June 4, 2019 | Rachel Seigel

43 Fast Facts About Time


"Time flies over us, but leaves its shadow behind."  —Nathaniel Hawthorne

Time is the component quantity used to measure the duration of events, intervals between them, and their sequence. Time has long been a subject of study in science, religion, and philosophy, and it is incorporated into each aspect of a person’s everyday life. Below are 43 fast facts about time.


43. A Year Less a Few

Einstein’s theory of relativity states that the closer one is to the Earth, the slower time goes. A year goes by 15 microseconds faster at the top of Mount Everest than it does at sea level.

Time factsPixabay

42. Oscillations

Prior to the invention of atomic clocks, a second was measured as 9,192,631,770 oscillations of a caesium (a chemical element with symbol Cs and atomic number 55).

Time factsWikimedia Commons, Dnn87

41. The Smallest Measurement

Planck time is the smallest standard of the scientific measurement of time. It takes about five hundred and fifty thousand trillion trillion trillion Planck times to blink a single time.

Time factsGetty Images

40. No Such Thing as Now

According to Einstein, "the distinction between past and present and future is only an illusion, however persistent." This is because space and time are fluid, and are affected by gravity and speed.

Time factsGetty Images

39. Pinpoint Accuracy

The strontium atomic clock is the most accurate clock ever built. It’s accurate to within a second over 15 billion years.

Time factsWikimedia Commons, National Institute of Standards and Technology

38. Almost as Old as the Universe

A galaxy called z8_GND_5296 is the oldest object in the known universe. It’s estimated to be 13.1 billion years old, which is about 700 million years younger than the universe itself.

Time factsPixabay

37. Less than 24 Hours

Despite what we’ve been taught, a day isn’t a full 24 hours. It actually takes 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4.2 seconds for the earth to rotate once.

Time factsGetty Images

36. Sunrise to Sunrise

It takes 24 hours from sunrise to sunrise because each day the Earth moves further in its orbit around the sun, lengthening the day.

Time factsPixabay

35. Oldest Known Object on Earth

A 4.4 billion-year-old crystal, a zircon, is the oldest known object on Earth. It was found in Jack Hills in Western Australia, and is only 160 million years younger than Earth.

Time factsGetty Images

34. Is This Clock Late?

Until the 19thF century, towns would set their clock by the local noon, which would put a train in Bristol 11 minutes behind London. As a result, people kept missing their trains, and beginning with the Great Western Railway in 1840, railway companies began using standard, London-based UK time, making train timetables easier to run.

Time factsGetty Images

33. Everything is Past

It takes time for light to reach us, and as a result, everything we see is in the past. When you see the sun out your window, the light is already eight minutes and 20 seconds old. The light from Earth’s nearest star Proxima Centauri is four years old.

Time factsPixabay

32. A Long Day

On the planet Mercury, a single day is two Earth years long.

Time factsPixabay

31. Overestimating is Better

Researchers agree that we get more pleasure from overestimating time than underestimating. If a task estimated to take an hour is completed in 15 minutes, a person will regard the experience more pleasurably than the reverse. This is why people become agitated when someone is late, and why theme parks overestimate projected wait times for rides.

Time factsGetty Images

30. Time Slows When You’re Having Fun

According to a psychological study, the old adage "time flies when you’re having fun" isn’t quite true. In fact, it’s just the opposite. When people were listening to music they enjoyed, time seemed to pass more slowly. This could be because people pay more attention to things they like, which slows their perception of time.

Time factsPixabay

29. Frozen

It appears that distant galaxies are moving faster than nearby ones, which suggests that the universe is accelerating as it expands. One physicist has suggested that the reason distant galaxies appear to move faster is because in the past, time was faster. If he’s correct, this means that in a few billion years, time will be frozen.

Time factsShutterstock

28. Leap Second

The Earth’s rotation is slowing, making the 24-hour day slightly off. In order to compensate for the lengthening days, the International Earth Rotation Service (the body which regulates astronomical time) periodically adds a second to the clock to keep things regular. This extra second is called a leap second, and the most recent one took place on Dec. 31, 2016.

Time factsGetty Images

27. Spending Time

There are 31,556,926 seconds in a year.

Time factsPixabay

26. The Beginning of Time

Although scientists know that the universe began with the Big Bang approximately 15 billion years ago, they have no estimation for when the universe will end.

Time factsPixabay

25. Younger than the Sun

The sun is estimated to be around five billion years old. Earth is slightly younger than that at about 4,540,000,000 years old.

Time factsGetty Images

24. On a Saturday Night

According to the 17th century Archbishop of Armagh, James Usher, the Earth was created on Saturday, October 22, 4004 BC. Usher came to this conclusion by adding up the family histories mentioned in the bible.

Time factsWikimedia Commons

23. No More Weekends

In 1930, Joseph Stalin abolished weekends in Soviet Russia to improve productivity. In 1931, the calendar went to a six day week and then back to a seven day week in 1941.

The Most Hated Rulers In World History FactsGetty Images

22. Longest Living Mammal on Earth

The bowhead whale (also known as the artic whale) is one of the longest living mammals on Earth. The oldest known bowhead whale is at least 211 years old, and there are whales swimming around with the tips of 200-year-old ivory spears still lodged in their flesh.

Time factsGetty Images

21. Beats Per Second

A hummingbird’s heart beats as fast as 1,260 beats per minute. On cold nights, their heartbeat slows to 50-180 beats per minute, when they experience a hibernation-like state.

Time factsPixabay

20. The First Calendar

The original Roman calendar is believed to have been invented by Romulus, the first king of Rome, around 753 BCE, and was based on phases of the moon. The calendar began in March, and only had 10 months. Six of those months had 30 days, and four months had 31 days.

