It is not clear what you mean with "units of power".
A megawatt (MW) is larger than a kilowatt (kW). Specifically, one megawatt equals 1,000 kilowatts, making it 1,000 times larger. This measurement is commonly used to express the capacity of power plants and electrical systems.
A 1 megawatt power station can power 10,000 100W bulbs. This is because 1 megawatt is equal to 10,000 100W bulbs in terms of power consumption.
The power plant produces one megawatt of electricity.
You cannot. A megawatt is a measure of power, whereas a ton is a measure of mass. The two measure different things and, according to the basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. The amount of power generated from one ton of nuclear fuel will be very different from that obtained by burning a ton of gas, or anthracite, or peat.
A megawatt is one million watts. One watt is a unit of electrical power.
1000. A megawatt-hour is the energy you'd get with a megawatt of power for 1 hour. Energy = power * time. It's important to note that it's 'megawatt hour' and not megawatt/hour (ie. it's not megawatt per hour).A gigawatt has 1000 times the power of a megawatt. Thus, since the time is the same (both 1 hour), a gigawatt-hour = 1000 megawatt hours.
To use 1 megawatt you would need to switch on five hundred 2-kilowatt convectors. That would blow the fuse :)
Gallons are a measure of volume. Megawatt is a measure of power. The two are not automatically convertible without some other rate.
No, it is the unit of Power. Where 1MW = 106 Watt
MWh stands for megawatt-hour, which is a unit of measurement for electrical energy. It is commonly used to measure the amount of electricity consumed over time or generated by power plants. It is equivalent to one million watt-hours.
The power varies, but sizes in the range of 2000 to 3000 megawatt are common.
The two megawatt wind turbines envisaged would be similar in size to those on Burgar Hill, Evie.