A “day” is usually defined as 24 hours, but the precise answer is a bit more nuanced: a true Earth day is about 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds, while the civil day we use on clocks is fixed at exactly 24 hours (86,400 seconds).

What “a day” really means

  • In everyday life, a day is defined as 24 hours by convention, equal to 86,400 seconds.
  • Astronomically, a day is the time Earth takes to rotate once on its axis relative to the Sun, which averages about 24 hours.

Solar day vs. sidereal day

  • The solar day (what your clock tracks: noon to noon) averages 24 hours but varies slightly during the year because Earth’s orbit is not a perfect circle and its axis is tilted.
  • The sidereal day (one full rotation of Earth relative to distant stars) is about 23 h 56 min 4 s, which is why sources note that an “Earth day” is slightly less than 24 hours in strict rotational terms.

Why your clock says 24 hours

  • Civil timekeeping uses a fixed 24-hour day so life stays simple for schedules, calendars, and technology, even though Earth’s rotation is not perfectly constant.
  • Because Earth’s actual rotation can drift by milliseconds, timekeepers occasionally add a leap second to keep our atomic clocks aligned with the true length of the day.

Extra fun context

  • The length of a day is tied to Earth’s rotation , which over very long periods is gradually slowing due to tidal interactions with the Moon, meaning days in the distant past were shorter.
  • Other planets have very different “days”: for example, Mars’s day is about 24 hours 39 minutes, and Jupiter’s is under 10 hours, showing that “exactly how long is a day” depends on which world is being discussed.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.