Time Calculator

Time Calculator

Add or Subtract Two Time Values




Add or Subtract Time from a Date




Time Calculator in Expression


Understanding Time: Units, History, and Measurement

Common Units of Time

Time can be added or subtracted just like numbers, but its calculations follow unique rules. Here are standard time units:

  • Millennium – 1,000 years

  • Century – 100 years

  • Decade – 10 years

  • Year (average) – 365.242 days

  • Common Year – 365 days

  • Leap Year – 366 days

  • Quarter – 3 months

  • Month – 28–31 days (varies by month and leap years)

  • Week – 7 days

  • Day – 24 hours (86,400 seconds)

  • Hour – 60 minutes (3,600 seconds)

  • Minute – 60 seconds

  • Second – Base unit

  • Millisecond – 10⁻³ seconds

  • Microsecond – 10⁻⁶ seconds

  • Nanosecond – 10⁻⁹ seconds


Historical Concepts of Time

Ancient Greece – Aristotle defined time as a measurement of change tied to motion, believing it infinite and continuous.

Newton vs. Leibniz – Newton proposed absolute time, flowing independently of events, while Leibniz argued for relational time, existing only in relation to objects and events.

Einstein – In his theory of relativity, Einstein connected space and time into spacetime, showing that time is relative to speed and gravity. The faster you move through space, the slower you move through time.


Measuring Time: Calendar & Clock

Today, time is tracked using the calendar (years, months, days) and clock (hours, minutes, seconds). These systems are based on the ancient sexagesimal system (base 60) from Sumer and Babylon, chosen for its many divisors.


Development of the 24-Hour Day

  • Egyptians used sundials dividing daylight into 12 parts; night was divided using star positions.

  • Hipparchus (147–127 BC) standardized 12 hours of daylight and 12 of night, leading to the 24-hour day.

  • Claudius Ptolemy divided degrees into minutes and seconds, giving us the terms still used today.


Early Timekeeping Devices

  • Sundials – Measured daylight hours.

  • Water clocks (clepsydra) – Tracked time with flowing water.

  • Hourglasses – Used sand to measure fixed intervals.

  • Pendulum clocks – Invented by Christiaan Huygens in 1656, accurate to within seconds a day.

  • Atomic clocks – The most precise today, measuring time using cesium atomic resonance.