stop cheating and do the math urself lazy.
Well, not really, but don't worry. Our Sun was formed about 4.57 Billion years ago, and is not quite half-way through its life cycle for this type of star. The Sun will last in roughly its present style till about 10 billion years. 10 billion might be a large number, but it is far from infinite. [For many purposes, 'arbitrarily long' is an adequate description for a very large number. Infinity has no limit. ]
The long trails of ejecta that radiate outward from craters are called "rays." These rays are formed when material is ejected during the impact event of a meteorite or asteroid striking a planetary surface, such as the Moon or other celestial bodies. The rays can extend for many kilometers and are often more prominent on younger craters, indicating their relatively recent formation.
Energy can come in many different forms
Approximately three weeks at 500 miles per hour.
Energy exists in many more than two states, but two are light energy and heat energy.
kWh stands for kiloWatthours, the amount of electrical energy an appliance uses or generates in one hour measured in kiloWatts. It has nothing to do with one cubic metre of water.
Kilo = 1000. Watts the produce of Amps x Volts. One hour is not divided up into kilowatt hours, it is the use of 1000 watts over a period of one hour.
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A 400-watt light uses energy at the rate of 0.4 kilowatt. In 1 hour, it uses 0.4 kilowatt-hour of energy.
A 1 MW generator produces 1000 KWH every hour assuming its fully loaded. There are 8760 hours in a year, so assuming no downtime, it would generate 8,760,000 KWH in a year. 1MW = 1000000 watts 1 KW = 1000 watts 1 MW = 1000 KW 1 MW for 1 hour = 1 MWH 1 MWH = 1000 KWH
1,687 kilos = 1,048 miles.
The energy 1 kilowatt-hour (kWh) is 3600000 joules.AnswerThere is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour'. You probably mean 'kilowatt hour'?
The energy loss from speaking for one hour can vary based on factors such as voice volume, speed of speech, and individual physiology. On average, speaking for one hour burns around 50-100 calories, which is equivalent to the energy in a small snack.
There are many more than two units in common use for energy. Some of them are: -- newton-meter -- joule -- foot-pound -- calorie -- watt-second -- kilowatt-hour -- horsepower-hour
Watts are units for measuring the rate of energy consumption. So it is meaningless to speak of how many watts something consumes in a length of time. (It would be like asking how many miles per hour a car drives in an hour.)Energy consumption may be measured in kilowatt-hours. A typical microwave consumes 1500 watts, which would be 1.5 kilowatt-hours in one hour.
There is no such thing as a "kilowatt per hour". Kilowatt is a unit of power, not of energy. A unit of energy is kilowatt-hour. That's kilowatt times hours, not "per" hour ("per" implies division, not multiplication). If a generator produces 10 kilowatts, that means it produces 10 kilowatt-hours every hour.
1 watt-hour equals 1 watt times 1 hour, or 3600 joules.