No, the average day 151,000 people die and 360,000 people are born each day. So no their has never been a day when nobody died.
February 3rd is the only day where no one in history has ever been born. Despite much scientific study, there is no explanation for this phenomena. Historically it has been referred to as “the empty day” or “nobody's birthday”.
There is no certain time for death and that can come at any time. Yet, some reports say most death occurs during night while the time span between 3 am to 4 am is the most vulnerable. According to a research most hospital deaths occur between 3am to 4am.
And particularly when you're human, you are more likely to die in the late morning -- around 11 a.m., specifically -- than at any other time during the day.
December 25 (Christmas Day) is the least common birthday, while January 1 (New Year's Day) is the second least common. December 24 (Christmas Eve) also makes the list as the 3rd least common birthday while July 4 (Independence Day) is the 4th least common birthday.
Christmas, New Years, Christmas Eve, July 4th, Halloween, and some suspiciously Thanksgiving days all make the top 10 least common birthdays.
The least common birthday is leap day, or February 29. But because the day only occurs once every four years, it's obvious it would yield the least amount of birthdays. The rarest birthday of the 365 annual calendar days is Christmas day, Dec. 25.
You know the ones I am talking about — the ones that end in a zero. The ones that make you happy when you are young, happy that you are getting older, can do more, be more. The zero birthdays as you get older that make you stop and think about your future, your life, your family, your mortality.
They found that the most fertile months for conceiving a boy were from September to November, while the lowest fertile period was from March to May.
The man who is thought to have fathered the most children of all time is Moroccan Sultan Ismail Ibn Sharif (1645 to 1727) with a total of more than 1,000, according to Guinness World Records.
According to real birth data compiled from 20 years of American births, mid-September is the most birthday-packed time of the year, with September 9th being the most popular day to be born in America, followed closely by September 19th.
A huge population in the Indian sub-continent celebrate their birthdays on two different days – one the official one, and one on the day they were actually born.
Probability of right sperm meeting right egg: one in 400 quadrillion.
Your golden birthday is the year you turn the same age as your birthday – for example, turning 25 on the 25th, or 31 on the 31st. If you've ever wondered where the tradition comes from, you're not alone. Joan Bramsch, a midwestern author, started celebrating her five children's golden birthdays in the 1950s.
Also meaning that December is the least common birth month, with January and February sharing a similarly low birth rate.
On the other hand, the chances of anyone in the U.S having been born at the same time on the same date as you would be 6.6 (other people born at the same time) divided by 275,600,000 (the population of the U.S.), which comes to about 1/41,800,000 or about . 0000025%.
A half-birthday is a day approximately six months before or after the anniversary of a person's birth. It is sometimes marked by people whose birthday falls near major holidays, the celebration of which may overshadow celebration of the birthday.
In short, the arbitrary nature of birthdays makes it very easy for your brain to forget about them. Sure, you can overlearn any tidbit of information and commit it to memory, but new information can easily interfere with this process.
The Chinese aren't big on having birthday celebrations every year; instead, they focus on the 1st, 10th, 60th, and 70th. For a child's first birthday, friends and relatives are invited to come for lunch. Long noodles called “longevity noodles” are served as a wish for the child to have a long life.
Those born in September are, apparently, the smartest out of the entire year. According to Marie Claire, a study published in the National Bureau of Economic Research found that there's a clear correlation between the month during which you were born and how smart you are.
German man Sven Hagemeier set a world record on August 4, 2014, for the longest birthday — 46 hours — by flying from Auckland, New Zealand, to Brisbane, Australia, and then Honolulu, Hawaii, where his wife was waiting to greet him, according to Guinness World Records.
Birth data shows that Sept. 9 is the most common birthday in the U.S., and September is the busiest month for births overall. There have been several reported data sets that offer a picture of which days and months are the most common for births.
Raghav became the world's oldest father at age 94 when his first child was born in 2010. He broke his own record in 2012 when at the age of 96 he had another son. Julio Iglesias Sr. Ecclestone is the former head of Formula One motor racing; he previously had children in 1955, 1984, and 1988.