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The joule (/dʒuːl/ JOOL, or /dʒaʊl/ JOWL; symbol: J) is the unit of energy in the International System of Units (SI). In terms of SI base units, one joule corresponds to one kilogram-square metre per square second (1 J = 1 kg⋅m2⋅s−2). One joule is equal to the amount of work done when a force of one newton displaces a body through a distance of one metre in the direction of that force. It is also the energy dissipated as heat when an electric current of one ampere passes through a resistance of one ohm for one second. It is named after the English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818–1889).
Joule | |
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![]() Intuitive representation of the joule as the work of a motive force | |
General information | |
Unit system | SI |
Unit of | energy |
Symbol | J |
Named after | James Prescott Joule |
Conversions | |
1 J in ... | ... is equal to ... |
SI base units | kg⋅m2⋅s−2 |
CGS units | 1×107 erg |
watt-seconds | 1 W⋅s |
kilowatt-hours | ≈2.78×10−7 kW⋅h |
kilocalories (thermochemical) | 2.390×10−4 kcalth |
BTUs | 9.48×10−4 BTU |
electronvolts | ≈6.24×1018 eV |
Definition
In terms of SI base units and in terms of SI derived units with special names, the joule is defined as
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One joule is also equivalent to any of the following:
- The work required to move an electric charge of one coulomb through an electrical potential difference of one volt, or one coulomb-volt (C⋅V). This relationship can be used to define the volt.
- The work required to produce one watt of power for one second, or one watt-second (W⋅s) (compare kilowatt-hour, which is 3.6 megajoules). This relationship can be used to define the watt.
The joule is named after James Prescott Joule. As with every SI unit named for a person, its symbol starts with an upper case letter (J), but when written in full, it follows the rules for capitalisation of a common noun; i.e., joule becomes capitalised at the beginning of a sentence and in titles but is otherwise in lower case.
History
The CGS system had been declared official in 1881, at the first International Electrical Congress. The erg was adopted as its unit of energy in 1882. Wilhelm Siemens, in his inauguration speech as chairman of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (23 August 1882) first proposed the joule as unit of heat, to be derived from the electromagnetic units ampere and ohm, in cgs units equivalent to 107 erg. The naming of the unit in honour of James Prescott Joule (1818–1889), at the time retired and aged 63, followed the recommendation of Siemens:
Such a heat unit, if found acceptable, might with great propriety, I think, be called the Joule, after the man who has done so much to develop the dynamical theory of heat.
At the second International Electrical Congress, on 31 August 1889, the joule was officially adopted alongside the watt and the quadrant (later renamed to henry). Joule died in the same year, on 11 October 1889. At the fourth congress (1893), the "international ampere" and "international ohm" were defined, with slight changes in the specifications for their measurement, with the "international joule" being the unit derived from them.
In 1935, the International Electrotechnical Commission (as the successor organisation of the International Electrical Congress) adopted the "Giorgi system", which by virtue of assuming a defined value for the magnetic constant also implied a redefinition of the joule. The Giorgi system was approved by the International Committee for Weights and Measures in 1946. The joule was now no longer defined based on electromagnetic unit, but instead as the unit of work performed by one unit of force (at the time not yet named newton) over the distance of 1 metre. The joule was explicitly intended as the unit of energy to be used in both electromagnetic and mechanical contexts. The ratification of the definition at the ninth General Conference on Weights and Measures, in 1948, added the specification that the joule was also to be preferred as the unit of heat in the context of calorimetry, thereby officially deprecating the use of the calorie. This is the definition declared in the modern International System of Units in 1960.
The definition of the joule as J = kg⋅m2⋅s−2 has remained unchanged since 1946, but the joule as a derived unit has inherited changes in the definitions of the second (in 1960 and 1967), the metre (in 1983) and the kilogram (in 2019).
