The download of this app is disabled as it may not be supported on modern devices. The app may be available from the official source.
| Category | Tools | File Type | APK |
| Requirements | All Platforms | File Size | N/A |
| License | Free | Platform | Android |
| Offered By | N/A |
Converter Minutes to Seconds Please provide values below to convert minute [min] to second [s], or vice versa.
A minute (symbol: min) is a unit of time based on the second, the base unit of the International System of Units (SI). It is equal to 60 seconds. Under Coordinated Universal Time, a minute can have a leap second, making the minute equal to 61 rather than 60 seconds.
A second is the base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI). It is defined based on cesium frequency, ΔνC, "by taking the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium-133 atom to be 9,192,632,770 when expressed in hertz, which is equal to s-1." This definition was adopted in late 2018, and is largely the same as the previous definition, except that the conditions are more rigorously defined.
The download of this app is disabled as it may not be supported on modern devices. The app may be available from the official source.
| Category | Tools | File Type | APK |
| Requirements | All Platforms | File Size | N/A |
| License | Free | Platform | Android |
| Offered By | N/A |
Converter Minutes to Seconds Please provide values below to convert minute [min] to second [s], or vice versa.
A minute (symbol: min) is a unit of time based on the second, the base unit of the International System of Units (SI). It is equal to 60 seconds. Under Coordinated Universal Time, a minute can have a leap second, making the minute equal to 61 rather than 60 seconds.
A second is the base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI). It is defined based on cesium frequency, ΔνC, "by taking the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium-133 atom to be 9,192,632,770 when expressed in hertz, which is equal to s-1." This definition was adopted in late 2018, and is largely the same as the previous definition, except that the conditions are more rigorously defined.