Day to Decade Converter
Convert days to decades with our free online time converter.
Quick Answer
1 Day = 0.000274 decades
Formula: Day × conversion factor = Decade
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.
Day to Decade Calculator
How to Use the Day to Decade Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Day).
- The converted value in Decade will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Time category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Day to Decade: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Day to Decade involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Day = 0.000273791 decadesExample Calculation:
Convert 60 days: 60 × 0.000273791 = 0.0164274 decades
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
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View all Time conversions →What is a Day and a Decade?
The day (symbol: d) is a unit of time equal to 24 hours, 1,440 minutes, or 86,400 seconds.
Official civil definition: Since 1967, one day is defined as exactly 86,400 SI seconds, where each second equals 9,192,631,770 periods of caesium-133 radiation. Therefore:
- 1 day = 86,400 × 9,192,631,770 = 793,927,920,332,800,000 caesium-133 oscillations
- This equals approximately 794 quadrillion atomic oscillations
Astronomical definitions:
-
Solar day (apparent solar day):
- Time between two successive transits of the Sun across the local meridian (noon to noon)
- Varies throughout year: ±16 minutes due to Earth's elliptical orbit and axial tilt
- Mean solar day: Average of all solar days = 24 hours exactly (86,400 seconds)
- This is the basis for civil timekeeping
-
Sidereal day:
- Time for Earth to rotate 360° relative to distant stars
- 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4.09 seconds (86,164.09 seconds)
- ~4 minutes shorter than solar day
- Used in astronomy for telescope tracking and star charts
-
Synodic day (planetary science):
- Time for same position of sun in sky on other planets
- Mars sol: 24 hours, 39 minutes, 35 seconds
- Venus day: 116.75 Earth days (very slow rotation)
Why the difference?
- Earth rotates 360° in one sidereal day
- But Earth also orbits the Sun (~1° per day along orbit)
- Must rotate an additional ~1° (4 minutes) for sun to return to same position
- Result: Solar day = sidereal day + ~4 minutes
- Over one year: 365 solar days, but 366 sidereal days (one extra rotation)
A decade is a unit of time equal to 10 consecutive years. The word derives from Ancient Greek "dekas" (δεκάς), meaning "a group of ten."
Duration in Other Units
1 decade equals:
- 10 years (exactly)
- 120 months (10 × 12 months)
- ~520 weeks (10 × 52.18 weeks)
- 3,652 days (common years) or 3,653 days (including leap years)
- Average: 3,652.5 days (accounting for leap year cycle)
- 87,660 hours (3,652.5 × 24)
- 5,259,600 minutes (87,660 × 60)
- 315,576,000 seconds (5,259,600 × 60)
Decade Boundaries: The 0 vs. 1 Debate
Popular usage (dominant):
- 1980s = 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 (years ending 0-9)
- 1990s = 1990-1999
- 2000s = 2000-2009
- 2010s = 2010-2019
- 2020s = 2020-2029
Formal reckoning (pedantic, rarely used):
- Because there was no year 0 in the Gregorian calendar (1 BCE → 1 CE directly), decades "should" span 1-10:
- 1st decade = 1-10 CE
- 199th decade = 1981-1990
- 200th decade = 1991-2000
- 201st decade = 2001-2010
Reality: Popular usage (0-9) dominates overwhelmingly. When people say "the 1980s," they mean 1980-1989, not 1981-1990. Cultural identity, nostalgia, and historical analysis all use the 0-9 convention.
