Earth was created
As today is November 21, the date 46 days ago would have been October 6.
To find the date 46 weeks ago from today, you would subtract 46 weeks from the current date. Since today is October 6, 2023, 46 weeks ago would be January 13, 2023.
1,451,618,596 seconds in 46 years.
To find the date that is 46 weeks ago from today, you would subtract 322 days (since 46 weeks is 46 x 7 days) from the current date. For example, if today is October 1, 2023, then 46 weeks ago would be December 31, 2022. You can calculate this by using a calendar or date calculator to ensure accuracy.
That portion of the universe from which light from distant objects can reach us which has been traveling since it was possible for light to travel through the universe (about 380,000 years after the Big Bang) This is a sphere centered on Earth extending 46.6 billion light years in all directions. That sphere gets slightly bigger every day. Note also that even though the universe is 13.798 billion years old the observable universe is larger becuase the universe has been expanding during that 13.798 billion years.
4.6 billion/100 = 4.6*109/102 = 4.6*107 = 46*106 or 46 million.
To find out how many years ago 1977 was, subtract 1977 from the current year, 2023. This gives you 2023 - 1977 = 46 years. Therefore, 1977 was 46 years ago.
As of April 2018, it is 46 years ago.
The first super bowl was 46 years ago
Well, it's complicated.The universe is about 13.8 billion years old. In that time, in a vacuum (and while interstellar and even intergalactic space isn't a perfect vacuum, for these purposes it's close enough), light could have travelled 13.8 billion light-years. That's pretty straightforward.Where it becomes non-straightforward is in determining the radius of the observable universe. If there's only been time for light to go 13.8 billion light-years, then the edge of the observable universe should be 13.8 billion light-years away, right?Wrong.Because the universe is expanding, light that started on its way 13.8 billion years ago got a certain percentage of its traveling done when the universe was smaller. It turns out that the earliest thing we can see is the surface of last scattering or the cosmic microwave background radiation (we can't see past that because it's effectively opaque), which is currently about 46 billion light years away. (The theoretically observable universe is actually slightly larger than that, since the decoupling event when the universe became non-opaque happened when the universe was already about 380,000 years old).So, while light can only possibly have gone 13.8 billion light years, light that started on its way to us 13.8 billion light years ago and is reaching us now came from objects that are "now" about 46 billion light years away.
147.2 billion.
1.4791
the population of the world was around 3,957,345,210
The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years; that would be a diameter of 92 billion light-years. The entire Universe is likely much bigger, but it isn't know how much bigger.
0.0696
Check your math and your answer....one billion divided by 31,536000 = 31.7 years, not 31 thousand years. It is actually 31 years, 259 days, 1 hour, 46 minutes and 40 seconds 1 Billion seconds equal 1 billion divided by the number of seconds in a year (31,536,000) equals 31,709.79 years. So just about 32 thousand years
31 years, 252 days, 1 hour, 46 minutes, and 40 seconds.