It is quite simple. If it takes 11.57 days for 1 million seconds to pass, then it is just that number multiplied by 1000, which would be 11,570 days. (Which divided by 365 is 31 years and a little over 8 months.)
So if this fact is correct that 1 million seconds is 11.57 days, then I conclude that:
1 billion seconds = 31.7 years!
It takes about 11,574.1 days for one billion seconds to elapse. This is equal to 31. 7 years based on the fact that a single day has 86,400 seconds.
Probably 6
No one can answer this because Google is almost an infinate number. It take more than a billion, million years! Who ever looks this up is kinda a loser.
Around 100. On Tuesdays and Fridays it can take anywhere from 120 to 200, and around double that during a solar eclipse.
about 2.56 seconds
I'm busy watching time elapse.
11574074.074074072 DAYS or..... 1653439.1534391534 WEEKS 31709.791983764586 YEARS (about 31 Thousand, 710 years)
The word elapse refers to time that has passed. This word can be used in a sentence such as "How much time will elapse until I have the opportunity to take another vacation?"
Elapse - Point A 2009 was released on: USA: February 2009
Elapse - Point B - 2009 was released on: USA: July 2009
The periodic time of an alternating-current system is the is the time in seconds that has to elapse before the waveform repeats itself from its beginning to the end. It is denoted as the Period (T).
Several weeks may elapse between the time an invoice is submitted and the time a payment is made.