Joule is a unit of work, and of energy.
Each of those quantities has a different SI unit. They are: Force. . . . . . . . . Newton Height (length) . Meter Work. . . . . . . . . Joule Mass. . . . . . . . . Kilogram Energy . . . . . . . Joule (same as work)
No. They're different. "Newton" is a unit of force. "Joule" is a unit of energy. A small force (1 newton) that pushes a basketball 10 miles can deliver more energy than a large force (a thousand newtons) that pushes it 1 foot.
There are several. They are the Metre, Gramme, Second, and I think the Volt, Ampere and Coulomb but I stand to be corrected. Where does the Joule come into things?
Work is a measure of energy transfer that occurs when a force is applied to an object and it moves in the direction of the force. Joule is the unit of measurement for work and energy, representing the amount of work done when a force of 1 newton is applied over a distance of 1 meter.
0.00027777777777778 Wh1 Wh = 3600 Joule
Gauss is a unit of magnetic flux density, while joule is a unit of energy. There is no direct conversion between the two as they measure different physical quantities.
Dyne is the unit of force in CGS system and joule is the unit of work in MKS system. So both are for different physical quantities. So they cannot be related.
Yes, there is a relation between Tesla and joule. Tesla is a unit of magnetic flux density named after the inventor Nikola Tesla. Joule is a unit of energy named after the physicist James Prescott Joule. Both units are used in physics to quantify magnetic and energy-related quantities.
Each of those quantities has a different SI unit. They are: Force. . . . . . . . . Newton Height (length) . Meter Work. . . . . . . . . Joule Mass. . . . . . . . . Kilogram Energy . . . . . . . Joule (same as work)
In SI, the unit is the joule. In cgsA units, it's the calorie. In Imperial System its a British Thermal Unit.
No. They're different. "Newton" is a unit of force. "Joule" is a unit of energy. A small force (1 newton) that pushes a basketball 10 miles can deliver more energy than a large force (a thousand newtons) that pushes it 1 foot.
joule island
Joule is newton-meter, newton is kg m/s2. Therefore: J/kg = Nm/kg = kg m2/s2 kg = m2/s2. So, the answer is no.
Joule is the real name.
The joule is an SI unit!
0.1 Joule
A Newton.meter is a unit of work, it is called the Joule, in the SI system. By kilometres hour I suppose you mean kilometres/hour which is a speed, there is no connection between these two quantities