Practical examples
One joule represents (approximately):
- The typical energy released as heat by a person at rest every 1/60 s (~16.6667 ms, basal metabolic rate); about 5,000 kJ (1,200 kcal) / day.
- The amount of electricity required to run a 1 W device for 1 s.
- The energy required to accelerate a 1 kg mass at 1 m/s2 through a distance of 1 m.
- The kinetic energy of a 2 kg mass travelling at 1 m/s, or a 1 kg mass travelling at 1.41 m/s.
- The energy required to lift an apple up 1 m, assuming the apple has a mass of 101.97 g.
- The heat required to raise the temperature of 0.239 g of water from 0 °C to 1 °C.
- The kinetic energy of a 50 kg human moving very slowly (0.2 m/s or 0.72 km/h).
- The kinetic energy of a 56 g tennis ball moving at 6 m/s (22 km/h).
- The food energy (kcal) in slightly more than half of an ordinary-sized sugar crystal (0.102 mg/crystal).
Multiples
Submultiples | Multiples | ||||
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Value | SI symbol | Name | Value | SI symbol | Name |
10−1 J | dJ | decijoule | 101 J | daJ | decajoule |
10−2 J | cJ | centijoule | 102 J | hJ | hectojoule |
10−3 J | mJ | millijoule | 103 J | kJ | kilojoule |
10−6 J | μJ | microjoule | 106 J | MJ | megajoule |
10−9 J | nJ | nanojoule | 109 J | GJ | gigajoule |
10−12 J | pJ | picojoule | 1012 J | TJ | terajoule |
10−15 J | fJ | femtojoule | 1015 J | PJ | petajoule |
10−18 J | aJ | attojoule | 1018 J | EJ | exajoule |
10−21 J | zJ | zeptojoule | 1021 J | ZJ | zettajoule |
10−24 J | yJ | yoctojoule | 1024 J | YJ | yottajoule |
10−27 J | rJ | rontojoule | 1027 J | RJ | ronnajoule |
10−30 J | qJ | quectojoule | 1030 J | QJ | quettajoule |
Common multiples are in bold face |
- zeptojoule
- 160 zeptojoules is about 1 electronvolt. The minimal energy needed to change a bit of data in computation at around room temperature – approximately 2.75 zJ – is given by the Landauer limit.[citation needed]
- nanojoule
- 160 nanojoule is about the kinetic energy of a flying mosquito.
- microjoule
- The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) produces collisions of the microjoule order (7 TeV) per particle.[citation needed]
- kilojoule
- Nutritional food labels in most countries express energy in kilojoules (kJ). One square metre of the Earth receives about 1.4 kilojoules of solar radiation every second in full daylight. A human in a sprint has approximately 3 kJ of kinetic energy, while a cheetah in a 122 km/h (76 mph) sprint has approximately 20 kJ. One watt-hour, of electricity or any other form of energy, is 3.6 kJ.
- megajoule
- The megajoule is approximately the kinetic energy of a one megagram (tonne) vehicle moving at 161 km/h (100 mph).[citation needed] The energy required to heat 10 L of liquid water at constant pressure from 0 °C (32 °F) to 100 °C (212 °F) is approximately 4.2 MJ.[citation needed] One kilowatt-hour, of electricity or any other form of energy, is 3.6 MJ.
- gigajoule
- 6 gigajoule is about the chemical energy of combusting 1 barrel (159 L) of petroleum. 2 GJ is about the Planck energy unit. One megawatt-hour, of electricity or any other form of energy, is 3.6 GJ.
- terajoule
- The terajoule is about 0.278 GWh (which is often used in energy tables). About 63 TJ of energy was released by Little Boy. The International Space Station, with a mass of approximately 450 megagrams and orbital velocity of 7700 m/s, has a kinetic energy of roughly 13 TJ. In 2017, Hurricane Irma was estimated to have a peak wind energy of 112 TJ. One gigawatt-hour, of electricity or any other form of energy, is 3.6 TJ.
