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Encyclopedia > Petawatt
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This page lists examples of the power in watts produced by various different sources of energy. They are grouped by orders of magnitude, and each section covers three orders of magnitude, or a factor of one thousand.

Contents

1 yoctowatt

(10-24 watts)


1 zeptowatt

(10-21 watts)

1 attowatt

(10-18 watts)

  • 1 aW - approximate power scale at which operation of nanoelectromechanical systems is overwhelmed by thermal fluctuations.[1] (http://physicsweb.org/article/world/14/2/8)

1 femtowatt

(10-15 watts)

  • 2.5 fW - minimum discernable signal at the antenna terminal of a good FM radio receiver
  • 10 fW (-110 dBm) - approximate lower limit of power reception on digital spread-spectrum cell phones

1 picowatt

(10-12 watts)

  • 1 pW - average power consumption of a human cell
  • 2.5 pW - Sound intensity per square centimeter for average human threshold of hearing at 1000Hz; 1 phon or 0 dB SPL
  • 150 pW - Power entering a human eye from a 100 Watt lamp 1 km away

1 nanowatt

(10-9 watts)


1 microwatt

(10-6 watts)

1 milliwatt

(10-3 watts)

  • 5 mW - laser in a CD-ROM drive [2] (http://sharp-world.com/products/device/ctlg/laser/)
  • 5-10 mW - laser in a DVD player
  • 100 mW - laser in a CD-R drive

1 watt

  • 5 W -- maximum power output of a CB or hand-held radio transmitter
  • 20-40 W -- approximate power consumption of the human brain
  • 30 W -- the power of the typical household tube light
  • 60 W -- the power of the typical household light bulb
  • 100 W -- approximate average power used by the human body
  • 290 W -- approximately 1000 BTU/hour
  • 745.7 W -- 1 horsepower
  • 750 W -- the amount of sunshine falling on a square metre of the Earth's surface on a clear day

1 kilowatt

(103 watts)

  • 1.36 kW -- power received from the Sun at the Earth's orbit by one square metre
  • up to 2 kW -- approximate short time power output of sprinting professional cyclists
  • 1 kW to 2 kW -- heat output of a domestic electric kettle.
  • 2.2 kW -- per capita average power use of the world in 2001
  • 11.4 kW -- per capita average power use in the U.S. in 2001
  • 40 kW to 200 kW -- approximate range of power output of typical automobiles
  • 50 kW to 100 kW -- ERP of clear channel AM stations

1 megawatt

(106 watts)

1 gigawatt

(109 watts)

1 terawatt

(1012 watts)

  • 1.7 TW -- average electrical power consumption of the world in 2001
  • 3.327 TW -- average total power consumption of the U.S. in 2001
  • 13.5 TW -- average total power consumption of the world in 2001

1 petawatt

(1015 watts)

1 exawatt

(1018 watts)


1 zettawatt

(1021 watts)

1 yottawatt

(1024 watts)

Higher and Lower orders of magnitude

It has been proposed [Shuch, H. Paul, The large and the small of it (Letter). Science News 143(14): 211, April 3, 1993] to extend the scale in both directions, by continuing to work backward through the alphabet. Thus 10^-27 becomes xocto, 10^30 becomes wocto, etc., through to acto (10^-94). Similarly, 10^+27 becomes Xotta, 10^+30 becomes Wotta, etc., clear through to Atta (10^+94).


  Results from FactBites:
 
Old Photographic Technique Applied To Future Energy Research (1735 words)
Schematic of the petawatt laser target chamber shows the laser beam entering from the left and being focsued by a glass mirror and a plasma mirror (since a solid mirror would disintegrate under the concentrated flash).
The petawatt laser is derived for the 10-laser Nova facility.
For the petawatt laser tests, the film strips are not just hung inside the chamber where the laser target sits, but placed inside three special electron spectrometers.
Petawatt Program (396 words)
Petawatt experiments may begin as early as 2004, and design of new components and conversion of the laser are progressing.
This process, called Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA), requires extensive modification of Z-Beamlet and a means of compressing the pulse, which is advancing the state of the art in its design.
Protons generated from the petawatt laser driven backlighting of targets could be used to create a new kind of image of materials, structures, and events.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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