Power Formula
The power formula P = W/t calculates the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred.
Learn to calculate power in watts with examples.
The Formula
Power is the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred. One watt equals one joule of energy per second.
Variables
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| P | Power (measured in watts, W) |
| W | Work done or energy transferred (measured in joules, J) |
| t | Time taken (measured in seconds, s) |
Example 1
A motor does 6,000 J of work in 12 seconds. What is its power output?
Identify the values: W = 6,000 J, t = 12 s
Apply the formula: P = W / t = 6,000 / 12
P = 500 W
Example 2
A 60 W light bulb runs for 5 minutes. How much energy does it use?
Convert time: t = 5 × 60 = 300 s
Rearrange: W = P × t = 60 × 300
W = 18,000 J (or 18 kJ)
When to Use It
Use the power formula when you need to find how quickly energy is used or work is done.
- Comparing the output of engines, motors, or appliances
- Calculating energy consumption over time
- Determining how long a task will take at a given power level
- Electrical power calculations (often combined with P = IV)