How Long is a Year, Actually?

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  • Опубліковано 16 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 609

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  Рік тому +33

    Where were you during the leap year that wasn't?

    • @Hammeredprawn
      @Hammeredprawn Рік тому +3

      Sat in my little van , homeless , suffering from ptsd and the only people that help me recover and find peace are you two. So I was watching you that day. Like I do everyday because I learn about the most important thing in my life , space. I don’t know why but it’s the only thing I’m smart at. Thankyou for your channel. It makes a difference to a lot of peoples lives. I hope I get to shake your hands and Thankyou in person some day.

    • @michaeljohndias
      @michaeljohndias Рік тому

      Time is an illusion to it's interpreter.

    • @riblets1968
      @riblets1968 Рік тому

      Wowing my friends, who didn't believe me that this was a rare(ish) event. They were too busy worrying about outdated computer programs that used 2 decimal digit years to calculate dates.

    • @Orangeflava
      @Orangeflava Рік тому

      @@riblets1968nowhere, I was born in 2015

    • @AusTxMale
      @AusTxMale Рік тому +3

      Since 2000 actually was a leap year, I'd say the last leap year that wasn't would be 1900, and I wasn't alive then.

  • @redonk1740
    @redonk1740 Рік тому +152

    I love answers to questions people don't ask. It encourages you to actually think about what you already know.

    • @matthewozga
      @matthewozga Рік тому +1

      I would love to see these guys address news articles such as James Webb Telescope finds star older than 13.8 billion years old...
      i remember all the leap year info from when i was in school (mostly i remember how the teacher said 2000 would have a leap year but 2100 would not)
      Respectfully, (from the NASA website) one year = 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes - i guess you inspired me enough to look up the exact amount of time...

    • @silvercloud1641
      @silvercloud1641 Рік тому

      It's the year 4721 currently according to Chinese Culture. Was it really even the year, 2000? Without the orbit of the planets around the sun. Say, out in space somewhere. How do we measure time then?

  • @shawnrcurrie
    @shawnrcurrie Рік тому +32

    These two have the best chemistry!

    • @panhalt5604
      @panhalt5604 Рік тому +1

      No, they have the best physics.

  • @DannyJoh
    @DannyJoh Рік тому +67

    I love this explainer! Brilliant! Just a correction: Neil said we return to exact point after a sidereal year, but because of the elliptical precession we actually never really return to that exact point right? And since Jupiter causes the angle of the plane of Earths orbit to change, it causes even more chaos. And then we orbit around the centre of the galaxy, which is in it's turn moving through space, so this means my brain is now left somewhere in space at a place I will never return to. I give up!

    • @fmb909
      @fmb909 Рік тому +4

      Well said

    • @UC-4
      @UC-4 Рік тому +3

      😂😂

    • @guidodenbroeder935
      @guidodenbroeder935 Рік тому

      Indeed this exact point doesn't really exist, it is all relative.

    • @rdspam
      @rdspam 11 місяців тому

      Anything can change depending on you define your frame of reference

    • @alexanderxyz6146
      @alexanderxyz6146 10 місяців тому +1

      He did it for didactical reasons. As for your question: I think we "return" after a full turn of precession; (its own "year") however now that I think about it, it's unlikely at the exact "time" (the point in the year?) Good question! I already wrote to him, that the precession topic would also have been cool to be more indepth - how does it affect our calendar? Do we actually "return"? I mean in theory there we won't be in no exact same place ANYWAYS, because our solar system also moves... It's all relative. For didactics I opine the "return" is very appropriate though. Probably deserves its own video, but would have best fit here, still.
      What mainly counts in the end is our position relative to the sun and what season it is from that, too: So, seasonal climate repeating and btw climate changing based on those other factors that were mentioned in the end in the video and which you even added! I think. And as a thought-provoking impulse.

  • @paynec1374
    @paynec1374 Рік тому +32

    I was born on Leap Day back in '88 and when I was in school during the leap day of 2000 the city ran an article that featured 3 people from the city that had that birthday. Wish I would've known how significant it was back then.

