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My home is all electric and when I get my bill, it shows how many units of electricity I have used. It is currently around 17,000 units a year. I believe that a unit is one kilowatt hour. My question is, is a unit of energy (one kilowatt hour) the same, whether it is produced by gas or by electricity?
(this might, of course depend on the efficiency of the heating system)?
Perhaps another way of looking at it would be to ask whether boiling a kettle of water by gas or electric would use the same number of units.
If you're heating your house by gas, you're not getting energy in the form of kilowatts.
A kilowatt hour is a unit of electrical energy.
Quote from: Halc on 24/02/2021 15:01:43A kilowatt hour is a unit of electrical energy.No, it isn't.It's a bit more than a horsepower hour.It is enough energy to move a force of 3600 Newtons through a distance of 1000 metres.
My gas bill says otherwise.It tells me my energy consumption in KW Hr.There's a very simple reason why they took to doing this.A KW Hr of gas heating is a lot cheaper than the same energy delivered as electricity.
You can measure some forms of energy easily enough. The "heat" energy produced by a 1-kilowatt electric fire can be measured by putting a thermometer in front of it.
But what about other forms of energy. Such as "potential" energy.
How do you measure the potential energy of say, the Moon.
What units would you you use to express the potential energy of these bodies?
units would you you use to express the potential energy of these bodies?
OK, I cannot argue with that. Energy is energy after all. It's just that where I live, only the electric company bills me by that unit. My gas bill *used to be) in terms of volume delivered at some standard pressure.
Is a unit of energy the same, no matter how it is produced?
Quote from: charles1948 on 24/02/2021 20:17:50 units would you you use to express the potential energy of these bodies?Joules.That's the point.
So, how many Joules has the Moon got, as it orbits the Earth. Could we use these Joules as an energy source.To generate electricity on Earth. If not, why not?
Quote from: Halc on Today at 15:01:43A kilowatt hour is a unit of electrical energy.No, it isn't.
Others include Strangford Lough in Eire.
Quote from: Colin2B on 24/02/2021 22:50:48 Others include Strangford Lough in Eire.One day, perhaps.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/02/2021 19:46:44Quote from: Halc on Today at 15:01:43A kilowatt hour is a unit of electrical energy.No, it isn't.Oh yes it is. Energy is power integrated over time, so 1 kWh (= 3.6MJ) is a perfectly respectable unit of energy that by convention happens to be used by the electricity supply industry but almost nobody else (apart, it seems, from some gas companies). And that is why your electricity bill mentions "units".
Please name a unit of electrical energy that is not a unit of any other form of energy.
Quote from: alancalverd on 24/02/2021 23:17:46Please name a unit of electrical energy that is not a unit of any other form of energy.How about "volt"?