Joule
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The done or energy required to exert a force of one newton for a distance of one metre, so the same quantity may be referred to as a newton metre or newton-metre with the symbol N·m. However, the newton metre is usually used as a measure of work.
As a rough guide, 1 joule is the absolute minimum amount of energy required to lift a one kilogram object up by a height of 10 centimetres on the surface of the Earth.
One joule is also:
- The work required to move an electric charge of one coulomb through an electrical potential difference of one volt; or one coulomb volt, with the symbol C·V.
- The work done to produce power of one watt continuously for one second; or one watt second (compare kilowatt-hour), with the symbol W·s
Contents |
[edit] Conversions
1 joule is exactly 107 ergs.
1 joule is approximately equal to:
- 6.24150636309 ×1018 eV (electron-volts)
- 0.238845896628 cal (calorie) (small calories)
- 2.390 ×10−4 kilocalorie (food)
- 9.47817120313 ×10 −4 BTU (British thermal unit)
- 0.737562149277 ft·lbf (foot-pound force)
- 23.7 ft·pdl (foot poundals)
- 2.7778 ×10−7 kilowatt-hour
- 2.7778 ×10−4 watt-hour
- 9.8692 ×10−3 litre-atmosphere
Also, some very rough approximations of a joule from the real world are:
- the energy required to lift a small apple (102 g) one metre against Earth's gravity.
- the amount of energy, as heat, that a quiet person produces every hundredth of a second.
- the energy required to heat one gram of dry, cool air by 1 degree Celsius.
- 1/100th of the energy a person can get by drinking a single droplet of beer.
Units defined in terms of the joule include:
- 1 thermochemical calorie = 4.184 J (exact)
- 1 International Table calorie = 4.1868 J (exact)
- 1 watt-hour = 3600 J (exact)
- 1 kWh = 1 kilowatt-hour = 3.6×106 J = 3.6 MJ
[edit] History
A joule is the mechanical equivalent of heat meaning the number of units of work in which the unit of heat can perform. Its value was found by James Prescott Joule in experiments that showed the mechanical energy Joule's equivalent, and represented by the symbol J. The term was first introduced by Dr. Mayer of Heilbronn.
[edit] SI multiples
| Multiple | Name | Symbol | Multiple | Name | Symbol | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | joule | J | ||||
| 101 | decajoule | daJ | 10–1 | decijoule | dJ | |
| 102 | hectojoule | hJ | 10–2 | centijoule | cJ | |
| 103 | kilojoule | kJ | 10–3 | millijoule | mJ | |
| 106 | megajoule | MJ | 10–6 | microjoule | µJ | |
| 109 | gigajoule | GJ | 10–9 | nanojoule | nJ | |
| 1012 | terajoule | TJ | 10–12 | picojoule | pJ | |
| 1015 | petajoule | PJ | 10–15 | femtojoule | fJ | |
| 1018 | exajoule | EJ | 10–18 | attojoule | aJ | |
| 1021 | zettajoule | ZJ | 10–21 | zeptojoule | zJ | |
| 1024 | yottajoule | YJ | 10–24 | yoctojoule | yJ |
[edit] See also
| This SI unit is named after James Prescott Joule. As for all SI units whose names are derived from the proper name of a person, the first letter of its symbol is uppercase (J). But when an SI unit is spelled out, it should always be written in lowercase (joule), unless it begins a sentence or is the name "degree Celsius". — Based on The International System of Units, section 5.2.
|
- Conversion of units
- SI prefixes
- Orders of magnitude
- Orders of magnitude (energy)
- Electronvolt
- Watt-hour
[edit] References
- The adoption of joules as units of energy, FAO/WHO Ad Hoc Committee of Experts on Energy and Protein, 1971. A report on the changeover from calories to joules in nutrition.
[edit] External link
ca:Joule cs:Joule da:Joule de:Joule es:Julio (unidad) eo:Ĵulo eu:Joule (unitatea) fr:Joule gl:Joule (unidade) ko:줄 hr:Džul id:Joule it:Joule he:ג'ול lv:Džouls lt:Džaulis lb:Joule hu:Joule ms:Joule nl:Joule ja:ジュール no:Joule nn:Joule pl:Dżul pt:Joule ro:Joule ru:Джоуль simple:Joule sk:Joule sl:Joule sr:Џул fi:Joule sv:Joule th:จูล tr:Joule uk:Джоуль zh:焦耳

