Conversion number between blink and year (Julian) [a, y, or yr] is 7.9220219535072 × 10-9. This means, that blink is smaller unit than year (Julian).
Switch to reverse conversion:
from year (Julian) to blink conversion
blink |
Result in year (Julian)
?If conversion between blink to second and second to year (Julian) is exactly definied, high precision conversion from blink to year (Julian) is enabled.
Since definition contain rounded number(s) too, there is no sense for high precision calculation, but if you want, you can enable it. Keep in mind, that converted number will be inaccurate due this rounding error!
Start value: | [blink] |
Step size | [blink] |
How many lines? | (max 100) |
blink | year (Julian) |
---|---|
0 | 0 |
10 | 7.9220219535072 × 10-8 |
20 | 1.5844043907014 × 10-7 |
30 | 2.3766065860522 × 10-7 |
40 | 3.1688087814029 × 10-7 |
50 | 3.9610109767536 × 10-7 |
60 | 4.7532131721043 × 10-7 |
70 | 5.5454153674551 × 10-7 |
80 | 6.3376175628058 × 10-7 |
90 | 7.1298197581565 × 10-7 |
100 | 7.9220219535072 × 10-7 |
110 | 8.714224148858 × 10-7 |
Definition of blink unit: ≈ 0.25 s. Human blink duration ranges from 0.1 to 0.4 seconds. Blink time is calculated as average of this range, and this value is a quarter of a second.
Definition of year (Julian) unit: = 365.25 d average. The basic calendar year has 365 days, but in fact the Earth needs a little more time around the sun. The Julian calendar compensated this with leap year (every fourth year had 366 days). According to the formula, a Julian year has 365 + 1/4 = 365.25 days. But even with this compensation, the astronomical year slip 0.78 days every 100 years into real seasons. Therefore, most countries have moved to the Gregorian calendar introduced in 1582.
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