Note: The Day is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Decade belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Day and Decade
of the Day
Prehistoric Recognition (Before 3000 BCE)
The day-night cycle is the most fundamental observable pattern in nature, recognized by all human cultures and even animals:
Biological origins:
- Circadian rhythms: Internal ~24-hour biological clock evolved in response to Earth's rotation
- Found in bacteria, plants, animals, humans
- Regulated by light/dark cycle
- Predates human civilization by billions of years
Early human observation:
- Stone Age: Organized activities by sun position (hunting at dawn, gathering by day)
- Neolithic era: Agricultural cycles tied to day length (planting, harvesting)
- Megalithic monuments: Stonehenge (c. 3000 BCE) aligned with solstice sunrise
- Earliest "clocks": Shadows cast by objects (proto-sundials)
Ancient Egyptian Timekeeping (c. 3000 BCE)
Egyptians formalized day measurement:
-
Shadow clocks and sundials (c. 1500 BCE):
- Obelisks cast shadows indicating time of day
- Divided daylight into 12 parts (seasonal hours)
- Used horizontal bars with markings
-
Water clocks (clepsydrae):
- Used at night when sundials didn't work
- Water dripped at constant rate through calibrated container
- Divided night into 12 parts
-
Decans (star clocks):
- 36 groups of stars rising throughout year
- Each decan rose ~40 minutes apart
- Used to tell time at night
Egyptian day structure:
- Day began at sunrise (variable time)
- 12 hours daylight + 12 hours darkness = 24 hours
- But "hours" varied by season (longer daytime hours in summer)
Babylonian Contributions (c. 2000 BCE)
Babylonians established key concepts:
-
Seven-day week:
- Based on seven visible celestial bodies (Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn)
- Each day named after a planet/god
- This system spread globally
-
Day began at sunset:
- Still used in Hebrew and Islamic calendars
- Genesis 1:5: "And there was evening, and there was morning—the first day"
-
Base-60 mathematics:
- Eventually led to 24 hours, 60 minutes, 60 seconds
- 360° circle (from ~360 days in year)
Greek and Roman Systems (500 BCE - 400 CE)
Greek astronomers:
- Hipparchus (c. 150 BCE): Studied equation of time (variation in solar day length)
- Recognized need for "mean solar day" as average
Roman timekeeping:
- Day began at midnight (adopted by modern civil timekeeping)
- Divided into:
- Dies (daytime): Sunrise to sunset, 12 horae (hours)
- Nox (nighttime): Sunset to sunrise, 4 vigiliae (watches) of ~3 hours each
- Market day cycle: Nundinae (8-day week, superseded by 7-day week)
Roman calendar influence:
- Julian Calendar (45 BCE): 365.25-day year, leap years
- Day names from planets (still used): Sunday (Sun), Monday (Moon), Saturday (Saturn)
Medieval and Islamic Developments (600-1300 CE)
Islamic timekeeping:
- Day begins at sunset (following Hebrew tradition)
- Five daily prayers (salat) structured the day:
- Fajr (dawn), Dhuhr (noon), Asr (afternoon), Maghrib (sunset), Isha (night)
- Sophisticated astronomical tables calculated prayer times
- "Islamic day" vs. "civil day" distinction in Muslim countries
Medieval Christian hours:
- Canonical hours: Structured monastic life
- Matins (midnight), Lauds (dawn), Prime (6 AM), Terce (9 AM)
- Sext (noon), None (3 PM), Vespers (sunset), Compline (bedtime)
- Church bells marked these hours, organizing community life
Mechanical Clocks and Equal Hours (1300s)
Transformation of daily time:
Before mechanical clocks:
- "Hours" varied by season
- Time was task-oriented ("work until sunset")
- Imprecise coordination
After mechanical clocks (1300s-1400s):
- 24 equal hours became standard
- Clocks tick at constant rate regardless of season
- "Clock time" replaced "sun time" for daily schedules
- Enabled precise coordination of activities
Social impact:
- Time discipline: Workers expected at specific times
- Urban life required synchronization
- "Punctuality" became a virtue
- Transition from natural rhythms to mechanical rhythms
Scientific Definition (1800s)
Astronomical measurement:
- 1832: Second officially defined as 1/86,400 of mean solar day
- Astronomers recognized Earth's rotation not perfectly uniform
- Tidal friction slowly increases day length (~1.7 milliseconds per century)
Problem discovered:
- Earth's rotation varies:
- Seasonal variations (atmosphere, ice melt)
- Long-term slowing (tidal friction from Moon)
- Irregular variations (core-mantle coupling, earthquakes)
- "Day" based on Earth rotation became unreliable time standard
Atomic Era: Day Decoupled from Rotation (1967)
Atomic second (1967):
- Second redefined based on caesium-133 atomic transitions
- Day remains 86,400 seconds (by definition)
- But now independent of Earth's actual rotation period
Consequence: Leap seconds
- Earth's rotation gradually slowing
- Atomic time (TAI) and Earth rotation time (UT1) drift apart
- Leap seconds added to keep them synchronized:
- 27 leap seconds added between 1972-2016
- Last one: December 31, 2016 (23:59:60)
- Makes that day 86,401 seconds long
- Controversy: May abolish leap seconds in favor of "leap hours" every few centuries
Current system:
- UTC (Coordinated Universal Time): Atomic time with leap seconds
- Keeps within 0.9 seconds of Earth rotation (UT1)
- Used for civil timekeeping worldwide
Calendar Evolution
Ancient calendars:
- Lunar calendars: Based on moon phases (~29.5 days per month)
- Solar calendars: Based on seasonal year (365.25 days)
- Lunisolar calendars: Combine both (Hebrew, Chinese)
Gregorian Calendar (1582):
- Reformed Julian calendar
- Year = 365.2425 days (very close to true solar year: 365.2422 days)
- Leap year rules:
- Divisible by 4: Leap year (1600, 2000, 2004, 2024)
- Divisible by 100: Not leap year (1700, 1800, 1900)
- Divisible by 400: Leap year anyway (1600, 2000, 2400)
- Now used in nearly all countries for civil purposes
of the Decade Concept
1. Ancient Origins: Base-10 Counting (Prehistoric)
The human preference for base-10 (decimal) counting stems from having 10 fingers, making groups of 10 natural for organization.
