It is approx 3.82*10^26 Joules.
That is called a kilowatt (kW). It is also equal to 1000 joules/second.
-- 1 kilowatt -- 1,000 joules per second -- 1.3405 horsepower (rounded)
1 kilowatt hour = 3,600,000 Joules 1 Tetrajoule = 1,000,000 Joules 1 kilowatt hour = 3.6 Tetrajoules
Well, unfortunately there are different BTUs, each a slightly different quantity of energy.The BTU (ISO) is 1054.5 joules exactly. Let's use that one, and avoid some rounding.10 kW = (10,000 joules/second) x (3,600 seconds/hour) x (1 BTU/1,054.5 joules) = 34,139.4 BTU/hour
One Second After has 350 pages.
40 Joules, I think, as the formula for Watts is Joules/Second = Joules per second 40 Watts should equal 40 Joules per one second...
A BTU is about 1055 joules. A kilowatt is 1000 joules/second, so it is 3,600,000 joules/hour. Dividing that by 1055 joules gives you the equivalent of about 3400 BTU/hour.
3.6 mega joules
1 hp for one second = 707 joules 1 hp = 746 watts 1 watt second = 1 joule of energy 1 btu = 1.055 joules So if you use 746 watts for one second you come out with 707 btu 746 watt second divided by 1.055 joules = 707 btu John L Lake Worth, Fl
Work is how much energy is transferred, measured in Joules. Power is how fast or slow the work is transfered, measured in Joules per second. One joule per second is called one Watt of power. This meams a 60 Watt light bulb converts 60 joules of electrical energy into roughly 15 joules of light and 45 Joules of heat every second its switched on for.
Killo = 1000. There are 1000 watts in 1 kw.
1 Newton is 1 joule/meter.
The equivalent of about 6,330,000,000 joules or 6 million BTUs
4 joules = about 1 ton of coal
1 kWh is a kilowatt-hour, in other words 1000 watts for one hour. That is 1000 Joules per second, for 3600 seconds. So 1 kWh is 3,600,000 Joules, or 3600 kJ.
One foot-pound of force equates to about 1.355818 joules.
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