The Science of Dates
Julian Day Number
Day of the Year
Leap Year?
Weekday
Days until New Year
UTC Offset (IST)
The Invention of Dates
Solar vs Lunar Calendars
The solar calendar follows the Earth’s orbit around the Sun (about 365.24 days). The lunar calendar follows the Moon’s 29.5-day cycle. Because 12 lunar months equal only 354 days, some calendars — like the Hindu and Hebrew — are lunisolar, inserting extra months to stay aligned.
Leap Years: Earth’s Fine Adjustment
Our planet doesn’t circle the Sun in an even 365 days. It takes 365.2422 days — so we add a leap day every four years. However, we skip leap years on centuries (e.g. 1900) unless divisible by 400 (e.g. 2000). This keeps calendars accurate within a fraction of a second per century.
Calendars Around the World
📅 Gregorian
Used globally. Solar-based; leap years keep it synchronized with Earth's orbit.
🕉️ Hindu Panchang
Combines solar and lunar cycles; includes tithi, nakshatra, and planetary positions.
☪️ Islamic Hijri
Purely lunar — 354 or 355 days. Months move through all seasons.
🦀 Chinese Calendar
Lunisolar — adds leap months to stay in sync with agricultural seasons.
The Future of Time
As we explore other planets, new calendars are emerging — for Mars, where a day is 24 hours 39 minutes long. Atomic clocks aboard satellites define time for navigation, finance, and science. Humanity’s next frontier might be a universal “interplanetary time” standard.
Did You Know?
- The French once tried a 10-day week in the 1790s.
- In 1752, Britain skipped 11 days to adopt the Gregorian calendar.
- Our word “month” comes from “Moon.”
- Leap seconds are being phased out after 2035.