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Work is the transfer of mechanical energy; its units are the same as for energy, for example joule. Power is the rate of transfer of energy, and it has units of energy/time, for example watt.
Joules per second or watts
Energy . . . 'Joule'Momentum . . . 'kilogram-meter per second' . . . the product of (mass x speed)Work . . . work is energy, measured in units of energyPower . . . power is the rate of producing or using energy, 'joule per second', also called 'watt'.
Power is defined as Work divided by Time. Typically, work is caculated using in Joules and Time in seconds. 1 Joule per second is 1 Watt, the unit of power in the International System of Units.
Power is the rate of change of work with respect to time. It has units of [kg*m^2/s^3].
Power is energy divided by time. Solving for energy, energy is power multiplied by time. Work is closely related to energy - work is the amount of energy transferred.
Work is the transfer of mechanical energy; its units are the same as for energy, for example joule. Power is the rate of transfer of energy, and it has units of energy/time, for example watt.
Joules per second or watts
In very general terms, power is work (or energy, same units) per unit time. In SI units, power is measured in watts, which are joules per second.
Power is work/time. work is force times distance so Power=force*distance/time or (P=f*L/T).
Energy . . . 'Joule'Momentum . . . 'kilogram-meter per second' . . . the product of (mass x speed)Work . . . work is energy, measured in units of energyPower . . . power is the rate of producing or using energy, 'joule per second', also called 'watt'.
yes, it is possible. in fact in power systems all the generators do not run with same power factor.
Power 2: units digit 9. Multiply by 49 again to get power 4: units digit 1. So every 4th power gives units digit 1. So 16th power has units digit 1, so the previous power, the 15th must have units digit 3.
Work is transfer of energy, so it has the same units as energy. Power is the amount of energy transferred per unit time, so it does not have the same units of energy. Rather, its units are energy/time.
Power is defined as Work divided by Time. Typically, work is caculated using in Joules and Time in seconds. 1 Joule per second is 1 Watt, the unit of power in the International System of Units.
Work done per unit of time is defined as power. In the metric system, this unit is a watt. In the standard system, it is horsepower.
It is not clear what you mean with "units of power".