2.3901×10−4 kcal, 0.2390 cal, 2.7778×10−4 watt-hour, 2.7778×10−7 kilowatt-hour,
or 9.4782×10−4 BTU... all apply.
1 JOULE= 107
1 watt is equal to 1 joule per second. This means that 1 watt of power equals 1 joule of energy expended over a period of 1 second.
1 joule = 10 million ergs
1 newton x 1 meter can be either one of the following: A) One joule, the unit of energy B) The unit of torque. In that case, it is written 'newton-meter' and there is no special name for it. This use is completely unrelated to the unit of energy, even though it happens to use the product of the same units.
The amount of work required is one joule. This comes from the formula for work, which is force multiplied by distance. In this case, 1 newton multiplied by 1 meter equals 1 joule of work.
1 JOULE= 107
1 watt is equal to 1 joule per second. This means that 1 watt of power equals 1 joule of energy expended over a period of 1 second.
1 nm is 1 Newton.meter, which is 1 Joule. This equals 0.7376 ft.lbf
Watts are units of power. Joules are units of energy. They are not the same. One watt is one joule per second.
1 MW (megawatt) is equal to 1,000,000 watts. If 1 watt is equal to 1 joule per second, then 1 MW is equal to 1,000,000 joules per second or 1,000,000 joules/second.
The "Joule" is an interchangeable unit which equals the amount of energy a system invests in another body, or exhales to the environment . Today 1 Joule equals the amount of energy you need to heat 1 mm of water in 1 degree C. In 1845 Joule proved i his experiment that any energy can be translated into heat and vice-verse.
No. 1 watt = 1 joule per second 1 watt-second = 1 joule 1 kilo-joule = 1,000 joules
1 mega-anything = 1 million of them. 1 joule = 0.000001 megajoule
0.00027777777777778 Wh1 Wh = 3600 Joule
1 joule = 10 million ergs
1 newton x 1 meter can be either one of the following: A) One joule, the unit of energy B) The unit of torque. In that case, it is written 'newton-meter' and there is no special name for it. This use is completely unrelated to the unit of energy, even though it happens to use the product of the same units.
The SI unit is a Joule and 1 joule = 1 newton * 1 metre or 1 kg*1 metre2/1 second2.