Time factsShutterstock

19. Lost Days of Winter

In the Roman calendar, winter was not assigned to any month. This made the entire year 304 days long, with 61 days unaccounted for in the winter.

Time factsPixabay

18. Two New Months

The Julian calendar, which was the calendar proposed by Julius Caesar, was based on the Earth’s rotations around the sun. Caesar also introduced two new months to the calendar: July, which was named after him, and August, after his successor Augustus.

Julius Caesar FactsShutterstock

17. One Day More

A Julian year is 365 days and 12 months, with an extra day added to February once every four years. At the time, February was the last month of the year, and leap day would have been on Feb. 24.

Time factsShutterstock

16. February 30

A normal February has 28 days, and a leap year 29, but a few times in history Feb 30 has been a real day. The first was in 1700 when Sweden planned to switch from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar. The second was also in Sweden in 1712, when Sweden restored the Julian calendar, and added two leap days to the year.

Time factsShutterstock

15. Births Per Minute

In 2011, the Population Reference Bureau estimated that 250 babies are born around the world every minute. That adds up to about 4 births for every second of every day.

John Cena factsShutterstock

14. Deaths Per Minute

The number of births per minute is approximately half the number of deaths in the same time frame: 105 people die per hour, about 2 people per second.

Time factsPixabay

13. 6,000 Strikes Per Minute

Lightning hits the earth at a rate of 6,000 strikes per minute, or 100 strikes per second. Luckily, the odds of being struck by lightning are pretty low.

Wedding Objections factsPexels

12. 2.5 Billion Beats

By the time you turn 70, your heart will have beat 2.5 billion times. On average, the heart pumps 377 litres of blood around your body every 60 seconds, and beats more than 100,000 times per day.

Time factsPixabay

11. 75 Per Second

McDonalds sells approximately 375 hamburgers every five seconds.

Air Travel FactsWikimedia Commons

10. Oddball Effect

A new experience will always seem to stay longer in your memory than older ones. This is called the oddball effect, and it is the reason that time seems to speed up as you get older.

Time factsGetty Images

9. Time for Sale

In 1836, a business man named John Belville began to sell time. He set his pocket watch every morning at the Greenwich Observatory where he worked, and he would sell precise time to clients in the city. The business continued with his widow, Maria, until 1940.

Time factsPixabay

8. Ten Days Lost

In the Julian calendar, a year was 365.25 days, which was 10.75 minutes too long, and put time 10 days out of sync by 1582. To correct the error, Pope Gregory XIII decreed that 10 days be eliminated, and the Gregorian calendar was introduced.

Time factsWikimedia Commons

7. The Distance Between Them

Counting the seconds between a lightning flash and the sound of thunder can tell you how far away the lightning strike actually is: a delay of three seconds means that the lightning strike is 0.6 miles away.

Time factsGetty Images

6. First Time Keepers

The first known civilization to keep track of time were the Sumerians, who settled in Mesopotamia (now Iraq). Their calendar was based on the moon, and it had 30 days divided into 12 periods that again had 30 parts.

Time factsPixabay

5. Water Clocks

Dating back to 16th century B.C. Babylon, water clocks used the steady flow of water to track time. A large bowl or container was filled with water, and would slowly drain through a spout in the bottom. The inside of the bowl was marked with times, and you could tell time based on the water level in the bowl. Unfortunately, there was a fatal flaw to this design: as the bowl emptied, water would flow more slowly until it barely trickled and no longer kept accurate time.

Time factsWikimedia Commons

4. Getting Some Shut-Eye

If a person sleeps for an average of 8 hours per night, they will spend approximately 229,961 hours sleeping in their lifetime, which amounts to about 1/3 of their lives.

Time factsPixabay

3. 3-Day Game

The longest board game marathon on record is 80 hours, achieved by four friends in the Netherlands between January 3 and 6, 2017.

Will Ferrell factsPixabay

2. Fast is Slow

The faster you move, the slower time goes. According to the laws of physics, you will actually age more slowly if you travel extremely fast. If you were to fly at 99% of the speed of light into the star Sirius, you would have aged less than two and a half years on arrival, but the people on Earth would have aged more than 17 years.

Time factsPixabay

1. A Dinosaur Year

In the time of the dinosaurs, a year was 370 days. Over time, the moon’s gravity has acted as a drag, lengthening a day by 1.7 milliseconds per century, causing the Earth to spin slower and the days to become longer.

Dinosaurs factsPixabay

Sources:  1234567910111213141516171819202122


More from Factinate

Featured Article

My mom never told me how her best friend died. Years later, I was using her phone when I made an utterly chilling discovery.

Dark Family Secrets

Dark Family Secrets Exposed

Nothing stays hidden forever—and these dark family secrets are proof that when the truth comes out, it can range from devastating to utterly chilling.
April 8, 2020 Samantha Henman

Featured Article

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.

Madame de Pompadour Facts

Entrancing Facts About Madame de Pompadour, France's Most Powerful Mistress

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.
December 7, 2018 Kyle Climans

More from Factinate

Featured Article

I tried to get my ex-wife served with divorce papers. I knew that she was going to take it badly, but I had no idea about the insane lengths she would go to just to get revenge and mess with my life.

These People Got Genius Revenges

When someone really pushes our buttons, we'd like to think that we'd hold our head high and turn the other cheek, but revenge is so, so sweet.
April 22, 2020 Scott Mazza

Featured Article

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but few people know her even darker history.

Catherine of Aragon Facts

Tragic Facts About Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s First Wife

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but very few people know her even darker history.
June 7, 2018 Christine Tran



Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.