Quick Find Conversion Table

1 - 33
megawatts to petawatts
1= 1.0E-9
2= 2.0E-9
3= 3.0E-9
4= 4.0E-9
5= 5.0E-9
6= 6.0E-9
7= 7.0E-9
8= 8.0E-9
9= 9.0E-9
10= 1.0E-8
11= 1.1E-8
12= 1.2E-8
13= 1.3E-8
14= 1.4E-8
15= 1.5E-8
16= 1.6E-8
17= 1.7E-8
18= 1.8E-8
19= 1.9E-8
20= 2.0E-8
21= 2.1E-8
22= 2.2E-8
23= 2.3E-8
24= 2.4E-8
25= 2.5E-8
26= 2.6E-8
27= 2.7E-8
28= 2.8E-8
29= 2.9E-8
30= 3.0E-8
31= 3.1E-8
32= 3.2E-8
33= 3.3E-8
34 - 66
megawatts to petawatts
34= 3.4E-8
35= 3.5E-8
36= 3.6E-8
37= 3.7E-8
38= 3.8E-8
39= 3.9E-8
40= 4.0E-8
41= 4.1E-8
42= 4.2E-8
43= 4.3E-8
44= 4.4E-8
45= 4.5E-8
46= 4.6E-8
47= 4.7E-8
48= 4.8E-8
49= 4.9E-8
50= 5.0E-8
51= 5.1E-8
52= 5.2E-8
53= 5.3E-8
54= 5.4E-8
55= 5.5E-8
56= 5.6E-8
57= 5.7E-8
58= 5.8E-8
59= 5.9E-8
60= 6.0E-8
61= 6.1E-8
62= 6.2E-8
63= 6.3E-8
64= 6.4E-8
65= 6.5E-8
66= 6.6E-8
67 - 99
megawatts to petawatts
67= 6.7E-8
68= 6.8E-8
69= 6.9E-8
70= 7.0E-8
71= 7.1E-8
72= 7.2E-8
73= 7.3E-8
74= 7.4E-8
75= 7.5E-8
76= 7.6E-8
77= 7.7E-8
78= 7.8E-8
79= 7.9E-8
80= 8.0E-8
81= 8.1E-8
82= 8.2E-8
83= 8.3E-8
84= 8.4E-8
85= 8.5E-8
86= 8.6E-8
87= 8.7E-8
88= 8.8E-8
89= 8.9E-8
90= 9.0E-8
91= 9.1E-8
92= 9.2E-8
93= 9.3E-8
94= 9.4E-8
95= 9.5E-8
96= 9.6E-8
97= 9.7E-8
98= 9.8E-8
99= 9.9E-8

Popular conversions

Popular units

megawatts

The megawatt (MW) is equal to one million (106) watts. Many events or machines produce or sustain the conversion of energy on this scale, including large electric motors; large warships such as aircraft carriers, cruisers, and submarines; large server farms or data centers; and some scientific research equipment, such as supercolliders, and the output pulses of very large lasers. A large residential or commercial building may use several megawatts in electric power and heat. On railways, modern high-powered electric locomotives typically have a peak power output of 5 or 6 MW, although some produce much more. The Eurostar, for example, uses more than 12 MW, while heavy diesel-electric locomotives typically produce/use 3 to 5 MW. U.S. nuclear power plants have net summer capacities between about 500 and 1300 MW.

petawatts

The petawatt (PW) is equal to one quadrillion (1015) watts and can be produced by the current generation of lasers for time-scales on the order of picoseconds (10−12 s). One such laser is the Lawrence Livermore's Nova laser, which achieved a power output of 1.25 PW (1.25×1015 W) by a process called chirped pulse amplification. The duration of the pulse was roughly 0.5 ps (5×10−13 s), giving a total energy of 600 J.