Exactly the same as its effect on the speed of light, since light and MW
are the same identical physical phenomenon.
Yes is playable
The biggest Hydro plant in Norway is Kvildal with an effect of 1240 MW per hour. So about 2500 Mw. But there are far bigger powerplants in the world with higher effect than this.
Cross is played by Dean McKenzie in Need For Speed Most Wanted
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.
You've misunderstood something in order to even be able to ask that question. A watt is a measure of power, which is an instantaneous value. A 1.8 MW turbine produces 1.8 MW whenever it's turning at its rated speed. It sounds like you want to measure energy, which is power multiplied by time. If your power units are watts and your time units are seconds, then you get energy in joules (there are roughly 31.5 million seconds in a year, so if the turbine is at full speed the whole time, you get about 56.8 terajoules of energy).
100 mW to W
1 kw = 0.001 mw 25 kw = 0.025 mw
1. Tamil Nadu (4906.74 MW)2. Maharashtra (2077.70 MW)3. Gujarat (1863.64 MW)4. Karnataka (1472.75 MW)5. Rajasthan (1088.37 MW)
1. Tamil Nadu (4906.74 MW)2. Maharashtra (2077.70 MW)3. Gujarat (1863.64 MW)4. Karnataka (1472.75 MW)5. Rajasthan (1088.37 MW)
1 mw = 4tph
1.493 mw