- petajoule
- 210 petajoule is about 50 megatons of TNT, which is the amount of energy released by the Tsar Bomba, the largest man-made explosion ever. One terawatt-hour, of electricity or any other form of energy, is 3.6 PJ.
- exajoule
- The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan had 1.41 EJ of energy according to its rating of 9.0 on the moment magnitude scale. Yearly U.S. energy consumption amounts to roughly 94 EJ, and the world final energy consumption was 439 EJ in 2021. One petawatt-hour of electricity, or any other form of energy, is 3.6 EJ.
- zettajoule
- The zettajoule is somewhat more than the amount of energy required to heat the Baltic Sea by 1 °C, assuming properties similar to those of pure water. Human annual world energy consumption is approximately 0.5 ZJ. The energy to raise the temperature of Earth's atmosphere 1 °C is approximately 2.2 ZJ.[citation needed]
- yottajoule
- The yottajoule is a little less than the amount of energy required to heat the Indian Ocean by 1 °C, assuming properties similar to those of pure water. The thermal output of the Sun is approximately 400 YJ per second.
Conversions
1 joule is equal to (approximately unless otherwise stated):
- 1.0×107 erg (exactly)
- 6.24151×1018 eV
- 9.47817×10−4 BTU
- 0.737562 ft⋅lb (foot-pound)
- 23.7304 ft⋅pdl (foot-poundal)
Units with exact equivalents in joules include:
- 1 thermochemical calorie = 4.184 J
- 1 International Table calorie = 4.1868 J
- 1 W⋅h = 3,600 J; 3.6 kJ
- 1 kW⋅h = 3.6×10 6 J; 3.6 MJ
- 1 W⋅s = 1 J
- 1 ton TNT = 4.184 GJ
- 1 foe = 1044 J
Newton-metre and torque
In mechanics, the concept of force (in some direction) has a close analogue in the concept of torque (about some angle):[citation needed]
Linear | Angular |
---|---|
Force | Torque |
Mass | Moment of inertia |
Displacement | Angle |
A result of this similarity is that the SI unit for torque is the newton-metre, which works out algebraically to have the same dimensions as the joule, but they are not interchangeable. The General Conference on Weights and Measures has given the unit of energy the name joule, but has not given the unit of torque any special name, hence it is simply the newton-metre (N⋅m) – a compound name derived from its constituent parts. The use of newton-metres for torque but joules for energy is helpful to avoid misunderstandings and miscommunication.
The distinction may be seen also in the fact that energy is a scalar quantity – the dot product of a force vector and a displacement vector. By contrast, torque is a vector – the cross product of a force vector and a distance vector. Torque and energy are related to one another by the equation[citation needed]
where E is energy, τ is (the vector magnitude of) torque, and θ is the angle swept (in radians). Since plane angles are dimensionless, it follows that torque and energy have the same dimensions.[citation needed]
Watt-second
A watt-second (symbol W s or W⋅s) is a derived unit of energy equivalent to the joule. The watt-second is the energy equivalent to the power of one watt sustained for one second. While the watt-second is equivalent to the joule in both units and meaning, there are some contexts in which the term "watt-second" is used instead of "joule", such as in the rating of photographic electronic flash units.
References
- International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), p. 120, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-04, retrieved 2021-12-16
- American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Online Edition (2009). Houghton Mifflin Co., hosted by Yahoo! Education.
- The American Heritage Dictionary, Second College Edition (1985). Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., p. 691.
- McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Physics, Fifth Edition (1997). McGraw-Hill, Inc., p. 224.
- "NIST Guide to the SI, Chapter 4: The Two Classes of SI Units and the SI Prefixes". NIST. 2016-01-28.
- Halliday, David; Resnick, Robert (1974), Fundamentals of Physics (revised ed.), New York: Wiley, pp. 516–517, ISBN 0471344311
- "What Is a Joule? - Chemistry Definition". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 2024-04-07.
