A joule is a unit of energy, not a unit of power. A watt is the same as a joule per second, so depending on how long it takes to output a million joules, the power can be very high, or very low.
approximately 19,230.769 (just put 19,230.77)
10,000,000 or ten million, A much easier way to figure this out, is that when you are using 10 to the power of ANYTHING just put the number of zeroes as the same number as the exponent. It's so easy!
6 million million million in standard form is: 6,000,000,000,000,000,000 (6 quintillion).
If you put £20 notes into stacks three notes wide, by four notes deep, then you'd have a block of bank notes over 45cm high. There are photos of a simulated block of one million pounds on this page - [See related link below for the photos]
Expressed in figures, this is equal to 25800000.
Strong enough to deliver 100,000 joules of energy every second, if there's a place to put it all.
one million and five hundred thousand or one and a half million
94%
1,000,000 is one million you have typed 1500000 which is one million, five hundred thousand - or to put it another way one and a half million.
For every joule of electricity we put into a refrigerator we can extract up to 25 joules of heat from its contents.
A suppressor is rated in joules, and a suppressor is rated as to the amount of joules it can expend before it no longer can work to protect the circuit from the power surge.I think you can find the answer to this question in Dehn-usa.com's "Lightning Protection Guide" or their "ABC's of Lightning". I put the link under the related links below.
there is a million million million million million million particals in the universe that we can observe yo mama took the ugly ones and put them in to one nerd.
Yes, to write "one point seven million dollars," you can write $1.7 million.
Manufacturing. A machine has a work output of 14ax4 j (joules) and a work in put 7a2x5 j. What is the eficiency of the machine? efficiency in % = work output in joules work input in joules
One that is of the world. To put it simply, a worldly power if you understand that..
Almost 90 % of electrical energy provided to an incandescent light bulb goes as heat and rest as light. A 100 Watt bulb puts out 100 Joules of heat per second. So - for one minute it would put out 6000 Joules (100 Watts X 60 seconds). 1 BTU (British Thermal Unit) of heat = 1055.056 Joules. So a 100 watt bulb, burning for one minute would put out 5.68 BTUs of heat. ( 6000 Joules / 1055.056 Joules) = 5.68 BTUs. Same bulb burning for one hour would generate 341 BTUs of heat.
Don't put a comma after the word and. You could get away with putting one after million but it would not be necessary.