Early base-10 applications:
- Ancient Egypt (~3000 BCE): Hieroglyphic numerals based on powers of 10
- Ancient China (~1500 BCE): Decimal system in oracle bone inscriptions
- Ancient Greece (~500 BCE): Decimal counting, though 12 and 60 also important
- Ancient Rome: Latin "decem" (ten) gave root to "decade"
Why 10-year groups? Humans naturally organize time into manageable chunks. A year is too short for long-term trends, a century too long for human memory—a decade provides a Goldilocks timescale for pattern recognition.
2. Medieval and Renaissance Period (500-1600 CE)
"Decade" as general term:
- Originally meant any group of 10 (10 books, 10 prayers, 10 beads)
- Rosary decades: Catholic rosary divided into 5 decades (groups of 10 Hail Marys)
- Literary decades: Collections of 10 stories or books (e.g., Boccaccio's "Decameron" = 10 days of stories)
Not yet specifically time-related: Medieval and Renaissance writers used "decade" for groupings, but not systematically for 10-year periods in historical analysis.
3. Enlightenment and Modern Historical Analysis (1700s-1800s)
Systematic historical periodization emerged:
- 18th-century historians began organizing events by 10-year periods for analysis
- Statistical thinking (late 1700s-1800s): Governments collected data in 10-year intervals
- US Census (1790-present): Conducted every 10 years, reinforcing decade thinking
- Economic cycles: Analysts noticed decade-scale patterns in markets, trade
Why decades gained prominence:
- Human lifespan scale: 10 years = noticeable change but within living memory
- Generational overlap: Enough time for trends to develop but not so long that witnesses die
- Data collection: Census and economic data naturally aligned with 10-year cycles
- Psychological salience: Decade birthdays (30, 40, 50, 60) mark life transitions
4. 20th Century: Decades as Cultural Identifiers (1900s-2000s)
The 20th century saw decades become powerful cultural and historical labels:
Early examples:
- "The Gay Nineties" (1890s): Retrospective label for late Victorian optimism
- "The Roaring Twenties" (1920s): Jazz Age, prohibition, economic boom, flapper culture
- "The Thirties" (1930s): Great Depression, Dust Bowl, rise of fascism
Post-WWII decade labels (most influential):
- "The Fifties" (1950s): Post-war prosperity, suburbs, rock and roll, Cold War begins
- "The Sixties" (1960s): Civil rights, Vietnam War, counterculture, sexual revolution, moon landing
- "The Seventies" (1970s): Disco, oil crisis, stagflation, Watergate, punk rock
- "The Eighties" (1980s): Reagan/Thatcher, Cold War end, MTV, personal computers, Wall Street boom
- "The Nineties" (1990s): Grunge, dot-com boom, end of Cold War, globalization, early internet
Why 20th-century decades are so culturally distinct:
- Rapid change: Technology, politics, culture shifted dramatically every 10 years
- Mass media: Radio (1920s-50s), TV (1950s-2000s), MTV (1980s-90s) amplified decade identity
- Music genres: Each decade had distinctive music (jazz/20s, rock/50s, disco/70s, grunge/90s)
- Fashion cycles: 10-year fashion trends reinforced decade boundaries
- Political eras: Often aligned with decade boundaries (Kennedy/60s, Reagan/80s)
5. 21st Century: Digital Age Decades (2000s-Present)
New challenges to decade identity:
- "The 2000s" = linguistic problem (no catchy name: noughties? aughts? two-thousands?)
