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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.
1,000 Source: http://www.unitconversion.org/power/megawatts-to-kilowatts-conversion.html
Yes, you can subtract a megawatt from a gigawatt because they are both units of power but differ by a factor of 1000. One gigawatt is equivalent to 1000 megawatts, so subtracting one megawatt from a gigawatt leaves you with 999 megawatts.
Nothing.
12000 megawatts
10,000,000 watts
1,000 watts? 0.001 megawatts?
According to the lists on the internet one pressurized water reactor can supply between 300 and 3000 Megawatts.
mega = 1 million, 1 megawatts is 1,000,000 watts
The Sun produces approximately 384.6 yottawatts, which is equivalent to 384.6 trillion trillion watts. This output is a result of nuclear fusion reactions in the Sun's core converting hydrogen into helium, which releases vast amounts of energy in the form of heat and light.