1 watt = 1 joule per second
Additional AnswerThe watt is not an 'electrical term' at all. It is simply the SI unit of measurement for power, which is the rate of doing work or of heat transfer.
From The Fact Monster: (http://www.factmonster.com) watt [for James Watt], abbr. W, unit of power, or work done per unit time, equal to 1 joule per second. It is used as a measure of electrical and mechanical power. One watt is the amount of power that is delivered to a component of an electric circuit when a current of 1 ampere flows through the component and a voltage of 1 volt exists across it. The derivative units are kilowatt (1,000 W; kW) and megawatt (1,000,000 W; MW), used in electric power systems, and milliwatt (0.001 W; mW) and microwatt (0.000001 W; μW), used in electronics.
Watt is the SI unit of Power. It is equivalent to one joule per second.
Or, one watt can be defined as the power or energy required to do 1 joule of work in one second.
A Watt is the SI unit of power, equivalent to one joule per second, corresponding to the power in an electric circuit in which the potential difference is one volt and the current one ampere
a watt is a unit of power equal to one joul per second.
Unit of electrical power is watt. 1 watt is one 1watt electrical power
It is the consumption that the fixture uses. It is found by multiplying the voltage the fixture operates on by the amperage the fixture draws.
Watt is a unit of power - the rate at which energy gets generated, used, or transferred. 1 watt is defined as 1 joule per second.
energy
milli watt
James Watt
What I think you mean, is, "How many kilowatt-hours could a 600 watt turbine produce in a month?" The answer is, not more than 432.
The word watt comes as a way of giving credit for James Watt and his help on the steam engine.
The real name of James Watt's father is unknown. Although, one could say the Watt is a Junior. All we know about Watt's father is that he was a shipbuilder.
Watt.
Watt does anti mean in texy
milli watt
It is that torque which at the synchronous speed of the machine under consideration would develop a power of 1 watt
This has no physical meaning. The correct unit for power is the watt (not watt per hour).
well,the 15 watt mean that foe each houre the neon is on it will consume 15 watt,hence,15(watt)*24(day)=360(watt). for a month 24-7 days on, 15*24*30=10800 watt
If you mean kW, that simply means kilowatt - or thousands of watts. To convert from kW to watt, multiply by 1000.
Yes, that is what the numbers mean.
If the socket threads of the lamp are the same then yes the bulbs can be interchanged. The 5 watt bulb will glow brighter than the 4 watt bulb. If by a 4 watt light you mean a 4 watt fixture, then it is not recommended to place a larger wattage lamp in a fixture that is rated by the manufacturer at a specific operating wattage
It's a measurement (in Watts (W)) of Power.
Electricity has three terms. Active power - Watt. Apparent power VA, reactive power VAR. Watt is known as active output
there is one Giga Giga watt in one Exa watt. So one Exa watt = one Giga Giga watt or 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = 1018 watt and one Giga watt = 109 watt then one Exa watt = 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = one billion Giga watt = one thousand million Giga watt