- Faster change: Internet, smartphones, social media accelerate cultural shifts
- Decade labels less distinct: 2000s and 2010s harder to characterize uniquely
- Nostalgia cycles: 1980s and 1990s nostalgia dominated 2010s-2020s
2000s decade naming attempts:
- "Noughties" (British English): From "nought" (zero)
- "Aughts" (American English): From "aught" (zero, archaic)
- "Two-thousands": Clunky but functional
- "The zeros": Rarely used
2010s:
- "The twenty-tens" or "the tens": More natural linguistically
- Cultural markers: Smartphones ubiquitous, social media dominance, streaming services
2020s (current decade):
- "The twenties": Natural label, but overlaps with "Roaring Twenties" (1920s)
- COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2023) defined early decade
- Climate change, AI revolution, geopolitical shifts
Common Uses and Applications: days vs decades
Explore the typical applications for both Day (imperial/US) and Decade (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for days
and Applications
1. Age and Lifespan Measurement
Human life measured in days:
-
Age calculation:
- Newborn: Age in days (first month)
- Infant: Days and weeks (first 12 months)
- Adult: Years (365.25 days per year)
-
Life expectancy:
- Global average: ~73 years = 26,645 days
- US average: ~78 years = 28,470 days
- Japan (highest): ~84 years = 30,660 days
-
Milestones:
- 100 days: Traditional celebration in some cultures
- 1,000 days: ~2.7 years (toddler milestone)
- 10,000 days: ~27.4 years (young adult)
- 20,000 days: ~54.8 years (mid-life)
- 30,000 days: ~82.2 years (if reached, long life)
-
Historical figures:
- "Lived 90 years" = 32,850 days
- Queen Elizabeth II: 35,065 days (96 years, 140 days)
- Oldest verified person: Jeanne Calment, 44,724 days (122 years, 164 days)
2. Project Management and Planning
Projects measured in days:
-
Timeline terminology:
- "Day 0": Project start
- "Elapsed days": Total calendar days
- "Working days": Excluding weekends/holidays
- "Man-days": One person working one day
-
Estimation:
- "3-day task"
- "2-week project" = 10 working days
- "6-month project" = ~130 working days
-
Milestones:
- "Deliverable due Day 30"
- "Phase 1 complete Day 45"
- "Final deadline Day 90"
-
Agile/Scrum:
- Sprint: 14 days (2 weeks) typical
- Daily standup: Every day, 15 minutes
- Sprint review: End of 14-day sprint
3. Astronomy and Planetary Science
Planetary rotation periods measured in days:
-
Planetary "days" (rotation period):
- Mercury: 58.6 Earth days
- Venus: 243 Earth days (slower than its year!)
- Earth: 1 day (23 hours 56 min sidereal)
- Mars: 1.03 days (24 hours 37 min) - called a "sol"
- Jupiter: 0.41 days (9 hours 56 min)
- Saturn: 0.45 days (10 hours 33 min)
- Uranus: 0.72 days (17 hours 14 min)
- Neptune: 0.67 days (16 hours 6 min)
-
Orbital periods (years in days):
- Mercury year: 88 Earth days
- Venus year: 225 Earth days
- Mars year: 687 Earth days
- Earth year: 365.25 days
-
Mars missions:
- Use "sols" (Mars days) for mission planning
- Sol 1, Sol 2, Sol 3... (rovers like Curiosity, Perseverance)
- Communication delay: 3-22 minutes (depends on planets' positions)
-
Astronomical events:
- Lunar month: 29.53 days (new moon to new moon)
- Eclipse cycles: Saros cycle = 6,585.3 days (18 years, 11 days)
4. Weather and Climate
Weather patterns measured in days:
-
Forecasting:
- 1-day forecast: Very accurate (~90%)
- 3-day forecast: Accurate (~80%)
- 7-day forecast: Moderately accurate (~65%)
- 10+ day forecast: Less reliable
-
Weather phenomena:
- Heat wave: 3+ consecutive days above threshold
- Cold snap: 2+ days below freezing
- Drought: 15+ days without significant rain
-
Seasonal patterns:
- Growing season: Number of frost-free days (150-200+ days)
- Rainy season: 90-180 days (tropics)
- Winter: Shortest day (winter solstice) vs. longest night
-
Degree days:
- Heating degree days (HDD): Measure of cold
- Cooling degree days (CDD): Measure of heat
- Base 65°F: Sum of daily degrees below/above
-
Climate records:
- "Hottest day on record"
- "100 days above 90°F" (Phoenix averages 110+ days)
- "Consecutive days of rain" (record: 331 days, Kauai)
5. Finance and Business
Financial operations measured in days:
-
Payment terms:
- Net 30: Payment due 30 days after invoice
- Net 60: Payment due 60 days after invoice
- 2/10 Net 30: 2% discount if paid within 10 days, otherwise due in 30
-
Interest calculation:
- Daily interest: Annual rate ÷ 365 days
- Grace period: 21-25 days (credit cards)
- Late fees: Applied after due date + grace period
-
Financial metrics:
- Days sales outstanding (DSO): Average days to collect payment
