1 million ton of energy per second
11 watts = 11 joules per second
It depends upon the amount of uranium being used.However, the energy given out per nucleon per fission of uranium is 0.9 MeV.
Electron flow is current, or coulombs per second. Electron potential is voltage or joules per second.
The SI unit for a quantity of energy is the Joule.The SI unit for the rate of moving energy is the watt = 1 joule per second.
Watts is energy output. Watts is joules per second. Joules is energy.
11 watts = 11 joules per second
The sun produces 4 billion kilograms of energy per second..
7 miles per second? Don't you mean 7 meters per second?
It depends upon the amount of uranium being used.However, the energy given out per nucleon per fission of uranium is 0.9 MeV.
Electron flow is current, or coulombs per second. Electron potential is voltage or joules per second.
twice as much
Velocity, the units are meters per second, or feet per second.
There's an extra "per second" in the question. One "kilogram-meter per second squared" is one "newton".
It takes 60 watt-hours. Same as lighting a 1-watt bulb for 60 hours; or 60 bulbs of 1 watt each for 1 hour. You get the idea.Notice the units: watt-hours, not watts. Watt is a unit of power, watt-hour is a unit of energy. 1 watt-hour = 0.001 kWh (kilowatt-hour) = 3600 joules = 860 calories = 3.4 BTU.
Power. In SI, energy is measured in Joule, and power is measured to watts (= Joule per second).Power. In SI, energy is measured in Joule, and power is measured to watts (= Joule per second).Power. In SI, energy is measured in Joule, and power is measured to watts (= Joule per second).Power. In SI, energy is measured in Joule, and power is measured to watts (= Joule per second).
if the tennis ball is stationary the energy in it is its gravitational energy given by the formula MGH=E where H is height in m M is mass of tennis ball in kg and G is 9.8 meters per second squared. if the ball is moving however the formula for energy from velocity is 1/2MV2=E ware M is mass in kg and V is velocity in meters per second
Watts (and kiloWatts) are a measure of power, which is energy per second. Since it depends on something that isn't determinable from the given information, it is impossible to say.