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Energy conversion efficiency is the ratio between the useful output of an energy conversion machine and the input, in energy terms. The useful output may be electric power, mechanical work, or heat.
If the useful energy output of a system is equal to the energy input, the following calculation can be done:Efficiency = (Useful energy out) / (Energy In)Efficiency = 1Efficiency = 100%Therefore, the machine you describe does have an efficiency value, which is equal to 100%. Very few situations like this exist though, unfortunately.
the answer would be hydrogen
You divide useful output energy by the input energy. Or equivalently, useful output power by input power.
Such a machine would have an efficiency of 100% and, as the question suggests, it would be a miracle. No real machine is 100% efficient because there are always losses.
Energy conversion efficiency is the ratio between the useful output of an energy conversion machine and the input, in energy terms. The useful output may be electric power, mechanical work, or heat.
useful energy output divided by total energy output x 100 give answer as a percentage, which is why you multiplied by 100
High efficiency means that a large percentage of the energy used is converted to something useful (the desired output of the machine), and a low percentage is wasted.High efficiency means that a large percentage of the energy used is converted to something useful (the desired output of the machine), and a low percentage is wasted.High efficiency means that a large percentage of the energy used is converted to something useful (the desired output of the machine), and a low percentage is wasted.High efficiency means that a large percentage of the energy used is converted to something useful (the desired output of the machine), and a low percentage is wasted.
If the useful energy output of a system is equal to the energy input, the following calculation can be done:Efficiency = (Useful energy out) / (Energy In)Efficiency = 1Efficiency = 100%Therefore, the machine you describe does have an efficiency value, which is equal to 100%. Very few situations like this exist though, unfortunately.
the answer would be hydrogen
You divide useful output energy by the input energy. Or equivalently, useful output power by input power.
Not likely - any machine wastes some energy; that would reduce the useful output energy.
Work input is how much work you put into a machine and work output is the work done by the machine according to how much work you put into it. You will never get more work out of a machine than you put into it. The efficiency of a machine is how much useful work you got out of the machine compared to how much you put in (expressed in a percent). Efficiency = Useful Work Output ÷ Work Input
Such a machine would have an efficiency of 100% and, as the question suggests, it would be a miracle. No real machine is 100% efficient because there are always losses.
Efficiency = ( useful energy output / total energy input ) x 100
The efficiency of a machine is found by dividing the amount of work done by a machine by the amount of energy used by a machine. The answer is then multiplied by 100 to give a percentage.
the imput and the output of the washing machine is input:washes your clothes output:your clothes get clean