First let us convert the power of the bulb into kilowatts.
A kilowatt is 1000 watts. We have one tenth of that. So 100W = 0.1kW
To work out the kilowatt hours we simply multiply the power in kilowatts by the time the bulb is on for (in hours):
0.1kW x 10h = 1 kWh
a 100 watt bulb uses 100 watts of power. In ten hours it uses 100x10 watt-hours, or 1 kilowatt-hour. A kilowatt-hour is also called a unit, and units are what you pay for.
Multiply the power by the time. For KWH then divide by 1000.
Thus 100W x 20 hrs = 2000 Whrs = 2 KWhrs
100 watt hours.
A 30-watt bulb uses 0.03 kilowatt-hours every hour, or 30 kilowatt-hours in 1000 hours. To find the kilowatt-hours, multiply 0.03 by the time in hours.
The idea is to divide the energy by the power used. First, convert the units to make them consistent. For example, you might convert kilowatt-hours to watt-hours.
A 60 Watt light bulb consumes electrical energy. If you leave is on for 24 hours, it consumes 60 x 24 = 1440 Watt-Hours, or 1.44 Kilowatt-Hours. If you want to know how much money this much energy costs, look on your last electricity bill. There it will give the cost of one Kilowatt-Hour.
1 kilowatt = 1000 watt ==> 1 watt = 0.001 kilowatt
15 w * 24 h = 360 watt-hours. [conversion: 360 (w-h) /1000 (w/kw)= .36 kilowatt-hours] So, .36 times your local electricity supply and delivery rate (in kilowatt-hours). For me, supply and delivery of 1 kilowatt-hour is $3.25 (you can find this on your bill) So, .36 * 3.25= $1.17 to run 15 watt light for 24 hours
A 30-watt bulb uses 0.03 kilowatt-hours every hour, or 30 kilowatt-hours in 1000 hours. To find the kilowatt-hours, multiply 0.03 by the time in hours.
1 kilowatt = 1,000 watts 6 kilowatts = 6,000 watts 6 kilowatt-hours = 6,000 watt-hours
50 watts is 0.05 kilowatts, so in 24 hours it uses 0.05 x 24 kilowatt-hours, or 1.2 kilowatt-hours of energy.
The idea is to divide the energy by the power used. First, convert the units to make them consistent. For example, you might convert kilowatt-hours to watt-hours.
No, kilowatt-hours are an exact measure of a quantity of energy. Energy is something that can be measured exactly and if you have an electricity supply at your house there is a meter that measures the kilowatt-hours you use. If you have a 40-watt light, it uses 40 watt-hours if it is on for an hour. If it is left on for 24 hours it uses 40 x 24 watt-hours, which is 0.96 kilowatt-hours, that might cost you 10-20 cents or pence.
This is a tricky question. Similar to the question which weigh more 1 kilogram wool or 1 kilogram iron? 1 kilowatt = 1,000 watt, and 60 watt are 0.06 kilowatt. It is the same power, but expressed in two different terms. The life of the light bulb will be the same, 95 hours.
two 40 watt bulbs in 24 hours use: 2*40*24 watt hours in practical uses, kilowatt hours are used divide by 1000 to change the units thus two 40 watt bulbs in 24 hours use 1.92 kilowatt hours
(600 watts) x (12 hours per day) = 7.2 kilowatt-hours per day
Add up all the individual watts, convert everything to kilowatts, then multiply by the number of hours.
It depends on the bulb, how many watts it is. All bulbs are marked with the correct voltage and the power taken, in watts. You multiply the watts by the number of hours to find the watt-hours of energy used. Then divide by 1000 to find the kilowatt-hours. A kilowatt-hour is also called a unit and you pay about £0.15 for a unit of electricity. Let's say it's a 100 watt bulb running for 24 hours. That uses 2400 watt-hours or 2.4 kilowatt-hours, which costs about 2.4 x £0.15 which is £0.36.
First find your watt hours and by moving the decimal place change to kilowatt hours. Then multiply that answer by .07 cents per kilowatt hour.
A 60 Watt light bulb consumes electrical energy. If you leave is on for 24 hours, it consumes 60 x 24 = 1440 Watt-Hours, or 1.44 Kilowatt-Hours. If you want to know how much money this much energy costs, look on your last electricity bill. There it will give the cost of one Kilowatt-Hour.