A unit is numerically-equal to a kilowatt hour and is used to measure energy consumption.
One unit of natural gas typically contains about 29.3 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of energy.
1 mwh = 1000 kwh hence 4 mwh = 4000 kwh
One kilowatt-hour (kWh) is a unit of energy, not rotation. It represents the amount of energy consumed when one kilowatt of power is used for one hour. The concept of rotations does not directly translate to kWh.
A unit (as mentioned on the electricity bills) is represented in kWH or Kilowatt Hour. This is the actual electricity or energy used. If you use 1000 Watts or 1 Kilowatt of power for 1 hour then you consume 1 unit or 1 Kilowatt-Hour (kWH) of electricity.
It depends on the btu of the unit
One unit of natural gas typically contains about 29.3 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of energy.
1 kwh is the unit used by electricity companies for pricing and billing.
One Kilowatt hour is one Unit. Expressed as :- 1 KWH = I UNIT
1 mwh is same a 1 megawatt unit. Genereally 1 KWH is called as 1 Unit.
Horsepower is a unit of energy delivery rate, while KWH is a unit of total energy. The two units are not convertible. It is true that, for an electric motor, 1 horsepower is defined as 746 watts, or 0.746 KW, but KWH is an entirely different thing.
A therm is an energy unit (equal to 100000 BTU) while kilowatts are power (energy/time). 1 watt = 1 Joule/second, and 1 kilowatt = 1000 Joules/second. The kilowatt hour is an energy unit (power X time = energy). 1 therm = 29.31 kWh
1 unit = 1 KW X 1 Hour so it means that unit of current can be converted into kWh by multiplying it by the watt and t time taken (in hours).
1 kwh = 3,600,000 Joules
1 mwh = 1000 kwh hence 4 mwh = 4000 kwh
One kilowatt-hour (kWh) is a unit of energy, not rotation. It represents the amount of energy consumed when one kilowatt of power is used for one hour. The concept of rotations does not directly translate to kWh.
Kilowatt-hour (KWh) which is an energy unit equivalent to a power of 1000 Watts running for 1 hour = 1000x3600 Joules =3.6million Joules. 1 kWh is sometimes called in the trade " 1 unit".
A unit (as mentioned on the electricity bills) is represented in kWH or Kilowatt Hour. This is the actual electricity or energy used. If you use 1000 Watts or 1 Kilowatt of power for 1 hour then you consume 1 unit or 1 Kilowatt-Hour (kWH) of electricity.