Watt-minutes (Wm) to Ergs (erg) conversion

1 Wm = 600000000 ergergWm
Formula
1 Wm = 600000000 erg

Understanding Watt-minutes to Ergs Conversion

A watt-minute (Wm) is 60 joules — one watt of power delivered over one minute — often used to describe brief electrical pulses or short-run device energy. The erg is the CGS unit of energy, equal to 10710⁻⁷ joule (one dyne-centimetre), which remains in use in classical mechanics, astrophysics, and older engineering texts. Converting watt-minutes to ergs is a matter of moving from a practical SI-based quantity to a tiny CGS one, producing a factor of hundreds of millions.

Conversion Formula

1 Wm=6×108 erg1\ \text{Wm} = 6 \times 10⁸\ \text{erg}

To convert Watt-minutes to Ergs, multiply by this factor:

erg=Wm×600000000\text{erg} = \text{Wm} \times 600000000

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Watt-minutes to Ergs.

erg=25×600000000=1.5×1010 erg\text{erg} = 25 \times 600000000 = 1.5 \times 10¹⁰\ \text{erg}

How to Convert Watt-minutes to Ergs

Move from SI watt-minutes to CGS ergs with one multiplication.

  1. Note the watt-minutes: Start with the energy value, such as 25 Wm.
  2. Multiply by the factor: Use 6×1086 \times 10⁸ ergs per watt-minute.
  3. Calculate: 25×600000000=1.5×101025 \times 600000000 = 1.5 \times 10¹⁰ ergs.
  4. Express clearly: Large erg totals are easiest read in scientific notation, so record 1.5×10101.5 \times 10¹⁰ erg.

Watt-minutes to Ergs conversion table

Watt-minutes (Wm)Ergs (erg)
00
1600000000
21200000000
31800000000
42400000000
53000000000
63600000000
74200000000
84800000000
95400000000
106000000000
159000000000
2012000000000
2515000000000
3018000000000
4024000000000
5030000000000
6036000000000
7042000000000
8048000000000
9054000000000
10060000000000
15090000000000
200120000000000
250150000000000
300180000000000
400240000000000
500300000000000
600360000000000
700420000000000
800480000000000
900540000000000
1000600000000000
20001200000000000
30001800000000000
40002400000000000
50003000000000000
100006000000000000
2500015000000000000
5000030000000000000
10000060000000000000
250000150000000000000
500000300000000000000
1000000600000000000000

What is the watt-minute?

Watt-minutes is a unit of energy. Below is a breakdown of what watt-minutes are, how they're formed, and some examples.

Understanding Watt-Minutes

Watt-minutes (W⋅min) is a unit of energy derived from the more standard unit, the watt-hour (W⋅h), and ultimately from the SI unit of energy, the joule (J). It represents the amount of energy consumed or produced when one watt of power is used for one minute.

Formation and Calculation

Watt-minutes are formed by multiplying power in watts by time in minutes.

  • Power (Watts): The rate at which energy is used or generated.
  • Time (Minutes): The duration for which the power is applied.

The formula to calculate energy in watt-minutes is:

E=PtE = P \cdot t

Where:

  • EE is the energy in watt-minutes (W⋅min)
  • PP is the power in watts (W)
  • tt is the time in minutes (min)

Conversion to Other Units

  • To convert watt-minutes to watt-hours, divide by 60: Wh=Wmin60Wh = \frac{W \cdot min}{60}

  • To convert watt-minutes to joules, multiply by 60: J=Wmin60J = W \cdot min \cdot 60

Practical Examples

  1. Small Electronic Devices: A small LED light bulb might consume 5 watts. If it's used for 20 minutes, the energy consumed is 5W20min=1005 W \cdot 20 min = 100 watt-minutes.
  2. Charging a Smartphone: If a phone charger delivers 10 watts of power and the phone charges for 30 minutes, it consumes 10W30min=30010 W \cdot 30 min = 300 watt-minutes.
  3. Microwave Oven: A microwave oven operating at 1000 watts for 2 minutes uses 1000W2min=20001000 W \cdot 2 min = 2000 watt-minutes.

Relation to James Watt

James Watt was a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer whose improvements to the steam engine were fundamental to the Industrial Revolution. The watt, the unit of power, is named in his honor. While Watt didn't directly work with "watt-minutes" as a standalone unit, his work on power and energy laid the groundwork for understanding these concepts.

Usefulness and Relevance

Watt-minutes are a convenient unit when dealing with energy consumption or production over relatively short periods. They offer a more granular view compared to watt-hours, especially when analyzing the energy usage of devices or processes with durations shorter than an hour.

What is the Erg?

The erg is a unit of energy in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system, historically common in physics, astronomy, and mechanics before the SI joule became standard.

Definition

One erg is the work done by a force of one dyne acting over a distance of one centimetre:

1 erg=1.00000×107 J1\ \text{erg} = 1.00000 \times 10⁻⁷\ \text{J}

This equals exactly one ten-millionth of a joule (10⁻⁷ J), or equivalently 1 g·cm²/s². The erg is a small unit, reflecting the small base units of the CGS system.

Origin and History

The name comes from the Greek ergon, meaning "work." The unit was formally adopted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1873 as part of the CGS system and remained the dominant energy unit in physics literature well into the 20th century.

Law and Notable Facts

The erg has been largely superseded by the joule and is deprecated in the modern SI framework, but it persists in astrophysics, where luminosities and energies are still frequently quoted in ergs and erg per second.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 joule equals 10 million ergs.
  • A mosquito in flight expends energy on the order of a few ergs per wingbeat.
  • The Sun radiates about 3.8 × 10³³ ergs every second, equivalent to 3.8 × 10²⁶ watts.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many ergs are in a watt-minute?

One watt-minute equals exactly 6×1086 \times 10⁸ ergs (600 million ergs), because 60 joules times 10710⁷ ergs per joule gives that figure.

How do I convert ergs back to watt-minutes?

Multiply the erg value by 1.666667×1091.666667 \times 10⁻⁹, or divide by 6×1086 \times 10⁸.

How does a watt-minute compare to a watt-hour in ergs?

A watt-hour is sixty times a watt-minute, so it equals 3.6×10103.6 \times 10¹⁰ ergs versus the watt-minute's 6×1086 \times 10⁸ ergs.

When is the erg still used?

The erg persists in astrophysics (for example luminosities in erg/s) and in older physics literature written in CGS units, so converting from watt-minutes helps align modern and legacy data.

How many ergs is 5 watt-minutes?

Five watt-minutes give 5×600000000=3×1095 \times 600000000 = 3 \times 10⁹ ergs.

Complete Watt-minutes conversion table

Wm
UnitResult
Watt-seconds (Ws)60 Ws
Watt-hours (Wh)0.01666667 Wh
Milliwatt-hours (mWh)16.66667 mWh
Kilowatt-hours (kWh)0.00001666667 kWh
Megawatt-hours (MWh)1.666667e-8 MWh
Gigawatt-hours (GWh)1.666667e-11 GWh
Joules (J)60 J
Kilojoules (kJ)0.06 kJ
Megajoules (MJ)0.00006 MJ
Gigajoules (GJ)6e-8 GJ
British Thermal Units (IT) (BTU)0.05686903 BTU
US Therms (thm)5.688261e-7 thm
Electronvolts (eV)374490500000000000000 eV
Ergs (erg)600000000 erg
Foot-pounds (ft-lbf)44.25373 ft-lbf
Tonnes of TNT (t-tnt)1.434034e-8 t-tnt
calories (cal)14.34034 cal
Kilocalories (kcal)0.01434034 kcal