Joule
joule
Joule
You have all the right words, but the concept is backwards. Energy is the amount, power is the rate of energy. One watt of power is required to move one joule of energy in one second.
No. One watt is one joule/second.
1 watt means 1 joule/second. To produce 1 watt means that every second, 1 joule of energy is produced.
it produces 3.826*10 to the 26 power in one second
(Air and rolling resistance ignored)Power required = energy change / time taken>Problem:Power required to accelerate 1000 kg car from 0 to 60 mph ( 26.82 metres / second) in 3 seconds ?>kinetic energy gained (energy change)= 0.5 * mass * velocity2,>so 0.5 * 1000 * 26.822 = 359656.2 joules>Power required = energy change / time taken= 359656.2 / 3= 119885.4 joules / second (watts)= 119.8854 kw (about 161 bhp)
Steam power is power(energy) produce by steam.
Assuming you mean "nuclear energy": power plants don't produce it, they use it.
A watt is a unit of power - how fast energy is transferred, or in other words, how fast work is done. "Work" can simply be understood as a transfer of certain types of energy.
All energy is measured in joules. A joule is a Newton meter.One joule is defined as the amount of work done by a force of one newton moving an object through a distance of one meter. It is also the work required to continuously produce one watt of power for one second; or one watt second (W·s)
They use nuclear energy to produce power for the grid.