It takes exactly 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds.
The exact answer depends on the number of leap years in a 13-year span. These can be 3 or 4. Also, there are leap seconds added from time to time. But, assuming 3 leap years, the number of seconds is 410,227,200 seconds.
A leap year is singular--it only occurs ONE time and ONLY in that year. (One) Leap Year occurs every 4 years.
Leap year is known because every year there isn't an exact number of days, there are 365 and 1/4 days. So every 4 years 1 day has been produced hence leap year
About once every 7 years. Not exact due to Leap year, last time was 2012.
No. In a normal year, the exact middle of the year is midday on the 2nd of July. In a leap year, it is at midnight on the 2nd of July, 12 hours later.
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 year is an accounting gimmick that we use to keep our human calendar matched to the seasons. There can be no situation as you describe, as there is no time when there is "supposed to be" a leap year.
Only in a leap year which is every four years. Most of the time a year is 365 days.
7 leap years!
Leap year is a change in time.
July 2 is the 183rd day of the year (184th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 182 days remain until the end of the year.
A light-year is a unit of distance, not a unit of time.