How many gigawatt in 1 millinewton meter/hour? The answer is 2.7777777777778E-16. We assume you are converting between gigawatt and millinewton meter/hour. You can view more details on each measurement unit: gigawatt or millinewton meter/hour The SI derived unit for power is the watt. 1 watt is equal to 1.0E-9 gigawatt, or 3600000 millinewton meter/hour. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between gigawatts and millinewton meters/hour. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!
1 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 3.6E+15 millinewton meter/hour
2 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 7.2E+15 millinewton meter/hour
3 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 1.08E+16 millinewton meter/hour
4 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 1.44E+16 millinewton meter/hour
5 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 1.8E+16 millinewton meter/hour
6 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 2.16E+16 millinewton meter/hour
7 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 2.52E+16 millinewton meter/hour
8 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 2.88E+16 millinewton meter/hour
9 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 3.24E+16 millinewton meter/hour
10 gigawatt to millinewton meter/hour = 3.6E+16 millinewton meter/hour
You can do the reverse unit conversion from millinewton meter/hour to gigawatt, or enter any two units below:
The SI prefix "giga" represents a factor of 109, or in exponential notation, 1E9.
So 1 gigawatt = 109 watts.
The definition of a watt is as follows:
The watt (symbol: W) is the SI derived unit for power. It is equivalent to one joule per second (1 J/s), or in electrical units, one volt ampere (1 V·A).
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