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Leap year question

bigredguy

Platinum Member
Mar 18, 2001
2,457
0
0
Since the tropical year is 365.242190 days long, a leap year must be added roughly once every four years (four times the fractional day gives ).

my question is that .242190 does not equal .25 so after a thousand year would we have a leap year without an extra day?
 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
61,504
12
56
must be it leapt off the page :p

ok, he put it up.
my answer to that question is to stop the brain strain immediately :D
 

kenshorin

Golden Member
Apr 14, 2001
1,160
0
0
Originally posted by: bigredguy
my question is that .242190 does not equal .25 so after a thousand year would we have a leap year without an extra day?

I figure no, since we have to catch up for all those other years where the calendar was wrong, or that didn't even have a calendar at all, gotta make up those lost days!
 

konichiwa

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,077
2
0
We have a leap day in:

Every year divisible by 4
EXCEPT the last year of each century, such as 1900, which is NOT a leap year . . .
EXCEPT when the number of the century is a multiple of 4, such as 2000, which IS a leap year . . .
EXCEPT the year 4000 and its later multiples (8000, 12000, etc) which are NOT leap years.

:)
 

dave127

Senior member
Nov 26, 2000
912
0
0
here it is:

The calender we use (the Gregorian Calendar, adopted by pope Gregory XII i believe) has a leap year every four years EXCEPT years divisible evenly by 400....this allows for the extra little percentage of a day, and allows for an error of one day for every 3000 years

EDIT: ok....so maybe my astro teacher taught us a bit wrong
 

TallBill

Lifer
Apr 29, 2001
46,017
62
91
Originally posted by: konichiwa
We have a leap day in:

Every year divisible by 4
EXCEPT the last year of each century, such as 1900, which is NOT a leap year . . .
EXCEPT when the number of the century is a multiple of 4, such as 2000, which IS a leap year . . .
EXCEPT the year 4000 and its later multiples (8000, 12000, etc) which are NOT leap years.

:)

wow, just wow. I need to go do something important today that wont have a normal anniversery.
 

bigredguy

Platinum Member
Mar 18, 2001
2,457
0
0
looked it up and we lose 27 secs every year so thats 1 day every 3236 years. So would that mean in about 3000 years we would have a year that met the leap year rules but did not leap?
 

TallBill

Lifer
Apr 29, 2001
46,017
62
91
i wonder if theres any leap year social clubs that meet on the 29th. if not, i should start one today.
 

MacBaine

Banned
Aug 23, 2001
9,999
0
0
We should just add 6 hours every year that don't count. At 11:59 they begin, and 6 hours later, 12:00. You can do whatever the fvck you want and it won't count.
 

Thoreau

Golden Member
Jan 11, 2003
1,441
0
76
Originally posted by: konichiwa
We have a leap day in:

Every year divisible by 4
EXCEPT the last year of each century, such as 1900, which is NOT a leap year . . .
EXCEPT when the number of the century is a multiple of 4, such as 2000, which IS a leap year . . .
EXCEPT the year 4000 and its later multiples (8000, 12000, etc) which are NOT leap years.

:)

1900 *is* a multiple of four. 2000 is the last year of that century.
 

bigredguy

Platinum Member
Mar 18, 2001
2,457
0
0
Was just reading something that said 1896 way a leap year but 1900 wasn't, because it didn't fit the rules. And that this will happen again in about 100 years between 2096 and 2104. I thought leap year was just every 4 years like the olympics or presidential election year. Wow, i feel un-edumacated.
 

konichiwa

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,077
2
0
Originally posted by: Thoreau
Originally posted by: konichiwa
We have a leap day in:

Every year divisible by 4
EXCEPT the last year of each century, such as 1900, which is NOT a leap year . . .
EXCEPT when the number of the century is a multiple of 4, such as 2000, which IS a leap year . . .
EXCEPT the year 4000 and its later multiples (8000, 12000, etc) which are NOT leap years.

:)

1900 *is* a multiple of four. 2000 is the last year of that century.

Note what I said -- "except when the NUMBER OF THE CENTURY" is a multiple of four. Hence, 19 is not a multiple of four but 20 is ;)

Or, if you prefer, the last year of every century is NOT a leap year UNLESS that year is divisible by 400