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Перевод слова


Перевод: kilowatt speek kilowatt


[существительное]
киловатт


Тезаурус:

  1. The inventor says that a steel flywheel around half a metre in diameter ran store the equivalent of around 5 kilowatt hours of energy.
  2. Salter told the inquiry how his "bobbing duck" device - a duck-shaped canister which, when installed in lines out to sea, would continually extract energy from the waves - had at that time (1982) been officially estimated to be capable of producing electricity at about 5 pence per kilowatt hour (p/kWh).
  3. In 1978 it was claimed that these devices could not produce electricity at a cheaper rate than 20 pence per kilowatt hour (as opposed to the Central Electricity Generating Board's 2.7 pence per kilowatt hour) but this has now been reduced to 10 pence per kilowatt hour while Dr Salter maintains that the Duck could achieve 4 pence per kilowatt hour.
  4. At 1989 prices, this would turn the first British PWR into a 2 billion project even before it had generated a single kilowatt of electricity.
  5. On a clear day on the equator, at noon, each square metre of the Earth's surface receives about one kilowatt (kW) of solar energy; that is, one hundred kilocalories (kcal) per hour.
  6. For example, one type of silicon diode used in microwave communications can operate at a power density of I kilowatt per square millimetre of base area.
  7. Electricity generated by the one remaining PWR was expected to cost 8p (possibly 10p, according to one report) a kilowatt hour against 3p for power from a modern coal-fired power station and about 2.5p from one of the advanced gas turbine power stations.
  8. The humiliating "commercial" figures the British industry - the pioneer of civil nuclear energy - was obliged to produce in advance of privatization in 1989 practically trebled the previously estimated cost per kilowatt hour.
  9. "Non-fuel" running costs, for example, had risen from 25 per kilowatt of capacity in 1974 to 94 in 1984, making nuclear plants about as expensive to run as coal.
  10. People who are behind with their electricity bills could find themselves restricted to a consumption of as little as one kilowatt.

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