The watt (symbol: W) is the SI derived unit of power. A typical household, incandescent lightbulb uses 100 watts. The Hoover Dam produces about two billion watts.
One watt is one joule of energy per second.
Note that, since 1 W = 1 J/s, the Wh mixes up two measurements of time, of which the hour is not an SI unit. It first divides by seconds and then multiplies by hours. Another unit that is sometimes used is the kWh/yr (kiloWatthour/year), which mixes up three units of time (second, hour and year). For conversion purposes:
Watt electrical (abbreviation: We) is a term that refers to power produced as electricity. SI prefixes can be used, for example megawatt electrical (MWe) and gigawatt electrical (GWe).
Watt thermal (abbreviation: Wt). This is a term that refers to thermal power produced. SI prefixes can be used, for example megawatt thermal (MWt) and gigawatt thermal (GWt). For example, a nuclear power plant might use a fission reactor to generate heat (thermal output) which creates steam to drive a turbine to generate electricity.
Since solar cell output power depends on multiple factors, such as the sun's incidence angle, for comparison purposes between different cells and panels, the peak watt (Wp) is used. It is the output power under these conditions: *
SI derived units | Units of power
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