The number of kilowatts used by a device in one hour. This gives you the rate at which energy is consumed.
To measure a physical quantity correctly and need to compare it with some standard quantities. Thus a standard unit is needed to measure a quantity correctly.
You have not specified the quantity of water. You cannot measure one fifth of an unspecified quantity.
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0.6726
a kilowatt hour measures electrical usage in the home usually 600 to 1200 kwh for the average home
You cannot. kWh is a measure of energy. There are lots of people in the world who use energy but have no use for a dollar. Kwh and dollars measure different things and, according to the basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
1 BTU = 1.055 kilojoules. I'm not sure what you mean by 'BTUday'. BTU is a quantity of energy, so BTU x Day has no meaning. BTU/day is a rate of energy, ie power. KW is a rate, and KWh a quantity. So what are we comparing? 1 BTU/sec = 1.055 kJ/sec = 1.055 KW. So 1.055 KWsecs = 1 BTU, 1 KWh = 3412 BTU. It also follows that 3412 BTU/hour = 1 KW. Hope this has helped. Just remember to compare quantity with quantity, and rate with rate, and don't mix them up.
What can measure only one quantity of liquid?
MW*100*24= is how you convert Megawatt to Megawatt hour.
Assuming it is used to produce electricity, it will be sold in kWh, or MWh probably on a commercial scale.
To measure a physical quantity correctly and need to compare it with some standard quantities. Thus a standard unit is needed to measure a quantity correctly.
You have not specified the quantity of water. You cannot measure one fifth of an unspecified quantity.
Mass
Newtons :)
No. ppm is a pure number - a ratio. g per kwh is a measure of mass per energy with dimensions: [L-2][T2]
These are incompatible measures. Cubic meters is a measure of volume, while kWh (Kilowatt-Hours) is a measure of electric energy.
It quantified in kW per area or kWh per area per day since the output of wind power is electricity.