Energy (Joules) is equal to the mass multiplied by the speed of light squared (E=mc^2).
Joule is newton-meter, newton is kg m/s2. Therefore: J/kg = Nm/kg = kg m2/s2 kg = m2/s2. So, the answer is no.
It depends on the materia. 1 kg fat contains more calories (joule) than 1 kg water
kg
Latent heat is a type of heat, and heat is a type of energy. Therefore, units of energy are used. In the SI, that would be the joule.
The joule is the SI unit for energy.The unit of power is the watt (W), which is equal to one joule per second.Both the joule and the watt are derived units. (They are both surnames so their symbols are always capitalised: J and W.)For the pure physics geeks:a joule is m2 kg s-2 anda watt is m2 kg s-3
The SI unit is a Joule and 1 joule = 1 newton * 1 metre or 1 kg*1 metre2/1 second2.
The SI unit for Energy is the same unit used for work, which is the Joule. The defition of a Joule is: J = N * m = kg*m^2/s^2 Where: kg is kilogram m is meter s is second N is Newton J is Joule
meters/second.
1 Kilo Joule = 2.777778e-007 Kwh/kg
A Joule in SI base units is: 1 kg · m2/s2
10^-7 joule
1 JOULE= 107