A kiloPascal is a measure of pressure, not power or work. It has 1 kPa = 1000 N/m^2 while 1 Watt = 1J/s = 1 Nm/s. Work must be measured in units of force*distance, like Nm or ft lbf. Also Watts measure power which is work/time.
As a result, it is not possible to convert Kpa to Watt.
No. A kiloPascal is a measure of pressure, not power or work. It has 1 kPa = 1000 N/m^2 while 1 Watt = 1J/s = 1 Nm/s. Work must be measured in units of force*distance, like Nm or ft lbf. Also Watts measure power which is work/time.
15kpa
12000pa
15
5000
22000pa
A kilopascal is a thousand pascal - a unit of pressure. "Absolute" means the actual pressure - this is in contrast to measuring a pressure DIFFERENCE (usually, how much higher some pressure is, compared to atmospheric pressure).
the question is a bit stupid...W-hr (Watt hour) is unit of Energy while W (Watt) is unit of Power.So dividing energy (in Watt-hour) by time (in hours) will give you Watt.Power = Energy / Time
You simply can't convert between units that measure completely different tings, in this case energy (for joules), and power (for watts). The general relationship is: joules = watts x seconds Or equivalently: watts = joules / seconds
The Watt, which is defined as 1 Joule per second
The guy that descovered the formula for power (work/time = power) had the last name "watt"AnswerIn SI, compound units are frequently given special names. For example, the coulomb is a special name given to an ampere second.Power is the rate at which energy is supplied and, so, its compound unit is the joule per second. Under SI, this is given the special name, 'watt', in honour of a Scottish engineer, James Watt.
(psi x 6.89476 = kPa). So, 70 psi x 6.89476 = 482.633 kPa
Impossible to convert a power unit to temperature unit.
1 watt = 1,000 milliwatts -- take the number of Watt-seconds -- multiply it by 1,000 -- the answer is the number of milliwatt-seconds
1 watt = 1,000 milliwatts -- take the number of Watt-seconds -- multiply it by 1,000 -- the answer is the number of milliwatt-seconds
kilopascal gauge
There are 1000 of them.
No such formula exists. The units are incompatible.
PdBm = 10*log10(1000*W)
If you mean kW, that simply means kilowatt - or thousands of watts. To convert from kW to watt, multiply by 1000.
energy = power x time.In this case, you can either: * Convert the time to seconds, then multiply. The answer will be in watt-seconds = joules. * Convert the time to hours, convert the watt to kilowatt, then multiply. The answer will be in kilowatt-hours.
Whenever you're working with units of measure, the prefix "kilo ..." almost always means "one thousand", as it does in this case. 1 kilopascal = 1,000 pascals
1000 Pascal.