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100 watts
1800 joules / 1 minute = 1,800 joules / 60 seconds = 30 joules per second = 30 watts.
Power (Watts) is Joules (energy) per Second (time) so divide the number of joules by the number of seconds. 104/60 = 1.733 Watts
A typical nuclear plant can run continously at 600 MW, which 6 x 108 Joules per second or, per day, 5.184 x 1013 Joules.
11 watts = 11 joules per second
10 joules of work in 1 second
Work is how much energy is transferred, measured in Joules. Power is how fast or slow the work is transfered, measured in Joules per second. One joule per second is called one Watt of power. This meams a 60 Watt light bulb converts 60 joules of electrical energy into roughly 15 joules of light and 45 Joules of heat every second its switched on for.
Power is measured in watts, or joules per second. So in 90 seconds, 1200 joules of work is equal to 1200/90 watts or 13.3 watts.
100 watts
1800 joules / 1 minute = 1,800 joules / 60 seconds = 30 joules per second = 30 watts.
Approximately 0.01341 horsepower or 0.01 kilowatts.
Power (Watts) is Joules (energy) per Second (time) so divide the number of joules by the number of seconds. 104/60 = 1.733 Watts
A power output of 25W for one second is 25 joules. It is also 0.03 horsepower (electric motor scale)
The power rating of the bulb indicates how much power it uses. The power in watts indicates how much energy in Joules the bulb uses in one second. A bulb should have its voltage and power printed on it.
Joules (energy) are not equivalent to Watts (power).If something converts 6 Joules every second, it is 6 Watts. If it takes ten seconds to convert 6 Joules, its power is 0.6 Watts.Multiply the Watts by the seconds to find the Joules.CommentYou do not 'consume' power. Power is simply a rate; you cannot consume a rate! You consume energy; the rate at which you consume it is power.
"Watts per second" is not a unit of power."Watt" is a unit of power. It means 1 joule of energy per second.1 hour = 3,600 secondsTotal energy = (power) times (time) = (25 joules/sec) x (3,600 seconds) = 90,000 joules of work.
A typical nuclear plant can run continously at 600 MW, which 6 x 108 Joules per second or, per day, 5.184 x 1013 Joules.