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Megawatt-hour
The megawatt-hour (symbol: MWh) is a unit for measuring energy. It corresponds to one megawatt (MW) of power being used over a period of one hour. Since a watt is an amount of energy over a timespan (joule per second), multiplying it with a timespan gives an energy amount (1 J/s × 1 s = 1 J).
The megawatt-hour is commonly used for electrical energy, since it may be easier to understand in a practical context than the proper SI unit for energy, the joule, which is a watt-second (W·s). The joule is a comparatively small unit, making numbers quite large.
Identities
- 1 MW·h = 3,600,000,000 J
- 1 W·h = 3,600 J
- 1 W·s = 1 J
- 1 W = 1 J/s
A 60 W light bulb consumes 60 W, 60 J/s, 216,000 J/h, 60 W·s per second, 60 W·h per hour.
The relationship between power (P), energy (E) and time (t) is given by the formula:
E = P · t
If we use SI units,
- P is given in watts
- and t is given in seconds
- then E is in joules
If
- P is given in megawatts
- and t is given in hours
- then E is in megawatt hours
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