    • @tristenhood3167
      @tristenhood3167 Рік тому +7

      My bday is leap Day in 2000. It's cool to see others with the same birthday

    • @Arturo-hc9pl
      @Arturo-hc9pl Рік тому +3

      @@tristenhood3167Yoo that’s crazy my birthday is leap day 2000 aswell

  • @dre3k78
    @dre3k78 Рік тому +121

    10:06 Small mistake here. Neil got this backwards. We are farthest from the sun in July and closest in January.

    • @zeexenon2240
      @zeexenon2240 Рік тому +12

      Yup, it must be a trick to count the number of smart folks watching.

    • @KingCobbones
      @KingCobbones Рік тому +14

      Some people mistakenly think that Summer is hotter because we're closer to the Sun, when in fact we're actually father away from the Sun (for those of us in the northern hemisphere).

    • @greendragonreprised6885
      @greendragonreprised6885 Рік тому +8

      Yes Neil had me doubting for a minute.

    • @DannyJoh
      @DannyJoh Рік тому +6

      Maybe those people were born some 13,000 years ago, when the northern hemisphere summer actually occurred in perihelion. I can understand how that might have confused them back then.

    • @thecraigster8888
      @thecraigster8888 Рік тому +18

      Yep, and he also misspoke about the year 1600 not having a leap day. Every 100 century year divisible by 400 has the leap day re-added.

  • @lovelywaz
    @lovelywaz Рік тому +24

    "A year is a trip around the sun." 👌👌
    Genius! Regardless of calculations, speed and other factors that may affect on the "Calendar", this is the simple and accurate answer.

    • @rdspam
      @rdspam 11 місяців тому +1

      Except for the fact that it never is….

  • @kcf881
    @kcf881 Рік тому +20

    Always great to get a new explainer

  • @PixelsLaboratory
    @PixelsLaboratory Рік тому +65

    06:58, actually the year 1600 WAS a leap year, as it's a multiple of 400. I think in that whole enumeration, Neil wanted to say 1900, 1800, 1700, but since he started from 1800, he went a bit too low and included the one that actually was :) Also, at 10:06 it's the exact OPPOSITE: we're closest to the sun in January (perihelion) and furthest in July (aphelion).

    • @YTsuuuucks
      @YTsuuuucks Рік тому +5

      So if we’re further from the sun in the northern hemisphere’s summer, and closer in the southern hemisphere’s summer, would that make the temperature variance between seasons greater in the southern hemisphere? Cheers

    • @YTsuuuucks
      @YTsuuuucks Рік тому +9

      Caroline from New Zealand found through Google says: No, they are less extreme.
      The fact that the sun is closer to the earth during the Southern summer and further away during the southern winter would make the southern hemisphere seasons more extreme if all other things were equal. However, all other things are not equal. The main reason why southern hemisphere seasons are less extreme is because the southern hemisphere has more sea, and the high specific heat of water means that this moderates the temperature variations. 🎉😂

    • @PixelsLaboratory
      @PixelsLaboratory Рік тому +3

      @@YTsuuuucks indeed, for both your posts! also, there are a lot of other factors that make things very complicated to evaluate, such as vegetation, pollution, population etc.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +7

      @ PixelsLab: Yeah, I noticed that boo-boo, too. Neil inadvertently skipped the year 1800. He said "There was no Leap Year in 1900, 1700, or 1600..." He meant to say there was no Leap Year in 1900, 1800, or 1700...."

    • @jimlipscomb3236
      @jimlipscomb3236 Рік тому

      ​@@YTsuuuucksit does seem counter intuitive,but the explanation lies 8n the angle of the earth relative to the sun. The tilt of the axus means when you are in a part of the earth that has the sun shining directly each day it will be hotter, and in the areas that light us dispersed over more land it will be cold. Witness the fact that at the north and south pole there is a light season and a dark season.

  • @chejda6066
    @chejda6066 Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @likemeordont5951
    @likemeordont5951 Рік тому +46

    These guy never fail to make me laugh and learn.

