Home

Watt

The watt is the SI unit of power, defined as one joule of work per second. The symbol is W. The unit is named after James Watt, an 18th‑century Scottish inventor whose improvements to the steam engine helped drive the Industrial Revolution.

Power is the rate at which energy is transferred or transformed. Thus, 1 W equals 1 J/s.

The watt is a derived unit in the International System of Units (SI). Energy is measured in

In summary, the watt quantifies the rate of energy transfer, linking practical measurements of power to the

In
electrical
contexts,
power
is
often
expressed
as
P
=
V
×
I
for
direct
current,
where
V
is
voltage
and
I
is
current.
In
mechanical
terms,
power
can
be
written
as
P
=
F
×
v,
where
F
is
force
and
v
is
velocity,
or
as
P
=
τ
×
ω,
where
τ
is
torque
and
ω
is
angular
velocity.
joules,
while
power
measures
how
quickly
that
energy
is
used
or
produced.
A
common
related
unit
is
the
watt-hour
(Wh),
or
kilowatt-hour
(kWh),
which
is
a
unit
of
energy
equal
to
the
power
of
one
kilowatt
used
for
one
hour.
For
electrical
applications,
devices
are
often
rated
in
watts,
kilowatts,
or
megawatts.
A
typical
light
bulb
might
be
around
60
W,
while
electrical
utilities
report
consumption
in
megawatts
or
gigawatts
for
large-scale
generation.
underlying
principles
of
physics.