- Siemens, Cal Wilhelm (August 1882). Report of the Fifty-Second Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Southampton. pp. 1–33. pp. 6–7:
The unit of heat has hitherto been taken variously as the heat required to raise a pound of water at the freezing-point through 1° Fahrenheit or Centigrade, or, again, the heat necessary to raise a kilogramme of water 1° Centigrade. The inconvenience of a unit so entirely arbitrary is sufficiently apparent to justify the introduction of one based on the electro-magnetic system, viz. the heat generated in one second by the current of an Ampère flowing through the resistance of an Ohm. In absolute measure its value is 107 C.G.S. units, and, assuming Joule's equivalent as 42,000,000, it is the heat necessary to raise 0.238 grammes of water 1° Centigrade, or, approximately, the 1⁄1000th part of the arbitrary unit of a pound of water raised 1° Fahrenheit and the 1⁄4000th of the kilogramme of water raised 1° Centigrade. Such a heat unit, if found acceptable, might with great propriety, I think, be called the Joule, after the man who has done so much to develop the dynamical theory of heat.
- Pat Naughtin: A chronological history of the modern metric system, metricationmatters.com, 2009.
- Proceedings of the International Electrical Congress. New York: American Institute of Electrical Engineers. 1894.
- CIPM, 1946, Resolution 2, Definitions of electric units. bipm.org.
- 9th CGPM, Resolution 3: Triple point of water; thermodynamic scale with a single fixed point; unit of quantity of heat (joule)., bipm.org.
- The International System of Units (PDF) (9th ed.), International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Dec 2022, ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0
- "SI Redefinition". NIST. 2018-05-11.
- "Units of Heat – BTU, Calorie and Joule". Engineering Toolbox. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
- Ristinen, Robert A.; Kraushaar, Jack J. (2006). Energy and the Environment (2nd ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-73989-8.
- "Physics – CERN". public.web.cern.ch. Archived from the original on 2012-12-13.
- "You Say Calorie, We Say Kilojoule: Who's Right?". Archived from the original on 2023-05-15. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
- "Construction of a Composite Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) Time Series from 1978 to present". Archived from the original on 2011-08-30. Retrieved 2005-10-05.
- 1/2 × 70 kg × (10 m/s)2 = 3500 J
- 1/2 × 35 kg × (35 m/s)2 = 21400 J
- "Energy Units – Energy Explained, Your Guide To Understanding Energy – Energy Information Administration". www.eia.gov.
- Malik, John (September 1985). "Report LA-8819: The yields of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear explosions" (PDF). Los Alamos National Laboratory. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
- "International Space Station Final Configuration" (PDF). European Space Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
- Bonnie Berkowitz; Laris Karklis; Reuben Fischer-Baum; Chiqui Esteban (11 September 2017). "Analysis – How Big Is Hurricane Irma?". Washington Post. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
- Rathbone, John-Paul; Fontanella-Khan, James; Rovnick, Naomi (11 September 2017). "A weakened Irma unleashes more damage on Florida coast". Financial Times. New York (Rathbone), Miami (Fontanella-Khan), London (Rovnick). ISSN 0307-1766. Archived from the original on 4 August 2024. Retrieved 11 September 2017.
- World Energy Outlook 2022 (Report). International Energy Agency. 2022. p. 239. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
- "Volumes of the World's Oceans from ETOPO1". noaa.gov. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. 19 August 2020. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
- "The Sun". pveducation.org. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
- 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.
- Feynman, Richard (1963). "Physical Units". Feynman's Lectures on Physics. Retrieved 2014-03-07.
- Marc Herant; Stirling A. Colgate; Willy Benz; Chris Fryer (October 25, 1997). "Neutrinos and Supernovae" (PDF). Los Alamos Sciences. Los Alamos National Laboratory. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-14. Retrieved 2008-04-23.