  • @Max_Jacoby
    @Max_Jacoby Рік тому +4

    I'm amazed how such simple and short facts they are able to stretch to 12 minutes and make it interesting. That's a talent.

  • @TallinuTV
    @TallinuTV Рік тому +12

    Excellent explainer! I knew Sidereal year was a thing but didn't realize the precession of the orbit could be considered another form of year.

  • @carlozmrc
    @carlozmrc Рік тому +3

    This makes life more special, I learned this a little while ago but before that I always questioned how perfect it was to have a day according to the sun. This explanation helps

  • @oii0712
    @oii0712 Рік тому +4

    It was things you thought you knew i thought i knew it but i learned a lot thanks Neil thanks Chuck

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
    @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Рік тому +1

    8:12 “Crap” is a very apt word to use in an agricultural context. This is because it did not originally have any rude connotations at all: it was similarly a synonym for “chaff”, the stuff you throw away when harvesting a grain crop, as in “separate the wheat from the crap”.

  • @Ben-kh2rh
    @Ben-kh2rh Рік тому +5

    I love explainers!

  • @michaelccopelandsr7120
    @michaelccopelandsr7120 Рік тому +4

    Neil and Chuck for 2024!

  • @nathanrussell2158
    @nathanrussell2158 Рік тому +1

    You guys are great teachers.

  • @avi12
    @avi12 Рік тому +36

    9:38 "but we don't have to worry about that anymore because we have climate change" -Chuck Nice, 2023

  • @AceSpadeThePikachu
    @AceSpadeThePikachu Рік тому +5

    I can only imagine Chuck's reaction to learning about leap seconds.

  • @blessedveteran
    @blessedveteran Рік тому

    I just love you two ❤

  • @jofftiquez
    @jofftiquez Рік тому

    You guys are so funny to watch, I enjoy learning and having fun!

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler640 Рік тому +3

    🥰💗🤣
    Bright spot of my day award goes to you two gentlemen! Thanks🤭

  • @shakesrear7850
    @shakesrear7850 Рік тому

    Absolutely fabulous

  • @Thiago100Zwetsch
    @Thiago100Zwetsch Рік тому

    I love this videos!! Thanks for sharing!!

  • @alrunesapuri3659
    @alrunesapuri3659 Рік тому +2

    Nice video.

  • @fldon2306
    @fldon2306 4 дні тому

    This just shows “Time”, and the Calendar, are constructs of mankind… When the Gregorian Calendar was implemented, 10 days were added to correct the old calendar’s errors… The Mayan Calendar had an 819 day cycle would match the planets’ alignment every 45 years!! I remember “leap seconds” back in the 1970’s as Atomic Clocks got so accurate, we had to adjust what time it was/is… Thanks guys!!

  • @mariusmacas380
    @mariusmacas380 Рік тому

    Love explainers the most ❤

  • @oscarmedina1303
    @oscarmedina1303 Рік тому +1

    Very nicely explained. Easy to understand. Thank you!

  • @marinalomanova8077
    @marinalomanova8077 6 місяців тому

    This is Amazing🙏🙏🙏🙏👌👌👌👌

  • @dawnhansen7886
    @dawnhansen7886 Рік тому

    Educational Entertainment to the MAX ❤
    I LOVE STARTALK ❗️

  • @ctcboater
    @ctcboater Рік тому +4

    Errata: At 10 minutes , the Doctor said that we are closest to the Sun in July, farthest in January. It's just the opposite. Our seasons come from the tilt of the axis, not the distance to the Sun. The change in distance actually moderates the effect of the seasons in the Northern Hemisphere.

  • @Wright6994
    @Wright6994 Рік тому

    Hysterical and informative. Love it

  • @Teo117
    @Teo117 Рік тому

    Always a pleasure!

  • @BenjySparky
    @BenjySparky Рік тому

    Niel and Chuck y'all rock! Peace

  • @Causemoi
    @Causemoi Рік тому

    Excellent!

  • @mrgreenfull3897
    @mrgreenfull3897 10 місяців тому +1

    Milutin Milanković entered the chat.😊
    Serbian scientist made a most precise calendar ever - the Revised Julian calendar.
    He was a great scientist. I don't know why they excluded him in StarTalk.

