The earth's orbital period is 365.23 days.
Calendars are printed with 365 days in each year, plus one additional day every 4th year.
2014 has 365 days, it is not a leap year
A metre is a unit of distance. A year is a unit of time. The two units are therefore incompatible.
A light year is a measurement of distance not of time.
They are all increments of units of time: 12 months in a year 60 minutes in an hour 60 seconds in a minute 7 days in a week 365 days in a year
two different units of measure. It's like asking how many seconds in a mile.But there are 365.25 light days in a light year if you assume a day = 86,400 seconds and you use the Julian definition of a year.
You can't just convert between units of length and units of time. Unless it's a speed problem; in this case use the formula: distance = speed x time
Units of time - century, year, month, week, day, hour, minute, second.
Most of the time, it's 365 days, but if the year includes a leap year day (February 29), the total is 366 days.
Most of the time, a year is 365 days. Leap years contain 366 days.
None. A light year is a measure of distance, not of time.
There are many more than four units of time. Here are a dozen of them: -- picosecond -- microsecond -- second -- minute -- hour -- day -- week -- fortnight -- year -- decade -- century -- millennium
365 days in a year (except leap years that have 366) The average is thus 365.25 days to a year but really there are close to 365.2422 7 days in a week 52 weeks + 1 day (sometimes 2) in a year