energy
Mechanical work is the amount of energy transferred by a force. Like energy, it is a scalar quantity, with SI units of joules.
Newton x meter is joules. (Please note that Nm is also used for torque; in this case, it happens to have the same units, but it is unrelated to energy, and can therefore not be converted to energy units.)
Answer #1: Joules (J) or Newton metres (Nm)==================================Answer #2: Energy
To work out the Ratio of something, you have to compare numbers or quantities in the same units. For e.g.1m to 10cm, for this you first have to convert them so they become the same units, which will be100cm to 10cm. Which is written as:100:10 (100cm:10cm or 1m:10cm)
energy
Yes, work and energy have the same units. In the SI system, both are measured in Joules.
They are closely related. You can think of work as the transfer of energy.
Work and energy use the same units; but the term "work" is used in the sense of "transfer of energy" (amount of energy transferred).
energy
Work is simply the transfer of energy. Both work and energy are measured in the same units, for example, Joules.
Work is the transfer of mechanical energy; its units are the same as for energy, for example joule. Power is the rate of transfer of energy, and it has units of energy/time, for example watt.
momentum
Work is transfer of energy, so it has the same units as energy. Power is the amount of energy transferred per unit time, so it does not have the same units of energy. Rather, its units are energy/time.
work and energy have same unit which is jole denoted by "J"
Work uses the same unit as energy. Ideally, you would use the same units for work, potential energy, kinetic energy, or any other type of energy. In the SI, that is the joule.
Not exactly, but they are closely related. Both have the same units, but "work" specifically refers to a TRANSFER of mechanical energy. When "work is done", mechanical energy is transferred from one object to another.