  • @danfat5288
    @danfat5288 Рік тому

    Always great content, always something to learn, always entertaining! You are the best !

  • @yasserd86
    @yasserd86 Рік тому

    Thank you for the examples you added to the video!!! finally !!!!!

  • @prajaymaru4390
    @prajaymaru4390 Рік тому

    Thank you

  • @Dauti_
    @Dauti_ 11 місяців тому

    Kenyan here. When I was in school (I'm turning 45 on Sunday), we were taught that is 365 an a quarter days, and those quarters are what made the leap year every four years.

    • @fromnorway643
      @fromnorway643 11 місяців тому

      It's more complicated, but that's good enough!
      Most of us alive right now won't be here when we skip the next leap year in 2100.

  • @sekaramochi
    @sekaramochi Рік тому

    Pure love please please please never stop ❤️

  • @isatousarr7044
    @isatousarr7044 4 місяці тому +1

    The length of a year is commonly defined as the time it takes Earth to complete one orbit around the Sun, which is approximately 365.25 days. This period, known as a tropical year, is the basis for our calendar year. However, there are different types of years used for various purposes, such as the sidereal year (about 365.25636 days), which is based on Earth’s orbit relative to distant stars. Understanding these variations helps us appreciate the complexity of timekeeping and the astronomical factors that influence our calendar. How do the different definitions of a year such as the tropical year, sidereal year, and anomalistic year affect our timekeeping systems, and why is it important to account for these differences in astronomical and scientific calculations?

  • @sergetheijspartner2005
    @sergetheijspartner2005 Рік тому +4

    So I miss 6 hours of sleep a year? No wonder I am tired all the time

  • @acidcatfish8315
    @acidcatfish8315 Рік тому +8

    I never go an episode without laughing thx guys

    • @morbidmanmusic
      @morbidmanmusic Рік тому

      I read that as "without laughing gas" at first glance.

  • @erikklein7618
    @erikklein7618 Рік тому +1

    I just had an epiphany. March was named for the God of War Mars because that is the best time to go to war. The solstice in March would be the best time because the snow has melted and the summer is starting. WOW!

  • @tarsha1020
    @tarsha1020 Рік тому

    Always informative and entertaining 😅

  • @anthony..23
    @anthony..23 Рік тому

    Gracias

  • @kirandeepchakraborty7921
    @kirandeepchakraborty7921 Рік тому

    Good Stuff ⭐

  • @--Z-g-ube-c-k--
    @--Z-g-ube-c-k-- Рік тому +1

    Awesome! 👍🏻 I love science! 🤓

  • @hetk
    @hetk Рік тому +3

    it's interesting to know that mayans were incredibly right with their calculations of year time, and they didn't had super computers, atomic clocks or other modern marvels we have to keep time tracking as we do now.

  • @gjsherr
    @gjsherr Рік тому +6

    Small mistake: 1600 was a leap year (eligible) because it is divisible by 400. Like the year 2000.

  • @supersportblitz
    @supersportblitz Рік тому

    Just love u guys...

  • @hugooc
    @hugooc Рік тому

    I LOVE this show! 😂😅 It’s smart and funny!

  • @Opinion_0ne
    @Opinion_0ne Рік тому +1

    9:38 ❤ 😂

  • @vykintasmorkvenas6839
    @vykintasmorkvenas6839 Рік тому +4

    Great explanation, still they should've mentioned that when we shifted to the current calendar, called Gregorian calendar, back in 1582 the previous Julian calendar has had a seasonal drift (due to the lack of those normal years in centuries that can't be divided by 400) of 10 days which was necessary to correct. And they did it by shrinking the month November of 1582 by 10 days: after the 4th of November the 15th of November followed.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Рік тому

      There were riots in the streets, because some people though they had lost 10 days of their lives.
      Also the Protestants didn’t trust the Catholics over this issue, so some of them didn’t switch until much later. E.g. Britain (and its empire) only switched in 1762 I think it was. And the Orthodox Christians ... do you know why their Christmas now falls on about January 7?

