yes
If you were born on February 29, 1948, you would have celebrated your birthday on the actual date only during leap years. Leap years occur every four years, so from 1948 to 2023, there are 19 leap years (including 1948). Therefore, you would have had 19 calendar birthdays.
February.....because it only has 28 days (29 on leap years). Statistically it has the least amount of birthdays.
Birthdays are not uniformly distributed over the year. But, if you do assume that they are, then: ignoring leap years, it is approx 0.5982. If you include leap years it is 0.5687.
It depends on the year in which he was born.
Birthdays are not distributed uniformly over a year but if, for the sake of probability games you assume that they are, then ignoring leap years, the probability is 0.5687. Including leap years, it is slightly lower.
Assuming a year has 365 days and neglecting leap years, there are 31,536,000 seconds in a year. So, in 1,000,000 seconds, there will be approximately (1000000/31536000) = 0.03170979198 years. Therefore, you would have approximately 0.03170979198 birthdays in 1,000,000 seconds.
1,556,232,100 people are born on a leap year!
Approximately 4 million people worldwide celebrate their birthdays on February 29. This date occurs only every four years due to leap year calculations, making it a rare birthday. As a result, those born on this day often celebrate their birthdays on February 28 or March 1 during non-leap years.
Only if nature allows it. In other words, NO WAY if your an ordinary human, or YES WAY if you somehow alter the way the planets move and create a very unbalanced universe and the leap year never comes and you just violated the laws of nature.
No if you were not born on the leap day of the lep year then your birthday is not at all affected by theleap year because the leap year is making up for lost time in the regular year which is caused becasue the average year is not exactly 365 days it is slghtly more. So, on a leap year the extra time from other years are added up to equal one more full day over the corse of 4 years.
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.