Usually between 120-200. The older ones delivered much more, some as high as 400 joules, but they also had a tendency of giving the patient third degree burns.
The AED output is in joules (J); an energy output. Energy is an Amp Ohm divided by time. Although AED's may vary on their output, depending on numerous criteria, some AED's will shock at 200J, then 300J, then 360J.
The starting joules should be 100-120. This will generally result in 90% first shock success in patients with persistent A-Fib.
50.75 joules of energy equates to about 12.1 calories.
56 kilo joules = 56,000 joules
You can purchase a HeartStart Onsite defibrillator on Amazon The company that makes the defibrillator is Phillips. Many lives are saved by home defibrillators.
A petajoule is 1015 joules (Quadrillion joules)
Given the wavelength of the photons from above, 3000 nm you just calculate how many joules each photon has and divide that into 100 joules per second.
36.72 joules.
31.22 joules.
82.9 joules.
3.6 mega joules
No, because a defibrillator has no processor in it. All that a defibrillator does is run electricity through your heart to get it started. Now the machines that monitor your heart, they have processors, but not a defibrillator.