    • @PianistTanooki
      @PianistTanooki Рік тому

      Close, but the Julian calendar didn’t even account for century years at all. It simply approximated solar years to being an even 365.25 days, putting in a leap day every four years without exception. The Gregorian calendar took out the leap days on century years EXCEPT for those evenly divisible by 400, approximating the solar year to being 365.2425 days. This is much closer to the actual solar year, although it’s still slightly off.
      The difference, though, is that it would take about 7,200 years (when accounting for the precession of the earth among other things) for the Gregorian calendar to drift by a full day, as opposed to the 128 years that it would with the Julian calendar. To drift 10 days like the Julian calendar did in 1582, it would take tens of thousands of years. The Gregorian calendar is far more stable. I’m sure by the time the Gregorian calendar drifts ahead by a full day, people can just not observe a leap year when they otherwise would, and everything would become synchronized again.

  • @arubaguy2733
    @arubaguy2733 Рік тому

    This was the best "explainer" ever.
    None of it accounts for the fact that we will NEVER return to the same point in space that we occupied at any given moment because we're SPIRALING through space. It seems that the only way to accurately account for time is to begin at an agreed-upon arbitrary zero, and painstakingly accurately enumerate time. This would soon negate the notion of conventional "days", weeks", "seasons", and similar units such as seconds and microseconds, etc. Even the smallest time period that man can conceive of can be subdivided infinitely. Even infinity itself cannot exist, because you can always add to whatever value "infinite" is. Time will always be an analog function, but man has, from the very beginning, digitized it (incorrectly, but to the limits of our intelligence). Every instantaneous point in time will never happen again. Heavy.
    All I know for absolutely sure is when "it's time for a nap!"

  • @SpaceMiner007
    @SpaceMiner007 Рік тому

    6 by 4 always = 24
    Thanks for the explainer.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Рік тому +12

    There WAS a leap day in 1600. 1700, 1800 and 1900 were common years.

    • @MikeBramm
      @MikeBramm Рік тому +6

      Yep, when he was counting back centuries at 6:53, he skipped 1800.

    • @thomaslane1547
      @thomaslane1547 Рік тому +1

      I figure high-level physicist-math is all greek letters, vectors, and orders of magnitude. So folks who do that get caught off guard sometimes when plain honest-to-goodness countin' numbers show up.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Рік тому +2

      Some computer software even had this bug where the programmers didn’t know about the every-400-year rule, and thought 2000 was _not_ a leap year.

  • @jag731
    @jag731 Рік тому +1

    Just when you think you know your days/year ... Dr. Tyson & Chuck in unison... "Psyche!"

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 Рік тому

    I thought I knew all about the seasons and calendar days. Now I am just happy to get up in the morning.

  • @stuckp1stuckp122
    @stuckp1stuckp122 11 місяців тому

    Hilarious interplay!

  • @fraliexb
    @fraliexb Рік тому +3

    Hey Neal 6:55 1600 is divided by 400.

  • @BonBonBonni
    @BonBonBonni Рік тому +1

    Greetings from Kosovo 🇽🇰! Very informative and funny 😁!

  • @tombradford7035
    @tombradford7035 Рік тому

    What a double act - love this channel.

  • @OrcinusLaryngologist
    @OrcinusLaryngologist Рік тому +7

    Feels illegal to be this early..

  • @dayhawk12
    @dayhawk12 Рік тому

    Whenever the video starts with chuck I've got an explainer I know it's gonna be good

  • @Arturo-hc9pl
    @Arturo-hc9pl Рік тому +9

    I knew about the 6 hours but everything after that it’s mind blowing. 🤯
    I was born February 29, 2000 and I had no idea about the rarity of such a leap day.

    • @ilmaio
      @ilmaio Рік тому +4

      Literally, you have a birthday every 400 years...

    • @djantouahmed7319
      @djantouahmed7319 Рік тому

      ​@@ilmaioAnd since the life span of an average human being isn't 400 years. The year 200p was a rare leap year.

  • @jayjames8026
    @jayjames8026 Рік тому

    Very cool.