- "Units with special names and symbols; units that incorporate special names and symbols". International Bureau of Weights and Measures. Archived from the original on 28 June 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
A derived unit can often be expressed in different ways by combining base units with derived units having special names. Joule, for example, may formally be written newton metre, or kilogram metre squared per second squared. This, however, is an algebraic freedom to be governed by common sense physical considerations; in a given situation some forms may be more helpful than others. In practice, with certain quantities, preference is given to the use of certain special unit names, or combinations of unit names, to facilitate the distinction between different quantities having the same dimension.
- International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), pp. 39–40, 53, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-04, retrieved 2021-12-16
- "What Is A Watt Second?". Archived from the original on 2017-06-02. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
External links
The dictionary definition of joule at Wiktionary
The joule dʒ uː l JOOL or dʒ aʊ l JOWL symbol J is the unit of energy in the International System of Units SI In terms of SI base units one joule corresponds to one kilogram square metre per square second 1 J 1 kg m2 s 2 One joule is equal to the amount of work done when a force of one newton displaces a body through a distance of one metre in the direction of that force It is also the energy dissipated as heat when an electric current of one ampere passes through a resistance of one ohm for one second It is named after the English physicist James Prescott Joule 1818 1889 JouleIntuitive representation of the joule as the work of a motive forceGeneral informationUnit systemSIUnit ofenergySymbolJNamed afterJames Prescott JouleConversions1 J in is equal to SI base units kg m2 s 2 CGS units 1 107 erg watt seconds 1 W s kilowatt hours 2 78 10 7 kW h kilocalories thermochemical 2 390 10 4 kcalth BTUs 9 48 10 4 BTU electronvolts 6 24 1018 eVDefinitionIn terms of SI base units and in terms of SI derived units with special names the joule is defined as J kg m2 s 2 N m Pa m3 W s C V displaystyle begin alignedat 3 mathrm J amp mathrm kg cdot m 2 cdot s 2 0 7ex amp mathrm N cdot m 0 7ex amp mathrm Pa cdot m 3 0 7ex amp mathrm W cdot s 0 7ex amp mathrm C cdot V 0 7ex end alignedat Symbol NameJ joulekg kilogramm metres secondN newtonPa pascalW wattC coulombV volt One joule is also equivalent to any of the following The work required to move an electric charge of one coulomb through an electrical potential difference of one volt or one coulomb volt C V This relationship can be used to define the volt The work required to produce one watt of power for one second or one watt second W s compare kilowatt hour which is 3 6 megajoules This relationship can be used to define the watt The joule is named after James Prescott Joule As with every SI unit named for a person its symbol starts with an upper case letter J but when written in full it follows the rules for capitalisation of a common noun i e joule becomes capitalised at the beginning of a sentence and in titles but is otherwise in lower case HistoryThe CGS system had been declared official in 1881 at the first International Electrical Congress The erg was adopted as its unit of energy in 1882 Wilhelm Siemens in his inauguration speech as chairman of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 23 August 1882 first proposed the joule as unit of heat to be derived from the electromagnetic units ampere and ohm in cgs units equivalent to 107 erg The naming of the unit in honour of James Prescott Joule 1818 1889 at the time retired and aged 63 followed the recommendation of Siemens Such a heat unit if found acceptable might with great propriety I think be called the Joule after the man who has done so much to develop the dynamical theory of heat At the second International Electrical Congress on 31 August 1889 the joule was officially adopted alongside the watt and the quadrant later renamed to henry Joule died in the same year on 11 October 1889 At the fourth congress 1893 the international ampere and international ohm were defined with slight changes in the specifications for their measurement with the international joule being the unit derived from them In 1935 the International Electrotechnical