What makes up the unit joules?​

Trystan Castaneda

Trystan Castaneda

Answered question

2022-08-10

What makes up the unit joules?​

Answer & Explanation

Chaya Garza

Chaya Garza

Beginner2022-08-11Added 10 answers

Joule. Joule, unit of work or energy in the International System of Units (SI); it is equal to the work done by a force of one newton acting through one metre. Named in honour of the English physicist James Prescott Joule, it equals 107 ergs, or approximately 0.7377 foot-pounds
One joule is defined as the amount of energy exerted when a force of one newton is applied over a displacement of one meter. One joule is the equivalent of one watt of power radiated or dissipated for one second. In some applications, the British thermal unit (Btu) is used to express energy.
The joule has base units of k g m 2 / s 2 = N m. A joule is defined as the work done or energy required to exert a force of one newton for a distance of one metre
n equation form: work ( joules ) =  force (newtons) ×  distance (meters), where a joule is the unit of work, as defined in the following paragraph. In practical terms, even a small force can do a lot of work if it is exerted over a long distance.
Multiply watts by seconds to get joules.
A 1 Watt device consumes 1 Joule of energy every 1 second. If you multiply the number of watts by the number of seconds, you'll end up with joules. To find out how much energy a 60W light bulb consumes in 120 seconds, simply multiply ( 60  watts ) × ( 120  seconds ) = 7200  Joules .

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