Per hour the answer is 400 watt-hours or 0.4 kW-hours (or units).
A 2000 Watt fire burning for an hour will consume 2 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity. This is calculated by multiplying the power of the fire (2000 W or 2 kW) by the time it is burning (1 hour).
1 kilowatt (kW) is equal to 1 kilowatt-hour (kWh) when used continuously for one hour. So, if you use a 1 kW appliance for one hour, it will consume 1 kWh of electricity.
A quantity is an amount, or how much there is of a given thing. In this case, a quantity of electricity would be the amount of electricity used in a given reaction.
The patient is receiving 80 units of Pitocin per hour (10 units x 8 hours = 80 units).
A unit is numerically-equal to a kilowatt hour and is used to measure energy consumption.
1500 watt hours
A 2000 Watt fire burning for an hour will consume 2 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity. This is calculated by multiplying the power of the fire (2000 W or 2 kW) by the time it is burning (1 hour).
1 MW is 1000 kilowatts, so in 1 Hour it will sell 1000 units (taking a unit as 1 kilowatt hour)
1 kilowatt-hour is 3412 British Thermal Units, so 4 kWh is 13648 BTU.
Not compatible units of measurement, unless an exact bulk of the material is known.
None
1000
1,000 watts
1 kilowatt (kW) is equal to 1 kilowatt-hour (kWh) when used continuously for one hour. So, if you use a 1 kW appliance for one hour, it will consume 1 kWh of electricity.
Units of electricity as given on power bills are usually measured in kiloWatt hours. (kW.h) This is a kiloWatt of energy delivered for a period of an hour. It is a unit of power, and a kiloWatt is a measure of energy.
600
Lawri unit