Commission as the successor organisation of the International Electrical Congress adopted the Giorgi system which by virtue of assuming a defined value for the magnetic constant also implied a redefinition of the joule The Giorgi system was approved by the International Committee for Weights and Measures in 1946 The joule was now no longer defined based on electromagnetic unit but instead as the unit of work performed by one unit of force at the time not yet named newton over the distance of 1 metre The joule was explicitly intended as the unit of energy to be used in both electromagnetic and mechanical contexts The ratification of the definition at the ninth General Conference on Weights and Measures in 1948 added the specification that the joule was also to be preferred as the unit of heat in the context of calorimetry thereby officially deprecating the use of the calorie This is the definition declared in the modern International System of Units in 1960 The definition of the joule as J kg m2 s 2 has remained unchanged since 1946 but the joule as a derived unit has inherited changes in the definitions of the second in 1960 and 1967 the metre in 1983 and the kilogram in 2019 Practical examplesOne joule represents approximately The typical energy released as heat by a person at rest every 1 60 s 16 6667 ms basal metabolic rate about 5 000 kJ 1 200 kcal day The amount of electricity required to run a 1 W device for 1 s The energy required to accelerate a 1 kg mass at 1 m s2 through a distance of 1 m The kinetic energy of a 2 kg mass travelling at 1 m s or a 1 kg mass travelling at 1 41 m s The energy required to lift an apple up 1 m assuming the apple has a mass of 101 97 g The heat required to raise the temperature of 0 239 g of water from 0 C to 1 C The kinetic energy of a 50 kg human moving very slowly 0 2 m s or 0 72 km h The kinetic energy of a 56 g tennis ball moving at 6 m s 22 km h The food energy kcal in slightly more than half of an ordinary sized sugar crystal 0 102 mg crystal MultiplesSI multiples of joule J Submultiples MultiplesValue SI symbol Name Value SI symbol Name10 1 J dJ decijoule 101 J daJ decajoule10 2 J cJ centijoule 102 J hJ hectojoule10 3 J mJ millijoule 103 J kJ kilojoule10 6 J mJ microjoule 106 J MJ megajoule10 9 J nJ nanojoule 109 J GJ gigajoule10 12 J pJ picojoule 1012 J TJ terajoule10 15 J fJ femtojoule 1015 J PJ petajoule10 18 J aJ attojoule 1018 J EJ exajoule10 21 J zJ zeptojoule 1021 J ZJ zettajoule10 24 J yJ yoctojoule 1024 J YJ yottajoule10 27 J rJ rontojoule 1027 J RJ ronnajoule10 30 J qJ quectojoule 1030 J QJ quettajouleCommon multiples are in bold facezeptojoule 160 zeptojoules is about 1 electronvolt The minimal energy needed to change a bit of data in computation at around room temperature approximately 2 75 zJ is given by the Landauer limit citation needed nanojoule 160 nanojoule is about the kinetic energy of a flying mosquito microjoule The Large Hadron Collider LHC produces collisions of the microjoule order 7 TeV per particle citation needed kilojoule Nutritional food labels in most countries express energy in kilojoules kJ One square metre of the Earth receives about 1 4 kilojoules of solar radiation every second in full daylight A human in a sprint has approximately 3 kJ of kinetic energy while a cheetah in a 122 km h 76 mph sprint has approximately 20 kJ One watt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 kJ megajoule The megajoule is approximately the kinetic energy of a one megagram tonne vehicle moving at 161 km h 100 mph citation needed The energy required to heat 10 L of liquid water at constant pressure from 0 C 32 F to 100 C 212 F is approximately 4 2 MJ citation needed One kilowatt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 MJ gigajoule 6 gigajoule is about the chemical energy of combusting 1 barrel 159 L of petroleum 2 GJ is about the Planck energy unit One megawatt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 GJ terajoule The terajoule is about 0 278 GWh which is often used in energy tables About 63 TJ of energy was released by Little Boy The International Space Station with a mass of approximately 450 megagrams and orbital velocity of 7700 m s has a kinetic energy of roughly 13 TJ In 2017 Hurricane Irma was estimated to have a peak wind energy of 112 TJ One gigawatt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 TJ petajoule 210 petajoule is about 50 megatons of TNT which is the amount of energy released