- Days payable outstanding (DPO): Average days to pay suppliers
- Days inventory outstanding (DIO): Average days inventory held
-
Trading:
- "Trading day": Stock market open day (weekdays, excluding holidays)
- NYSE: ~252 trading days per year
- Settlement: T+2 (trade day + 2 business days)
-
Bonds:
- Accrued interest calculated by day
- 30/360 day count convention (assumes 30-day months)
- Actual/365: Uses actual calendar days
6. Data Storage and Computing
Digital retention measured in days:
-
Backups:
- Daily backups: 7 days retained (1 week)
- Weekly backups: 30 days retained (1 month)
- Monthly backups: 365 days retained (1 year)
-
Logs:
- Server logs: 30-90 days retention typical
- Security logs: 90-365 days (compliance requirements)
- Application logs: 14-30 days
-
Caching:
- Browser cache: 30 days default
- CDN cache: 1-30 days depending on content
- DNS cache: 1 day (86,400 seconds TTL common)
-
Data retention policies:
- GDPR: 30 days to fulfill deletion request
- Email: Auto-delete after 90 days (some organizations)
- Trash/recycle bin: 30 days before permanent deletion
7. Habits and Personal Development
Habit formation measured in days:
-
Popular beliefs:
- "21 days to form a habit" (myth - actually varies widely)
- "30-day challenge" (fitness, meditation, etc.)
- "90-day transformation programs"
-
Research findings:
- Average habit formation: 66 days (range: 18-254 days)
- Simple habits: 18-30 days
- Complex habits: 200+ days
-
Streaks:
- "100-day streak" on language apps (Duolingo)
- "30-day yoga challenge"
- "365-day photo project" (one photo per day for a year)
-
Reading goals:
- "Read every day for 30 days"
- "One book per week" = finish in 7 days
- "365 books in a year" = 1 per day
When to Use decades
and Applications
1. Age and Life Stage Communication
"In my [decade]" describes life stage:
- "In my twenties": Young adulthood, career building, dating/marriage
- "In my thirties": Career advancement, family raising, homeownership
- "In my forties": Peak earning years, midlife transitions
- "In my fifties": Late career, empty nest, retirement planning
- "In my sixties": Retirement, grandparenting, senior status
More specific than single age: "I'm in my early thirties" conveys life stage better than "I'm 32."
2. Historical Analysis and Research
Decade-by-decade comparison standard:
- "Income in 1970 vs. 2020": 5-decade comparison
- "Homicide rates declined every decade since 1990s": Decade-scale trend
- "Technology adoption: 2000s smartphones, 2010s tablets, 2020s AI"
Academic papers often structured by decade:
- "This study examines voting patterns across three decades (1980s-2000s)"
3. Goal Setting and Life Planning
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years?" = classic interview/life question
10-year planning horizons:
- Personal goals: "Get promoted within a decade," "Be debt-free in 10 years"
- Savings goals: "Save $100K over next decade"
- Health goals: "Run marathon before I turn 40" (decade milestone)
Vision boards and bucket lists: Often include decade milestones (30th birthday trip, 40th marathon).
4. Demographic and Market Segmentation
Age groups by decade:
- 18-29: Young adults (target for entry-level products, dating apps)
- 30-39: Prime family/career demographic (target for houses, minivans, life insurance)
- 40-49: Peak earning (target for luxury goods, college savings plans)
- 50-59: Pre-retirement (target for wealth management, travel)
- 60+: Seniors (target for retirement services, healthcare)
Market research: "Millennials in their thirties prefer [X], while Gen X in their fifties prefer [Y]."
5. Forecasting and Trend Prediction
"Next decade" predictions common:
- Technology: "AI will transform work in the next decade"
- Climate: "2020s critical decade for climate action"
- Economics: "Inflation forecasts for the decade ahead"
Industry roadmaps: Auto industry "2030 targets" = decade-scale planning (all-electric by 2030).
6. Reunion and Anniversary Events
Class reunions every decade:
- 10-year reunion: Compare life trajectories, still young
- 20-year reunion: Mid-life, established careers/families
- 30-year reunion: Late career, nostalgia peaks
- 50-year reunion: Senior years, mortality awareness
Anniversary milestones: Companies, organizations celebrate 10th, 25th, 50th, 100th anniversaries.
7. Sports Records and Comparisons
"Athlete of the Decade" awards:
- AP Athlete of the Decade: Michael Jordan (1990s), Tiger Woods (2000s), Lionel Messi (2010s)
- Team dominance: "Yankees dominated baseball in 1990s," "Patriots dynasty in 2010s"
Decade statistics: "Home runs per decade in MLB" = long-term trend analysis.