  • @Tom-vt4pw
    @Tom-vt4pw Рік тому +259

    The older you are the shorter the year

  • @pqrs_987
    @pqrs_987 Рік тому

    6:35 i was in the 7th grade when the year 2000 came along; and there was buzz among my schoolmates about having a February 30th that year.... i remember getting excited for it, and then felt disappointed when someone told me "scientists decided it was not necessary to add that extra extra day"

  • @murdock7112
    @murdock7112 Рік тому +1

    Neil please make a short or explain carbon dating certain types of objects (matter) if you time traveled into past/future...chemistry , composition, woods, metals, etc..😊

  • @TinyHouseHomestead
    @TinyHouseHomestead Рік тому +4

    It is as long as you define it! ACTUALLY! 😱😁😝🤪🤣👍👍🇺🇲

  • @SilentKaliSmoker
    @SilentKaliSmoker Рік тому

    The 2000 year into blew my mind. Was a freshman in high school and didn't think anything about it.
    The precession around the sun has been something I've thought about. That each year the seasons are slightly different cause we're not exactly in the same place in space. So from 2000, before that we saw the end of the seasons, and now after we're seeing the start.
    But who decided when to start the calendar and did we make up the years to reach 0 and then all the billions of years before that?

  • @chrism3784
    @chrism3784 11 місяців тому

    10:04 We're closest in January Neil and furthest in July, even the animation shows the correct distances and dates.

  • @electrovoyage2613
    @electrovoyage2613 Рік тому +1

    I thought i was 45 years old. Im 44 and some change. Im young witches!!!🎉

  • @aximilian15
    @aximilian15 Рік тому +23

    The Earth is closest to the sun in January and farthest in July.

    • @zeexenon2240
      @zeexenon2240 Рік тому +1

      But only by a tiny percent.

    • @richardgratton7557
      @richardgratton7557 Рік тому +1

      That’s correct. NDT got it backwards in the video.😮

    • @matthewgoetter3127
      @matthewgoetter3127 Рік тому +1

      Depending on your hemisphere….

    • @slyblack6574
      @slyblack6574 Рік тому

      Yeah... closer to the sun in July, just like he said. That's why it's the hottest part of the year.

    • @richardgratton7557
      @richardgratton7557 Рік тому +3

      @@slyblack6574 Actually, no.
      The Earth is closest to the Sun in January.
      The seasons are caused by Earth’s tilt. The axis of rotation is not perpendicular to its orbital plane. So we have summer in July because the northern hemisphere is facing the Sun more directly. In the southern hemisphere it is winter in July.

  • @philipberthiaume2314
    @philipberthiaume2314 Рік тому +2

    This tells me that we need to metricfy our calendar into units of tens with all of these leaps built in from the start. The current calendar is ancient, built on care and priorities that most of us no longer even know about. While we are at it, we should also create time units based on 100 second increments instead of this archaic system of 60 seconds, 60 m,inutes and 24 hours.

    • @JasonWW2000
      @JasonWW2000 Рік тому

      What your asking for is ridiculous. We have the best system right now. All scientists will tell you.
      Only units that are completely arbitrary can be switched to metric. Like length, weight, etc...
      The rotation of the earth on its axis and around the sun are not arbitrary, they are fixed.

    • @970357ers
      @970357ers Рік тому

      A metric week would no doubt see an 8/2 work/leisure days ratio. Surprised our billionaire overlords aren’t pushing for it.

    • @JasonWW2000
      @JasonWW2000 Рік тому

      @@970357ers Terrible joke. Plus conspiracy nonsense. 👎

    • @philipberthiaume2314
      @philipberthiaume2314 Рік тому

      @@JasonWW2000 it's not ridiculous. It's whatever we want it to be. And I have never heard a scientist say that our current time pattern is 'the best' . This whole video just proved that it isn't.

    • @JasonWW2000
      @JasonWW2000 Рік тому

      ​@@philipberthiaume2314Niel himself has explained all about the different calender systems and how the current one has lasted so long because its so well thought out. I'm sorry I don't have the link to the video, but you can search this channel. Its very interesting the history of calendars. 👍

  • @EricRoss57
    @EricRoss57 Рік тому

    Another "wow" moment! Thank you, gents!