by the Tsar Bomba the largest man made explosion ever One terawatt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 PJ exajoule The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan had 1 41 EJ of energy according to its rating of 9 0 on the moment magnitude scale Yearly U S energy consumption amounts to roughly 94 EJ and the world final energy consumption was 439 EJ in 2021 One petawatt hour of electricity or any other form of energy is 3 6 EJ zettajoule The zettajoule is somewhat more than the amount of energy required to heat the Baltic Sea by 1 C assuming properties similar to those of pure water Human annual world energy consumption is approximately 0 5 ZJ The energy to raise the temperature of Earth s atmosphere 1 C is approximately 2 2 ZJ citation needed yottajoule The yottajoule is a little less than the amount of energy required to heat the Indian Ocean by 1 C assuming properties similar to those of pure water The thermal output of the Sun is approximately 400 YJ per second Conversions1 joule is equal to approximately unless otherwise stated 1 0 107 erg exactly 6 24151 1018 eV 9 47817 10 4 BTU 0 737562 ft lb foot pound 23 7304 ft pdl foot poundal Units with exact equivalents in joules include 1 thermochemical calorie 4 184 J 1 International Table calorie 4 1868 J 1 W h 3 600 J 3 6 kJ 1 kW h 3 6 10 6 J 3 6 MJ 1 W s 1 J 1 ton TNT 4 184 GJ 1 foe 1044 JNewton metre and torqueIn mechanics the concept of force in some direction has a close analogue in the concept of torque about some angle citation needed Linear AngularForce TorqueMass Moment of inertiaDisplacement Angle A result of this similarity is that the SI unit for torque is the newton metre which works out algebraically to have the same dimensions as the joule but they are not interchangeable The General Conference on Weights and Measures has given the unit of energy the name joule but has not given the unit of torque any special name hence it is simply the newton metre N m a compound name derived from its constituent parts The use of newton metres for torque but joules for energy is helpful to avoid misunderstandings and miscommunication The distinction may be seen also in the fact that energy is a scalar quantity the dot product of a force vector and a displacement vector By contrast torque is a vector the cross product of a force vector and a distance vector Torque and energy are related to one another by the equation citation needed E t8 displaystyle E tau theta where E is energy t is the vector magnitude of torque and 8 is the angle swept in radians Since plane angles are dimensionless it follows that torque and energy have the same dimensions citation needed Watt secondA watt second symbol W s or W s is a derived unit of energy equivalent to the joule The watt second is the energy equivalent to the power of one watt sustained for one second While the watt second is equivalent to the joule in both units and meaning there are some contexts in which the term watt second is used instead of joule such as in the rating of photographic electronic flash units ReferencesInternational Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed p 120 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 04 retrieved 2021 12 16 American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Online Edition 2009 Houghton Mifflin Co hosted by Yahoo Education The American Heritage Dictionary Second College Edition 1985 Boston Houghton Mifflin Co p 691 McGraw Hill Dictionary of Physics Fifth Edition 1997 McGraw Hill Inc p 224 NIST Guide to the SI Chapter 4 The Two Classes of SI Units and the SI Prefixes NIST 2016 01 28 Halliday David Resnick Robert 1974 Fundamentals of Physics revised ed New York Wiley pp 516 517 ISBN 0471344311 What Is a Joule Chemistry Definition ThoughtCo Retrieved 2024 04 07 Siemens Cal Wilhelm August 1882 Report of the Fifty Second Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science Southampton pp 1 33 pp 6 7 The unit of heat has hitherto been taken variously as the heat required to raise a pound of water at the freezing point through 1 Fahrenheit or Centigrade or again the heat necessary to raise a kilogramme of water 1 Centigrade The inconvenience of a unit so entirely arbitrary is sufficiently apparent to justify the introduction of one based on the electro magnetic system viz the heat generated in one second by the current of an Ampere flowing through the resistance of an Ohm In absolute measure its value is 