1 watt = 1,000 milliwatts -- take the number of Watt-seconds -- multiply it by 1,000 -- the answer is the number of milliwatt-seconds
1 watt = 1,000 milliwatts -- take the number of Watt-seconds -- multiply it by 1,000 -- the answer is the number of milliwatt-seconds
A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).
A watt is a measurement of power equal to one joule of energy per second.
It depends on the type of bulb. Incandescent bulbs convert about 90% of the energy into heat and and only 10% is put off as light. LEDs, for instance, are much more efficient, converting almost 90% of the input energy to light. So, a 5 watt LED will convert about 4.5 watts to light, while a 25 watt incandescent will only convert 2.5 watts into light.
17300.
1 watt = 1,000 milliwatts -- take the number of Watt-seconds -- multiply it by 1,000 -- the answer is the number of milliwatt-seconds
250 milliwatts
1 KW = 1000 Watts.......1 mW = .001 Watt.......1 microwatt or uW = .000001 Watt
I think mini watt is an alias for milli watt, so 1000 mini Watts equals 1 Watt
There are 1000 milliwatts in a watt. There are 1000 watts in a kilowatt. Therefore, there are 1 million milliwatts in one kilowatt.
energy = power x time.In this case, you can either: * Convert the time to seconds, then multiply. The answer will be in watt-seconds = joules. * Convert the time to hours, convert the watt to kilowatt, then multiply. The answer will be in kilowatt-hours.
800 milliwatts, or 0.8 watt. It's a measurement of output power or power consumption.
You can't without knowing the source of the light as candelas have an allowance for human eye sensitivity built-in, and that varies from light source to light source. For any given light source you can find a lumens per watt figures and work back from that as a lumen is adjusted to human eye sensitivity as well.
Watts is amperes times volts. There are one thousand milliwatts in a watt. Milliwatts, then, is milliamperes time volts, or amperes times millivolts, or something equally consistent.
Four Hundred Joules
1000MW is equal to 1GW
You multiply the watts by the seconds. 10 hours is 36,000 seconds, so the watt seconds is 60 x 36,000 Answer 2,160,000 watt-seconds You can also say the bulb uses 60 x 10 or 600 watt-hours.