Same as for instantaneous power or any other kind of power:
Watt
(same as joule per second)
Power is the rate of use of energy in time. The unit of Energy is joule and the unit of Power is joule/second or Watt.
Joule is a unit of energyWatt is a unit of power
It's dependent on the size of the microwave. A small unit that's less than 1.0 cubic feet will have between 700 and 900 watts of power. I larger unit, say 1.5 cubic feet will have around 1100 watts of power.
The same as anywhere else in the world! The answer depends entirely on the size of the unit. To get some idea of the power used by different household electrical appliances go to any shop which sells them and read the information displayed about each unit.
There is no SI base unit for power.Power is measured in watts, which is a derived unit, not a base unit.A watt is equal to one joule (newton-meter) per second (J/s).
I never flushed a power steering unit in my 43 yr's of driving and never had a problem with a power steering unit, it's just a money maker for the garages and doesn't have to be done.
A "watt" is a derived unit of power.
Power is the rate of use of energy in time. The unit of Energy is joule and the unit of Power is joule/second or Watt.
A unit used to measure the power of engines.A unit of power equal in the United States to 746 watts and nearly equivalent to the English gravitational unit of the same name that equals 550 foot-pounds of work per second. 1 horse power a unit of energy that is supposed to be the amount of work done by an average horse in 1 minute. Or 763 watts.
The unit to express power is YOUR MOMMA
the unit of power is defined as the WATT unit of measure , as a standard international unit
The SI unit for power is the Watt, the most commonly derived unit is for electrical power definition, which is the Kilowatt.
the unit used to express power is time
MKS unit of power is "Watt 'W' (1W=1J/s)" CGS unit of power is "egr(cgs unit of work)per second"
... is called power. The SI unit for energy is the joule; the SI unit for power is joule/second = watt.
This depends on the situation. The main power unit used for electric power output is generally the Watt (W), while the main power unit used for mechanical power output is often the horsepower (hp).
Watt is a unit of power. 1 Watt = 1 Joule/second; joule is the unit for energy.