107 C G S units and assuming Joule s equivalent as 42 000 000 it is the heat necessary to raise 0 238 grammes of water 1 Centigrade or approximately the 1 1000 th part of the arbitrary unit of a pound of water raised 1 Fahrenheit and the 1 4000 th of the kilogramme of water raised 1 Centigrade Such a heat unit if found acceptable might with great propriety I think be called the Joule after the man who has done so much to develop the dynamical theory of heat Pat Naughtin A chronological history of the modern metric system metricationmatters com 2009 Proceedings of the International Electrical Congress New York American Institute of Electrical Engineers 1894 CIPM 1946 Resolution 2 Definitions of electric units bipm org 9th CGPM Resolution 3 Triple point of water thermodynamic scale with a single fixed point unit of quantity of heat joule bipm org The International System of Units PDF 9th ed International Bureau of Weights and Measures Dec 2022 ISBN 978 92 822 2272 0 SI Redefinition NIST 2018 05 11 Units of Heat BTU Calorie and Joule Engineering Toolbox Retrieved 2021 06 14 Ristinen Robert A Kraushaar Jack J 2006 Energy and the Environment 2nd ed Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 73989 8 Physics CERN public web cern ch Archived from the original on 2012 12 13 You Say Calorie We Say Kilojoule Who s Right Archived from the original on 2023 05 15 Retrieved 2 May 2017 Construction of a Composite Total Solar Irradiance TSI Time Series from 1978 to present Archived from the original on 2011 08 30 Retrieved 2005 10 05 1 2 70 kg 10 m s 2 3500 J 1 2 35 kg 35 m s 2 21400 J Energy Units Energy Explained Your Guide To Understanding Energy Energy Information Administration www eia gov Malik John September 1985 Report LA 8819 The yields of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear explosions PDF Los Alamos National Laboratory Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2009 Retrieved 18 March 2015 International Space Station Final Configuration PDF European Space Agency Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Bonnie Berkowitz Laris Karklis Reuben Fischer Baum Chiqui Esteban 11 September 2017 Analysis How Big Is Hurricane Irma Washington Post Retrieved 2 November 2017 Rathbone John Paul Fontanella Khan James Rovnick Naomi 11 September 2017 A weakened Irma unleashes more damage on Florida coast Financial Times New York Rathbone Miami Fontanella Khan London Rovnick ISSN 0307 1766 Archived from the original on 4 August 2024 Retrieved 11 September 2017 World Energy Outlook 2022 Report International Energy Agency 2022 p 239 Retrieved 7 September 2023 Volumes of the World s Oceans from ETOPO1 noaa gov National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 19 August 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2022 The Sun pveducation org Retrieved 22 November 2024 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 Feynman Richard 1963 Physical Units Feynman s Lectures on Physics Retrieved 2014 03 07 Marc Herant Stirling A Colgate Willy Benz Chris Fryer October 25 1997 Neutrinos and Supernovae PDF Los Alamos Sciences Los Alamos National Laboratory Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 14 Retrieved 2008 04 23 Units with special names and symbols units that incorporate special names and symbols International Bureau of Weights and Measures Archived from the original on 28 June 2009 Retrieved 18 March 2015 A derived unit can often be expressed in different ways by combining base units with derived units having special names Joule for example may formally be written newton metre or kilogram metre squared per second squared This however is an algebraic freedom to be governed by common sense physical considerations in a given situation some forms may be more helpful than others In practice with certain quantities preference is given to the use of certain special unit names or combinations of unit names to facilitate the distinction between different quantities having the same dimension International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed pp 39 40 53 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 04 retrieved 2021 12 16 What Is A Watt Second Archived from the original on 2017 06 02 Retrieved 2018 10 23 External linksThe dictionary definition of joule at WiktionaryListen to this article 13 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 6 March 2024 2024 03 06 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles