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.
No. Watt is the measurement of how much electricity.
A 15-watt fluorescent should produce about as much light as a 75-watt incandescent.
1MW = 1,000,000 watts
1 Joule is 1 Watt-Second. 1 Watt Hour is 3600 Watt-Second or 3600 Joules. 400 Watt-Hours is 1440000 Joules.
1 WATT is equal to 60 PMPO. You can check it in user manuals of various home theaters.
1 watt is the typcial measure of electricity so 1 watt is 1 watt. If your question is backwards and you want to know how much solar energy it takes to create 1 watt of power, that would depend on the efficientcy of your solar panels. None are 100% effective so there is always loss.
NFL player Chris Watt weighs 321 pounds.
NFL player J.J. Watt weighs 289 pounds.
Almost twice as much as 100 is almost twice 60.
ahm...depends on the cost per watt charged by your local provider... how much is it?
1 watt
1000-1400 watts