Additional Unit Information
About Day (d)
How many hours are in a day?
Exactly 24 hours in a standard civil day.
This is a defined constant: 1 day = 24 hours = 1,440 minutes = 86,400 seconds.
Exception: Daylight Saving Time transitions create days with 23 hours (spring forward) or 25 hours (fall back) in regions that observe DST.
How many seconds are in a day?
Exactly 86,400 seconds in a standard day.
Calculation: 24 hours × 60 minutes × 60 seconds = 86,400 seconds
Since 1967, this equals 793,927,920,332,800,000 caesium-133 oscillations (~794 quadrillion).
Exception: Days with leap seconds have 86,401 seconds (last occurred December 31, 2016).
Is every day exactly 24 hours long?
For civil timekeeping: Yes. The day is defined as exactly 24 hours (86,400 seconds).
For Earth's rotation: No. Earth's actual rotation period varies:
- Gradually slowing (~1.7 milliseconds per century) due to tidal friction from Moon
- Seasonal variations (±1 millisecond) from atmospheric/oceanic changes
- Irregular variations from earthquakes, ice melt, core-mantle coupling
Solution: Leap seconds occasionally added to keep clock time synchronized with Earth's rotation (within 0.9 seconds).
What's the difference between a solar day and a sidereal day?
Solar day (24 hours):
- Time from one solar noon to the next (sun at highest point)
- What we use for civil timekeeping
- Accounts for Earth's orbit around sun
Sidereal day (23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds):
- Time for Earth to rotate 360° relative to distant stars
- Used in astronomy for telescope tracking
- ~4 minutes shorter than solar day
Why the difference? After Earth rotates 360° (one sidereal day), it has moved ~1° along its orbit. It must rotate an additional ~1° (~4 minutes) for the sun to return to the same position in the sky.
Result: 365 solar days per year, but 366 sidereal days per year (one extra rotation due to orbit).
Why does February have 28 days?
Historical reasons:
-
Roman calendar (753 BCE):
- Originally 10 months, 304 days (March-December)
- Winter was monthless period
-
Numa Pompilius reform (c. 713 BCE):
- Added January and February
- Romans considered even numbers unlucky
- Made most months 29 or 31 days
- February got leftover days: 28 (occasionally 29)
-
Julius Caesar (45 BCE):
- Julian calendar: 365.25-day year
- Added day to February every 4 years (leap year)
- February remained shortest month
-
Pope Gregory XIII (1582):
- Gregorian calendar reform
- Refined leap year rules
- February kept 28/29-day structure
Why not fix it? Changing calendar would disrupt billions of systems worldwide (contracts, software, cultural traditions).
How many days are in a year?
Common year: 365 days Leap year: 366 days
Solar/tropical year (Earth's orbit): 365.2422 days (365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, 46 seconds)
Leap year rules (Gregorian calendar):
- Divisible by 4: Leap year (2024, 2028)
- Divisible by 100: Not leap year (2100, 2200)
- Divisible by 400: Leap year (2000, 2400)
Average Gregorian year: 365.2425 days (very close to true solar year)
Other calendar systems:
- Islamic calendar: 354 days (lunar)
- Hebrew calendar: 353-385 days (lunisolar, variable)
- Julian calendar: 365.25 days (old system, now obsolete)
What is a leap second?
A leap second is an extra second added to clocks to keep atomic time synchronized with Earth's rotation.
Why needed:
- Earth's rotation gradually slowing (tidal friction)
- Atomic clocks run at constant rate (86,400 seconds per day)
- Without leap seconds, clock time would drift from solar time
How it works:
- Added at end of June 30 or December 31
- Clock reads 23:59:59 → 23:59:60 → 00:00:00 (next day)
- That day has 86,401 seconds instead of 86,400
History:
- 27 leap seconds added between 1972-2016
- Last one: December 31, 2016
- None added since (Earth's rotation has been speeding up slightly)
Controversy:
- Causes problems for computer systems
- Proposed to abolish in favor of letting atomic time drift (then add "leap hour" every few centuries)
How do different cultures define when a day starts?
