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| Question 1023225:  It takes Earth approximately 365.2422 days to orbit the sun once, this is known as the tropical year and is the length of the cycle of seasons. In a regular year, there are 365 days, and in a leap year there are 366 days. In a four-year period, one year being a leap year, what is the absolute difference between the number of days observed in the calendar years and the number of days in four tropical years? Express your answer as a decimal to the nearest ten-thousandth.
 Thank you and please show all work to get you to the solution. Thanks
 Answer by KMST(5328)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! The number of days in a period of four consecutive calendar years where one year is a leap year is the integer number 
  , which we can express as
  to the nearest ten-thousandth, because
  is one ten-thousandth. The number of days in four orbits of Earth is the non-integer number
 
  . 
 The difference is
 
  . 
 NOTES:
 1) The length of the tropical year changes a little over the centuries, but for now
  is a good approximation. (I did not know that before your question, so thank you for the learning opportunity).
 Since
  is a good approximation, we do not have to worry about
  , given with 4 decimal places, not being precise enough to make
  not being  to the nearest  . 
 2) Calendar years are leap years if divisible by
  , but not by  unless divisible  by  , so in
  years there are  leap years, and the average length of a calendar year is
  . (I was taught that in the 9th grade, and it stuck with me).
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