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.
Solar panels produce electricity (a general statement) which, to be more specific, is electrical energy, measured in watt-hours or kilowatt-hours.
1 watt means 1 joule/second. To produce 1 watt means that every second, 1 joule of energy is produced.
The amount of energy produced by a 225-watt solar panel in a day depends on factors such as sunlight intensity and duration. On average, a 225-watt solar panel can generate around 900 watt-hours (0.9 kWh) to 1,350 watt-hours (1.35 kWh) per day, assuming about 4-6 hours of peak sunlight exposure.
4 Watt-hours
If it is 1000 watts then it produces a 1000 watts. A watt is 1 joule/sec.
Solar Ballon is designed to trap solar energy using an inflatable plastic thin film ballon called a solar concentrator. It can trap 500 watt to 1 kilowatt of solar energy.
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. One watt is one joule/second.
A 20 watt solar panel produces 20 watts of power/hour when it is in direct sunlight. However, this varies depending on the conditions. It won't produce at 100% in cloudy conditions. Let's say the 20 watt panel gets about 5 hours of good sunlight everyday between 10am and 3pm. This will produce .1 kWh or 100 watt hours. This means you can run a 100 watt bulb for one hour or two 50 watt bulbs for one hour.http://www.heatingandcoolingcompanies.org/
The work or energy required to produce one watt is equal to one joule per second. This is because one watt is defined as the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred, with one watt equivalent to one joule of energy transferred per second.
joule
About 200 Dollars