Instant · Precise · Universal
28 units available
6 categories total
To convert years to days: multiply by 365 (or 365.25 for average including leap years). To seconds: multiply by 31,536,000.
1 yr = 365 d = 8,760 h = 525,600 min = 31,536,000 s. A leap year has 366 days (31,622,400 s).
For example, 1 Year (365 days) (yr) = 0.9993155373 Year (Julian) (yr (Jul)).
| Year (365 days) (yr) | Year (Julian) (yr (Jul)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0.09993155373 |
| 0.5 | 0.4996577687 |
| 1 | 0.9993155373 |
| 2 | 1.998631075 |
| 5 | 4.996577687 |
| 10 | 9.993155373 |
| 25 | 24.98288843 |
| 50 | 49.96577687 |
| 100 | 99.93155373 |
| 500 | 499.6577687 |
| 1000 | 999.3155373 |
The common year is a unit of time equal to 365 days, or 31,536,000 seconds.
1 yr = 365 d = 8,760 h = 525,600 min = 31,536,000 s. A leap year has 366 days (31,622,400 s).
To convert years to days: multiply by 365 (or 365.25 for average including leap years). To seconds: multiply by 31,536,000.
Age calculation, financial year reporting, contract durations, academic years, and historical timeline reference.
The year 2000 was a leap year (divisible by 400), but 1900 was not (divisible by 100 but not 400). The Gregorian rule fixes the calendar's drift to 1 day per 3,236 years.
Assuming every 4th year is a leap year — century years must be divisible by 400 (so 1900 wasn't a leap year).
Leap year rule: divisible by 4 = leap, UNLESS divisible by 100, UNLESS also divisible by 400. So 2000 was, 1900 wasn't.
The Julian year is a unit of time equal to exactly 365.25 days (31,557,600 seconds), used as a standard in astronomy.
1 Julian year = 365.25 days = 8,766 hours = 31,557,600 seconds exactly.
To convert Julian years to seconds: multiply by 31,557,600. To common years: multiply by 365.25/365.
Defining the light-year, expressing stellar evolutionary timescales, and standardizing astronomical time intervals.
The Julian year is exactly 365.25 days — no exceptions. This simplicity is why astronomers prefer it over the variable Gregorian year.
Confusing the Julian year (365.25 d) with the Julian calendar (which has a specific leap year pattern). They are related but distinct.
When astronomers say 'light-year,' they mean the distance light travels in one Julian year (365.25 days), not a calendar year.



© 2026 UntangleTools. All Rights Reserved.