One Joule is one Newton-Meter, (Joule = Newton times Meter), so 10000 Joule equals 10 Newton-Kilometers (N*km). 10000*J/N = 10 km
Answer
You might as well be asking how many millimetres there are in kilowatt! Your question is meaningless! A kilometre is used to measure length, whereas the joule is used to measure energy. The original answer is nonsense.
there are 10,000 joules in a 10 kilojoules
-- the energy that a 100-watt light bulb uses in 10 seconds
-- the energy it takes to lift 225 pounds about 3 feet up off the floor
-- a little less than 1/4 of a food calorie
0.278 watt hours.
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 Watt = 1 Joule/second 1 kilowatt = 1000 Watts = 1000 Joules/second 1 hour = 60 minutes = 3600 seconds 1 kWh = 1000 (Joules/second) * 3600 (seconds) = 3,600,000 Joules = 3.6 MJoules
That would be 120 watt hours, or 0,12 kilowatt hours, or 432 000 joules. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilowatt_hour for an explanation of watt hours.
Running a power of 60 watts for one hour uses 60 watt-hours of energy. If you run it for two hours, that would be 120 watt-hours. Running a 60 watt appliance for 16 hours and 20 minutes is 1000 watt-hours, or 1 kWh, also called one Unit.
Killo = 1000. There are 1000 watts in 1 kw.
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).
365 kilowatt-hours is 1,314,000,000 joules.
1 Joule is 1 Watt-Second. 1 Watt Hour is 3600 Watt-Second or 3600 Joules. 400 Watt-Hours is 1440000 Joules.
1000 joules every second
A gallon of gasoline contains about 132x106 joules of energy, which is equivalent to 125,000 BTU or 36,650 watt-hours:
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
The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.
Yes, 1000 watts represents the conversion of 1000 Joules of energy each second, so it does not depend on the type of machine.
1 Watt = 1 Joule/second 1 kilowatt = 1000 Watts = 1000 Joules/second 1 hour = 60 minutes = 3600 seconds 1 kWh = 1000 (Joules/second) * 3600 (seconds) = 3,600,000 Joules = 3.6 MJoules
Your basal metabolic rate approximates 100 watts. Thus 1000 watt-hours equals about 10 hours of your existence.
That would be 120 watt hours, or 0,12 kilowatt hours, or 432 000 joules. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilowatt_hour for an explanation of watt hours.
Running a power of 60 watts for one hour uses 60 watt-hours of energy. If you run it for two hours, that would be 120 watt-hours. Running a 60 watt appliance for 16 hours and 20 minutes is 1000 watt-hours, or 1 kWh, also called one Unit.