ConvertXHub

Convert Week (week) to Second (s) instantly.

Week to Second conversion

1 Week (week) = 604800 Second (s). To convert Week to Second, multiply the value by 604800.

Week (week)Second (s)
1604800
21209600
53024000
106048000
2515120000
5030240000
10060480000
1000604800000

Frequently asked questions

How many Second are in one Week?

One Week (week) equals 604800 Second (s).

How do I convert Week to Second?

To convert Week to Second, multiply the value by 604800.

What is 10 Week in Second?

10 Week = 6048000 Second.

About these units

Week (week)

A week consists of seven days, a structure stemming from ancient Babylonian and Near Eastern traditions that associated each day with a celestial body (Sun, Moon, and five visible planets). The seven-day week spread through Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, becoming one of the world's most persistent cultural time cycles. Unlike the day, month, or year, the week has no astronomical basis—its endurance is purely cultural. Yet it organizes labor systems, religious observances, markets, and global business schedules. The survival of the week across millennia demonstrates the remarkable staying power of cultural tradition, transcending scientific revolutions, political changes, and the rise of international standardization.

Second (s)

The second is the fundamental SI unit of time and the basis for nearly every modern timing system, from everyday clocks to astronomical calculations and quantum physics. Historically, the second was defined as 1/86,400 of a mean solar day—reflecting Earth's rotation. But because Earth's rotation is not perfectly constant, this definition proved insufficient for scientific precision. Today, the second is defined by the vibration frequency of the cesium-133 atom, specifically 9,192,631,770 oscillations of its hyperfine transition. This atomic definition gives the second extraordinary accuracy and stability, enabling technologies like GPS, satellite communications, deep-space navigation, and particle physics experiments. The second sits at the intersection of human history and cutting-edge physics: once tied to the apparent motion of the Sun, it is now anchored to a universal atomic constant, making it one of the most precisely defined units in science.