T is not a unit of time. You have to state it is that you are converting from and what you want to convert to.
2650838400000 milliseconds approx. The exact value depends on how many leap years there were in the interval and on whether or not there were any leap seconds.
157,788,000000 milliseconds approx. The exact value depends on how many leap years there were in the interval and on whether or not there were any leap seconds.
1577880000000 milliseconds approx. The exact value depends on how many leap years there were in the interval and on whether or not there were any leap seconds.
not accounting for leap years, the answer is473,353,890,000
There is an average of 31556952000 milliseconds per year.
There are 31536000000 milliseconds.
Not sure about a melenium - whatever that is, but there are approx 31557600000000 milliseconds in a millennium. The exact number depends on how many leap years there were in the interval and on whether or not there were any leap seconds.
365 days/common year * 24 hours/day * 60 minutes/hour * 60 seconds/minute * 1000 milliseconds/second = 31,536,000,000 milliseconds/common year366 days/leap year * 24 hours/day * 60 minutes/hour * 60 seconds/minute * 1000 milliseconds/second = 31,622,400,000 milliseconds/leap year
No, but 2004 and 2008 were both leap years.
Leap Years are years divisible by four, with two exceptions. 1. "Century" year numbers (divisible evenly by 100) are not leap years. 2. Years divisible evenly by 400 ARE leap years. So years like 1992 and 1996 were leap years. Century years like 1900 or 2100 are NOT leap years. But 2000 was a leap year, and 2400 will be.
There are 4 years between every leap year. Correction: There are 4 years between MOST leap years. That's the case 99.25% of the time. For the other 0.75% of the time, there are 8 years between leap years.
Leap years are US election years. 2006 was not a leap year.