A total of 5 watts isfive times morethan 1 watt.
The bulb uses 5 watts of power.
It means you can run whatever off the battery as long as power x time = 5. Ten watts for 0.5 hours. Five watts for 1 hour or 2.5 watts for 2 hours.
None. But it does convert 5 watts of electrical power (energy per unit time) into 5 watts of [light + thermal] power.
If you have ten 20-watt lights running they take a power of 200 watts, continuously. If run for 5 hours they take 200x5 watt-hours of energy, which is 1000 watt-hours or 1 kilowatt-hour. That would register as 1 unit on a domestic electricity meter. This does not depend on the voltage of the lamps.
Work is the same as energy, equal to power times time. 500 watts for 2 minutes could be expressed as 1000 watt-minutes, but is more conventionally expressed as 500x120 watt-seconds, otherwise known as 60,000 Joules or 60 kJ.
1 watt = 1 amp * 1 volt So.... In a house: 5 amps * 115 volts = 575 watts In a car: 5 amps * 12 volts = 60 watts
The bulb uses 5 watts of power.
1 watt RMS equals to 100PMPO , accordingly 1000watt RMS equals to 10,000 PMPO. check out LG Home Theater HB954TB for the same.
It means you can run whatever off the battery as long as power x time = 5. Ten watts for 0.5 hours. Five watts for 1 hour or 2.5 watts for 2 hours.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts
calculation for Watts is = volts X amps P=IE P= Power(WATTS) I = Current(AMPS) and E = Voltage(VOLTS). So: I = P/E and E = P/I therefore: 1 watt = 1 ampere x 1 volt If you havea 240 volt lamp that is drawing .5 amp then it is using 120 Watts
It depends on the type of bulb. Incandescent bulbs convert about 90% of the energy into heat and and only 10% is put off as light. LEDs, for instance, are much more efficient, converting almost 90% of the input energy to light. So, a 5 watt LED will convert about 4.5 watts to light, while a 25 watt incandescent will only convert 2.5 watts into light.
None. But it does convert 5 watts of electrical power (energy per unit time) into 5 watts of [light + thermal] power.
John Morganti gave this explanation of "Wh": The watt-hour (symbolized Wh) is a unit of energy equivalent to one watt (1 W) ofpower expended for one hour (1 h) of time. The watt-hour is not a standard unit in any formal system, but it is commonly used in electrical applications. The designation 5 Wh indicates that the battery will power a load of 1 watt for 5 hours or a load of 5 watts for 1 hour.
Watts, same as light bulbs. Most pen pointer lasers are 5 mw, or 5 milliwatts (5 thousandths of a watt). Image the light of a 120 watt incandescent bulb compared to that. 120 watts vs. 0.005 watts. The light bulb consumes 24,000 times more energy, even though the laser dot is really, really bright.
1 watt = 1 joule per second1 kilowatt = 1,000 watts5 kilowatts = 5,000 watts = 5,000 joules per second
The question doesn't make sense. Watts are the product of volts and amps so you could have 1 V with a current of 1 amp = 1 watt or 10V and a current of 0.1 amps = 1 watt or 100V and a current of 0.01 amps = 1 watt etc.