The "m" - lower case "m" - is short for "milli", meaning 1/1000.
There are 1,000,000 joules in a megajoule.
1 calorie is equivalent to 4.184 joules. Therefore, 19.8 calories would be equal to 82.8432 joules.
There are approximately 155 calories in 650 joules. One calorie is equivalent to about 4.184 joules.
A calorie is about 4.2 joules, therefore a kilocalorie is about 4200 joules. You can multiply by this number.
There are 3.6 million joules in one kilowatt-hour (kWh).
The answer is 0.001 kilojoules in a joule 1J = 0.001kJ
Energy. Work done is measured in Watts, 1W = 1J/s.
Oh, dude, converting Joules to nanometers? That's like trying to turn a potato into a unicorn. It's not really a thing, you know? Joules measure energy, while nanometers measure length. It's like comparing apples to oranges, man. Just keep those units in their own lanes and you'll be golden.
A petajoule is 1015 joules (Quadrillion joules)
1 joule is 1 Newton meter which is 1 kg*m / s2. 1J = 1Nm = 1 (kg * m) / s2 Newton is force, kilogram is mass; they are not equivalent.
There are 56,000 joules in 56 kilojoules. This is because there are 1,000 joules in a kilojoule.
36.72 joules.
31.22 joules.
1J=0.001kJ
There are 1,000,000 joules in a megajoule.
A watt is defined as: W=1V*1A=1J/sec=1Nm/sec
work and energy +++ The Joule (J) is the unit of energy, alone, not of work. The Watt (W) is the unit of power, i.e. work done in converting or transferring energy, and 1W = 1J/s.