The double A-sided single "She's The One"/"It's Only Us" hit number one in November 1999.
Serena Williams first became the world number one in singles on July 8, 2002. She achieved this ranking after winning her second Grand Slam title at Wimbledon that year. Williams has since held the number one spot multiple times throughout her career, solidifying her status as one of the greatest tennis players of all time.
Yes, there are more nanoseconds in a second than the number of seconds in a year. A nanosecond is one billionth of a second, so there are 1,000,000,000 nanoseconds in one second. In a year, there are 31,536,000 seconds (in a non-leap year), which is significantly fewer than the number of nanoseconds in a single second.
No published sn data for Ted Williams
The Williams you are referring to is Brock Williams.
Is holder of arm model 300 with number of line of 273521160 make ted Williams informs for the year of manufacture.
DL Gerald Williams. Williams wore #98 for the Steelers from 1986-1994.
The Ted Williams Model 300 with serial number 0116570 was manufactured in 1964. The Model 300 was produced by the Sears, Roebuck and Co. under the Ted Williams brand for a few years, primarily in the early to mid-1960s. If you have a specific serial number, you can often reference it to determine the production year more accurately.
A second is 1/604800 of a week, so a year with a leap second has an extra 1/604800 week - this is small enough that it makes very little difference to a whole number, thus a year with a leap second has effectively the same number of weeks as a year without a leap second: 52 weeks plus one (or two if it is a leap year) day(s).
No sn data in the public domain.
My best guess is sometime between 1962 (When Sears signed a contract with Ted Williams) and 1978 (Sears discontinued the Ted Williams markings that year), The rifle is a Winchester Model 70- excellent rifle, by the way. The 273 number is the model number. If there is no serial number on the frame, it was pre-1968 (serial numbers were not required by US law on rifles and shotguns until 1968)
There are approximately 31,536,000 milliseconds in a year. This is calculated by multiplying the number of milliseconds in a second (1000) by the number of seconds in a year (31,536,000 seconds).
No. There are roughly pi * 10 million seconds in a year, which is around 30 times more than the number of microseconds in a second.