It the unit is watts, megawatts is millions of watts, so to convert watts to megawatts, multiply the number of watts be 1,000,000.
mega- as a prefix to anything means 1,000,000 as in megahertz, megawatts, megajoules &c. There are 1,000,000 meters in a megameter.
Engineering notation is similar to scientific notation, with the constraint that the power of ten must be a multiple of 3 (or -3) or zero. Example: 1. x 102 = 100. x 100 The advantage of engineering notation, is that moving between different metric prefixes (such as kilo-, mega-, giga-, milli-, micro-, nano-) is easier, because they change by a factor of 103. So in the example above with 1. x 102, if the units were megawatts, and you wanted to see how many kilowatts that was, it is easier with Engineering Notation than scientific. 100. x 100 megawatts = 100. x 103 kilowatts
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Any graph of a mapping which is one-to-one or many-to-one but not one-to-many.
There are one million (1,000,000) watts in a megawatt.
250 Megawatts = 250,000,000 Watts.
The worlds largest wind turbine creates seven-plus megawatts per year.
60 Gigawatts equals 60000 megawatts
The worlds largest wind turbine creates seven-plus megawatts per year.
1,000 Source: http://www.unitconversion.org/power/megawatts-to-kilowatts-conversion.html
It's a question of scale. A gigaWatt is 1000 megaWatts, so if you subtract one, you are left with 999 megaWatts.
Nothing.
12000 megawatts
10,000,000 watts
1,000 watts? 0.001 megawatts?
1 megawatt = 1,000,000 watts1 kilowatt = 1,000 wattsSo 544 million kilowatts is 524,000,000,000 watts. In megawatts this is 524,000 MW. Or 524 gigawatts (GW)