Convert Day (Sidereal) (d (sidereal)) to Year (Julian) (y (Julian)) instantly.
About these units
Day (Sidereal) (d (sidereal))
A sidereal day is the time Earth takes to rotate exactly 360 degrees relative to the distant stars—about 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds. In contrast, the solar day is slightly longer because Earth advances in its orbit each day and must rotate extra degrees for the Sun to appear in the same position in the sky. Sidereal days are fundamental to astronomy: telescopes use sidereal time to track stars, which appear in the same position in the sky at the same sidereal moment each night. This unit anchors astronomical observation to the cosmos rather than to the Sun.
Year (Julian) (y (Julian))
A Julian year is defined as exactly 365.25 days, reflecting the structure of the Julian calendar introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BCE. This calendar assumed a fixed year length with a leap year every four years. Although revolutionary in its simplicity, the Julian year overestimates the actual tropical year by about 11 minutes, causing the calendar date to drift slowly relative to the seasons—an issue that accumulated to more than 10 days by the 16th century. Astronomers still use the Julian year as a standardized unit for long-term timekeeping, especially when expressing stellar motions, orbital periods, and cosmological timescales. Its simplicity and fixed length make it ideal for scientific definition even though it is obsolete as a civil calendar.