I believe it's still calories... ---- It depends what you're measuring.
The basic unit of energy in science is the joule.
In food science, the amount of energy that a food may release is measured in calories or joules.
No, kinetic energy is measured in Joules (J), as this is the SI unit for energy.
The intensity of light is measured in lumens. The amount of energy in light can be measured in any unit of energy (BTU, calories, Joules, etc.) The energy per unit time can be measured in any unit of power (Watts, horsepower etc.) All of these are independent of specific classes of coordinate systems and hence "scalar".
Elastic energy is typically measured in joules (J), which is the standard unit of energy in the International System of Units (SI).
In the SI, any type of energy is measured in joules.
It is a more convenient unit of measurement.
Energy is measured in joules.Energy is measured in joules.Energy is measured in joules.Energy is measured in joules.
Energy is measured in Joules.
energy is measured in joules and kilojoules
The SI unit for energy is the joule.
Energy is the ability to do work. It is measured in joules.
No, kinetic energy is measured in Joules (J), as this is the SI unit for energy.
It is measured in Joules! :D
The international unit for energy is the joule.
I am not entirely sure what you mean. Energy is measured in joules. The energy stored in an inductor would therefore also be measured in joules. The "strength" of an inductor is measured in henry, but that is not an energy unit.
Energy is measured in joules.
The SI unit for work and energy is the joule.
In the SI, energy is measured in joules.