| 100 | 1.121818e+51 |
| 500 | 5.609092e+51 |
| 1000 | 1.121818e+52 |
The week is a unit of time equal to 7 days, or 604,800 seconds.
1 wk = 7 d = 168 h = 10,080 min = 604,800 s. A year has about 52.18 weeks.
To convert weeks to days: multiply by 7. To convert weeks to hours: multiply by 168.
Pay periods (biweekly), pregnancy tracking (40 weeks), sprint cycles in agile development, and workout schedules.
The seven-day week has no astronomical basis — unlike days, months, and years, it's a purely human invention. It has been continuous for thousands of years.
Assuming months are exactly 4 weeks — most months are 4.3 weeks (30–31 days). Only February in non-leap years is exactly 4 weeks.
Days of the week in many languages reflect the seven celestial bodies: Sun-day, Moon-day, Saturn-day, etc.
The Planck time is the smallest meaningful unit of time in physics — approximately 5.391 × 10⁻⁴⁴ seconds.
tₚ ≈ 5.391 × 10⁻⁴⁴ s. It takes ~1.855 × 10⁴³ Planck times to make one second.
To convert Planck times to seconds: multiply by 5.391 × 10⁻⁴⁴. To attoseconds: multiply by 5.391 × 10⁻²⁶.
No practical applications — Planck time is purely theoretical. No conceivable technology could measure time intervals this short.
The age of the universe is about 8.08 × 10⁶⁰ Planck times. In the first Planck time after the Big Bang, all four fundamental forces may have been unified.
Thinking of Planck time as the 'shortest possible time' — it's the scale where our current physics breaks down, not necessarily a fundamental limit.
Planck time sets the scale where quantum mechanics and gravity intersect. Below this scale, we need a theory of quantum gravity we don't yet have.



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