One thousand kilowatts per megawatt.
Total power output of the sun: 3.86 x 1023 kilowatts (386,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Total solar power received on Earth: 1.74 x 1014 kilowatts (174,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Solar power falling on 1 square meter of ground: 750 watts (0.75 kilowatt) Output of a 1 square meter solar panel: 120 watts (0.12 kilowatt)
How many WHAT in how many quarts!
there are many of them! :)
many
1024
1.56 kilowats high
Those are unrelated measurements; you can't convert one to the other.
power consumed per hour
2.4 million kilowats
(600 watts) x (12 hours per day) = 7.2 kilowatt-hours per day
Kilowatts are a measure of electrical power. Kilowatt hours are a measure of how much electrical power has been used.
Google -correction- www.blackle .com was created byt he same people who created google to save energy on your computer and they have saved millions of kilowats with blackle :)
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Watts (or kilowatts) and amperes are used to measure different things. Watts is a unit of power; ampere is a unit of current. The relationship (for direct current) is: watt = ampere x volt For AC, the relationship is a bit more complicated: watt = ampere x volt x power factor However, the power factor is often close to one.
Total power output of the sun: 3.86 x 1023 kilowatts (386,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Total solar power received on Earth: 1.74 x 1014 kilowatts (174,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Solar power falling on 1 square meter of ground: 750 watts (0.75 kilowatt) Output of a 1 square meter solar panel: 120 watts (0.12 kilowatt)
Electrical inductive motors, transformers and magnetic ballasts bring real power that are measured in kilowats and reactive power (measured in kilovolt-amperes reactive, kvar). Real power genrates "productive" work. Reactive power does the the magnetic field required for inductive devices to operate.
Kilowatts are really a measure of power, that is, the rate at which energy is being used. It depends on how big your engine is. You could have a tiny, low-powered engine which uses the gasoline up very slowly,or you could have a huge, high-powered gas-guzzling monster, which would use it up fast. What you really might be asking, however, is "what is energy content of a gallon of propane?". Energy is measured in Joules. A joule of energy will keep a 1 Watt engine running for 1 second. If you ask: "How many kilowatt-hours of energy can an engine get out of a gallon of propane?", that would depend on the efficiency of the engine, which could be as low as a few percent. Wikipedia states: "When properly combusted, propane produces about 50 MJ/kg"