  • @proscruxtj4693
    @proscruxtj4693 Рік тому

    I'm learning everyday.

  • @eltigrillopintito
    @eltigrillopintito Рік тому

    gretting fellas thank you for your contribution. Dr. Tyson they say you shouldnt meet your heros or risk disappointment so this is good enough much love

  • @clintjohnson1045
    @clintjohnson1045 Рік тому

    I remember when he explained this on Rogan, he was saying it’s a value conversation days over years or years over days

  • @akashprasad5750
    @akashprasad5750 2 місяці тому

    6:55 Year 1600 was a leap year coz the error was found in October 1582 and hence correction happened 1600 onwards

  • @tomdonahoe3539
    @tomdonahoe3539 Рік тому

    For the next edition of this perhaps bring up the concept of the "Leap Second" 😀

  • @TinyHouseHomestead
    @TinyHouseHomestead Рік тому +2

    Sooooooo, ... we need to fix this! 😱😁👍👍🇺🇲

  • @PokeMarieee
    @PokeMarieee Рік тому

    8:05 he’s basically saying we reset our seasonal calendar every century lol. Took me a sec. 😂

  • @chasethepops-n-flix2485
    @chasethepops-n-flix2485 Рік тому

    I 💚star talk 😂

  • @ZenRyoku
    @ZenRyoku Рік тому

    0:00
    an exact stellar time frame on an exact Earth year is:
    365 1/4 days

  • @HughJass-313
    @HughJass-313 Рік тому +1

    WoW
    😳😳

  • @bobbyhockey93
    @bobbyhockey93 Рік тому

    you could be a name that lasts forever, you already will, and Chuck Nice.

  • @tagmaster9522
    @tagmaster9522 Рік тому

    Time is another form of matter. You can know the location but not the velocity, or you can the velocity, but the location.

  • @AusTxMale
    @AusTxMale Рік тому

    I was half expecting the explainer to be about how long a year is on other planets in our solar system based on the criteria of completing one revolution around the sun. Even more so about how it relates to that planet's length of a day as it relates to it completing one revolution around its axis. Or perhaps even a solar year in regards to how long the sun takes to orbit...the center of the Milky Way? The length of a year as a time keeping method as we know it is truly localized to life on this planet alone. I have no idea how a galactic time keeping method would work.

  • @marianagyorgyfalvi3659
    @marianagyorgyfalvi3659 Рік тому

    Interesting🤔!

  • @Bl4cksail
    @Bl4cksail Рік тому +1

    Yes I would like to join the timekeepers guild.
    They wear flavor flave clocks.

  • @milosterwheeler2520
    @milosterwheeler2520 Рік тому +5

    OK. Now THAT was interesting.
    I think guys will be using these facts for bar bets.

    • @DipenDas-nf7ho
      @DipenDas-nf7ho Рік тому

      Do you know Hindu Calendar has a leap month. Every 4th year is a 13 month year.

  • @alexanderxyz6146
    @alexanderxyz6146 10 місяців тому

    The precession got me. Would have loved if you had looked at that more indepth; so when is that taken care of in our calendar?
    But everything else was also really cool explained! 2000 Huh

    • @thecarman3693
      @thecarman3693 10 місяців тому

      I thnk it showed it as 112,000 years.

  • @GeorgeVCohea-dw7ou
    @GeorgeVCohea-dw7ou Рік тому

    Arguably, the still utilised chosen calender was not the least bit arbitrary and instead pragmatic and deliberate for societal needs.

  • @jeanbart9458
    @jeanbart9458 Рік тому

    @10:08 Small mistake:in the audio : we are closest to the Sun in January, not July (the illustration is correct)

  • @arashjalali4489
    @arashjalali4489 Рік тому

    Fun fact:
    Persian new year is literally at the new year. So all who celebrate it around the world, they actually do it at the exact same time (Not at 00:00 every year the time is different) at the beginning of Spring .