What is week?

A week is a unit of time equal to 7 days. It is the standard cycle for work schedules, recurring events, sports seasons, and planning in most cultures worldwide.

Real-world uses

Weeks structure work schedules, school timetables, pregnancy tracking (40 weeks), and agile software development sprints. Pay periods are often weekly or biweekly, and epidemiologists report disease incidence in weekly intervals.

History

The seven-day week has ancient origins, adopted by the Babylonians and later by the Romans, who named days after celestial bodies. It became entrenched in Western culture through the Jewish Sabbath tradition and was formalized in the Roman calendar.

Common mistakes

Assuming a month is exactly 4 weeks—most months are 4 weeks plus 2 or 3 days. Also, different cultures start the week on different days (Sunday in the US, Monday in ISO 8601 and most of Europe).

What is millisecond?

A millisecond is a unit of time equal to one thousandth of a second. It is used in computing, networking, audio and video processing, and measuring reaction times and signal latencies.

Real-world uses

Milliseconds are critical in computing for measuring network latency (ping times), database query performance, and real-time system response. Financial trading platforms measure order execution in milliseconds, and human reaction time averages about 250 ms.

History

The millisecond became a practical unit with the invention of precise mechanical chronographs in the 19th century. Its importance exploded with electronic computing, where operations occur in millisecond and sub-millisecond timescales.

Common mistakes

Confusing milliseconds with microseconds in performance profiling—they differ by a factor of 1,000. Also, assuming human perception cannot detect millisecond differences, when in fact audio delays above 10 ms are perceptible.

When is this conversion used?

Converting week to millisecond is useful in the time domain when comparing values across different measurement standards or applying formulas that require a specific unit.

Worked examples

1 week = 604,800,000 millisecond

1 millisecond = 0.001 second

How to convert week to millisecond

To convert week to millisecond, multiply the value by 604,800,000.

To convert millisecond back to week, multiply by 1.653439e-09.

Measurement standards

The SI second is defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom, maintained by the BIPM and national metrology institutes worldwide.

Did you know?

Earth's rotation is gradually slowing due to tidal friction with the Moon. To keep atomic time aligned with solar time, "leap seconds" have been inserted 27 times since 1972 — though they are scheduled to be abolished by 2035.

Quick reference: week to millisecond

weekmillisecond
0.160,480,000
0.5302,400,000
1604,800,000
21.209600e+09
53.024000e+09
106.048000e+09
251.512000e+10
503.024000e+10
1006.048000e+10
2501.512000e+11
5003.024000e+11
1,0006.048000e+11

Common values

weekmillisecond
Blink of an eye4.960317e-07 week300 millisecond
Average pop song0.00034722 week210,000 millisecond
Feature film0.01190476 week7,200,000 millisecond
One work day (8 hrs)0.04761905 week28,800,000 millisecond
One calendar year52.14285714 week3.153600e+10 millisecond