Different traditions begin the day at different times:
Midnight (00:00) - Modern civil time:
- Used by most countries for official purposes
- Inherited from Roman tradition
- Convenient for business (avoids confusion around midday)
Sunset - Jewish and Islamic tradition:
- Hebrew calendar: Day begins at sunset
- Islamic calendar: Day begins at sunset
- Biblical: "And there was evening, and there was morning—the first day"
- Makes sense for agricultural societies
Dawn/Sunrise - Ancient Egypt, Hinduism:
- Egyptian day began at sunrise
- Hindu day traditionally begins at sunrise
- Natural marker of "beginning" of daylight
Noon - Ancient Babylonians (some periods):
- Based on sun at highest point
- Astronomical reference
Modern inconsistency:
- Civil day: Midnight
- Religious calendars: Often sunset
- Common language: "Day" often means daylight hours only
How old am I in days?
Formula: Age in days = (Years × 365.25) + extra days since last birthday
Example:
- Born January 1, 2000
- Today is November 26, 2024
- Age: 24 years, 329 days
- Days: (24 × 365.25) + 329 ≈ 9,095 days
Online calculators:
- Many websites calculate exact age in days
- Account for actual leap years experienced
- Can calculate down to hours/minutes/seconds
Milestones:
- 1,000 days: ~2.7 years old
- 10,000 days: ~27.4 years old ("10,000-day birthday")
- 20,000 days: ~54.8 years old
- 30,000 days: ~82.2 years old (if reached)
Why is a week 7 days?
Ancient origins:
-
Babylonian astronomy (c. 2000 BCE):
- Seven visible celestial bodies: Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn
- Each "ruled" one day
- 7-day planetary week
-
Biblical/Jewish tradition:
- Genesis creation story: God created world in 6 days, rested on 7th
- Sabbath (7th day) holy day of rest
- Commandment: "Remember the Sabbath day"
-
Roman adoption:
- Romans adopted 7-day week (1st-3rd century CE)
- Named days after planets/gods
- Spread throughout Roman Empire
-
Global spread:
- Christianity spread 7-day week with Sunday as holy day
- Islam adopted 7-day week with Friday as holy day
- Now universal worldwide
Why not 10 days?
- French Revolution tried 10-day week (1793-1805) - failed
- USSR tried 5-day and 6-day weeks (1929-1940) - abandoned
- 7-day week too culturally embedded to change
Day names (English):
- Sunday: Sun's day
- Monday: Moon's day
- Tuesday: Tiw's day (Norse god)
- Wednesday: Woden's day (Odin)
- Thursday: Thor's day
- Friday: Frigg's day (Norse goddess)
- Saturday: Saturn's day
Can a day ever be longer or shorter than 24 hours?
For civil timekeeping: Usually no. A day is defined as exactly 24 hours (86,400 seconds).
Exceptions:
-
Leap seconds:
- Day with leap second = 86,401 seconds (0.001% longer)
- 27 instances between 1972-2016
- Adds one second at end of June 30 or December 31
-
Daylight Saving Time:
- "Spring forward" day: 23 hours (lose 1 hour)
- "Fall back" day: 25 hours (gain 1 hour)
- Only in regions observing DST
-
Time zone transitions:
- Crossing International Date Line can skip or repeat a day
- Country changing time zones can alter day length
-
Earth's actual rotation:
- Varies by ±1 millisecond seasonally
- Gradually slowing (~1.7 ms per century)
- But civil day remains fixed at 86,400 seconds
Historical:
- Ancient "seasonal hours" made days vary by season
- Equal 24-hour days standardized with mechanical clocks (1300s)
About Decade (dec)
1. How many years are in one decade?
Exactly 10 years. The word "decade" comes from Greek "dekas" (δεκάς), meaning "group of ten."
Other units:
- 1 decade = 10 years = 120 months = ~3,652.5 days = 87,660 hours
2. How are decades typically named or referred to?
By tens digit: "The 1980s" (1980-1989), "the 2020s" (2020-2029).
Nicknames for famous decades:
- 1920s: "The Roaring Twenties," "The Jazz Age"
- 1950s: "The Fifties"
- 1960s: "The Sixties," "The Swinging Sixties"
- 2000s: "The Noughties" (UK), "The Aughts" (US), "The Two-Thousands"
3. Does a decade start with a year ending in 0 or 1?
Popular usage (dominant): Decades start with years ending in 0.
- The 1980s = 1980-1989
- The 2020s = 2020-2029
Formal reckoning (rarely used): Because there was no year 0, decades technically span 1-10.
- The 199th decade = 1981-1990
Conclusion: Popular usage (0-9) dominates in all practical contexts.
4. What decade am I in if I'm 35 years old?
You're in your fourth decade of life.
Breakdown:
- First decade: Birth (0) to 10th birthday (10) = ages 0-9
- Second decade: Ages 10-19
- Third decade: Ages 20-29
- Fourth decade: Ages 30-39 ← You are here at age 35
- Fifth decade: Ages 40-49
Mnemonic: Count the completed decades + 1. At age 35, you've completed 3 decades (0-10, 10-20, 20-30) and are in your 4th.
