The sun produces 4 billion kilograms of energy per second..
It produces so much energy because of the nuclear fusion reaction that happens in the Sun's core every second. Nuclear fusion releases tremendous amounts of energy.
Sun releases energy at the mass-energy conversion rate of 4.26 million metric tons per second. That is 384.6 yotta watts.You will need to multiply that up to get the daily output.
Sun releases energy at the mass-energy conversion rate of 4.26 million metric tons per second. That is 384.6 yotta watts.You will need to multiply that up to get the yearly output.
Yes, the mass of the sun is decreasing because of the continuous nuclear fusion processes that are responsible of the solar energy that reaches us as heat and light. However, this decrease is very much negligible that it could not be noticed any decrease in sun size. Each one second, about 616 million tonnes of hydrogen changes to about 612 million tonnes of helium and the mass difference is demonstrated as energy.
About 4 million tonnes.
1 watt means 1 joule/second. To produce 1 watt means that every second, 1 joule of energy is produced.
About 4 million tonnes of matter are converted to energy every second in the Sun. See related question.
it produces 3.826*10 to the 26 power in one second
A watt is one joule of energy used every second. In electronics, applying 1 volt across a 1 ohm resistor will produce 1 W of heat.
It produces so much energy because of the nuclear fusion reaction that happens in the Sun's core every second. Nuclear fusion releases tremendous amounts of energy.
1000 joules every second
Every turbine gives 300-400 homes power.
How much WHAT? It can't produce ANY brownies, but can produce energy storing molecules in plants The energy synthesis would vary depending on the size, and type of plant, it's overall health, the availability of CO2 and water, and the amount & intensity of the light it was exposed to.
500w
The energy does a airplane engine produce is 10 kg of ht?
1,000 joules of heat energy for every second that the 1,000 watts' dissipation continues.
I know