No, a 150 watt bulb consumes 150 watts of power, which is equivalent to 150 joules per second. The work done by the bulb depends on the time it operates for.
To calculate the energy in joules, you can use the formula: energy (joules) = power (watts) × time (seconds). If you have 1440 watts of electrical power and want to calculate the energy in joules for a specific time period, you would need to know the time duration in seconds.
A Joule is a Watt-second (or W=J/s). Therefore, 3.5 kWh = 3.5*3600 kWs = 3.5*3600*1000 W-s = 12.6 million Joules
1 MW (megawatt) is equal to 1,000,000 watts. If 1 watt is equal to 1 joule per second, then 1 MW is equal to 1,000,000 joules per second or 1,000,000 joules/second.
Killo = 1000. There are 1000 watts in 1 kw.
"59.4 watts" means "59.4 joules every second"
A 600W drill would use 600 joules of electrical energy in one second (since 1 watt = 1 joule/second). To calculate the total energy used over a specific period of time, you would multiply the power in watts by the time in seconds.
No, a 150 watt bulb consumes 150 watts of power, which is equivalent to 150 joules per second. The work done by the bulb depends on the time it operates for.
There are 100 joules in 1 watt-second, so in 1 second, there would be 100 joules per watt. Therefore, in 100 watts, there would be 10,000 joules.
It is approx 3.82*10^26 Joules.
Watt means joule/second, kW (kilowatt) means kilojoule/second, i.e., thousands of joules per second.
10,000 joules per second.
For every joule of electricity we put into a refrigerator we can extract up to 25 joules of heat from its contents.
watt (w) means joules per second. kW (kilowatts) means thousands of joules per second. Multiply that by 3600 to get the joules used per hour.
Watts means joules per second. The device uses 1190 joules of energy every second; most of that will be converted to heat. It is best to use SI units most of the time; in this case, joules rather than calories for energy. However, if you want to convert that, 1 calorie = 4.184 joules; thus, you can divide the number of joules by 4.184 to convert it to calories.
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.
To calculate the energy in joules, you can use the formula: energy (joules) = power (watts) × time (seconds). If you have 1440 watts of electrical power and want to calculate the energy in joules for a specific time period, you would need to know the time duration in seconds.