M.W Howkins has written:
'Celebration Cakes'
Christopher Howkins has written: 'Royal Tapestry'
Ben Howkins has written: 'Rich Rare and Red' -- subject(s): Port wine
Thomas Howkins has written: '[A catalogue of Friends' books]' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Catalogs, Booksellers'
M.W Barley has written: 'The house and home'
John Howkins was born in 1945.
M.W ROWE has written: 'PHILOSOPHY AND LITERATURE: A BOOK OF ESSAYS'
M.W Gilks has written: 'Survey of Borough shopping patterns 1987 and 1988'
W. Wayne Bowman has written: 'The 160 MW AFBC Demonstration Project' -- subject(s): Fluidization, Fluidized-bed furnaces
M.W Wambsganss has written: 'Tube vibration in industrial size test heat exchanger (30 degree triangular layout, six crosspass configuration), technical memorandum'
G Mouritzen has written: 'Alternate ciculator design concept no. 1 fo a 300 MW(e) GCFR demonstration plant' -- subject(s): Gas cooled reactors
In the context of watts, "mW" and "MW" represent different values. "mW" stands for milliwatts, which is one-thousandth of a watt, while "MW" stands for megawatts, which is one million watts. Therefore, a megawatt (MW) is significantly larger and more powerful than a milliwatt (mW) in terms of voltage.
MW is the abbreviation for megawatts. mW is the abbreviation for milliwatts.