5. Is the decade an SI unit?
No. The decade is not part of the International System of Units (SI). The SI base unit for time is the second.
Non-SI time units commonly used:
- Minute (60 seconds)
- Hour (3,600 seconds)
- Day (~86,400 seconds)
- Year (~31.5 million seconds)
- Decade (~315 million seconds)
Scientific contexts: Research often uses SI units like kiloyears (kyr = 1,000 years) or megayears (Myr = 1 million years) rather than decades.
6. How many days are in a decade?
Approximately 3,652.5 days (accounting for leap years).
Calculation:
- 10 years × 365 days = 3,650 days
- Plus ~2.5 leap days per decade = 3,652.5 days
Exact number varies: Depends on leap year distribution in the specific decade.
- Decade with 2 leap years: 3,652 days
- Decade with 3 leap years: 3,653 days
7. What's the difference between a decade and a generation?
Decade: Exactly 10 years, used for historical/cultural periodization.
Generation: Approximately 20-30 years, the average time between birth of parents and birth of their children.
Generations span multiple decades:
- Baby Boomers (1946-1964): ~2 decades
- Generation X (1965-1980): ~1.5 decades
- Millennials (1981-1996): ~1.5 decades
- Generation Z (1997-2012): ~1.5 decades
Key difference: Decade = fixed 10 years; generation = variable ~20-30 years based on demographic/cultural cohorts.
8. Why are decades important in history and culture?
Human-scale timescale: 10 years is long enough for significant change but short enough to remember/experience.
Pattern recognition: Decade groupings reveal trends invisible in year-by-year analysis.
Cultural identity: Decades serve as convenient labels for distinct eras ("the Sixties," "the Eighties").
Psychological salience: Decade milestones (10, 20, 30, 40) feel more significant than other ages.
Media influence: 20th-century mass media amplified decade identity through music, fashion, political eras.
9. What is a "lost decade"?
Economic term: A decade of economic stagnation or decline, minimal growth.
Famous examples:
- Japan's Lost Decade (1990s): Asset bubble burst → prolonged recession
- Actually extended into "Lost Two Decades" or "Lost Three Decades" (1990s-2010s)
- Latin America's Lost Decade (1980s): Debt crisis → stagnation
- US "Lost Decade" (2000s): Dot-com crash (2000) + Financial crisis (2008) = weak growth
Personal context: "Lost decade" can mean any 10-year period of personal stagnation or hardship.
10. How do I calculate how many decades between two years?
Formula: decades = (ending year - starting year) ÷ 10
Examples:
- 1980 to 2020: (2020 - 1980) ÷ 10 = 4 decades (40 years)
- 1995 to 2025: (2025 - 1995) ÷ 10 = 3 decades (30 years)
- 2000 to 2018: (2018 - 2000) ÷ 10 = 1.8 decades (18 years)
11. What are decennial events?
Decennial = occurring every 10 years (once per decade).
Examples:
- US Census: Conducted every 10 years (1790, 1800, ... 2020, 2030)
- 10th anniversaries: Wedding, company founding, event commemoration
- High school reunions: Often every 10 years (10th, 20th, 30th)
Etymology: From Latin "decennium" (decem = ten, annus = year).
12. How many decades in a century? In a millennium?
Century:
- 1 century = 100 years = 10 decades
Millennium:
- 1 millennium = 1,000 years = 100 decades
Conversions:
- 5 decades = 50 years = 0.5 centuries
- 20 decades = 200 years = 2 centuries = 0.2 millennia
Conversion Table: Day to Decade
| Day (d) | Decade (dec) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0 |
| 1 | 0 |
| 1.5 | 0 |
| 2 | 0.001 |
| 5 | 0.001 |
| 10 | 0.003 |
| 25 | 0.007 |
| 50 | 0.014 |
| 100 | 0.027 |
| 250 | 0.068 |
| 500 | 0.137 |
| 1,000 | 0.274 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Day to Decade?
To convert Day to Decade, enter the value in Day in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our time converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Day to Decade?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Day and Decade. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Decade back to Day?
Yes! You can easily convert Decade back to Day by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Decade to Day converter page. You can also explore other time conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Day and Decade?
Day and Decade are both standard units used in time measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our time converter for more conversion options.
For more time conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
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Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
National Institute of Standards and Technology — Official time standards and definitions
Bureau International des Poids et Mesures — Definition of the SI base unit for time
Last verified: December 3, 2025