Power Calculator

Master the rate of your energy throughput with our professional Thermodynamics & Power Intelligence Engine. Designed for electrical engineers, automotive tuners, and renewable energy researchers, our high-precision solver provides instant calculations of Power across mechanical and electrical systems. Whether you are auditing the "Work Rate" of an industrial motor, analyzing the output of a photovoltaic array, or calculating the horsepower of a combustion engine, our system ensures your performance data is mathematically definitive.

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VERIFIED Power logic verified for 2026 engineering and energy standards by Calculator2.net Thermodynamics Analysts.

Power Calculator: Physics Power, Force, and Work

Power, in physics, is the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred. It connects force, distance, velocity, and time into a unified framework that describes everything from a car engine's output to a human sprinter's peak capability. Our Power Calculator solves for any unknown variable (power, work, time, force, velocity) when the others are known.

Power Formulas

Basic power: P = W ÷ t, where W = work in joules (J) and t = time in seconds (s). Power unit = Watt (W) = 1 joule/second.

Mechanical power: P = F × v, where F = force in Newtons (N) and v = velocity in m/s.

Alternative form: P = F × d ÷ t, where d = distance in meters.

Example: A crane lifts a 500 kg load 20 meters in 30 seconds. Work = mgh = 500 × 9.81 × 20 = 98,100 J. Power = 98,100 ÷ 30 = 3,270 W = 3.27 kW.

Units of Power

Watt (W): SI unit. 1 W = 1 joule/second = 1 kg⋅m²/s³.

Kilowatt (kW) = 1,000 W. Used for household appliances, vehicle engines, solar panels.

Horsepower (HP): Traditional unit for engines. 1 mechanical HP = 745.7 W. Car engines are rated in HP or kW. 100 HP ≈ 74.6 kW.

Metric horsepower (PS): 1 PS = 735.5 W (used in European automotive context).

British Thermal Unit per hour (BTU/hr): Used in HVAC. 1 BTU/hr = 0.293 W. 1 ton AC = 12,000 BTU/hr = 3,517 W ≈ 3.5 kW.

Human Power Output

A fit adult cyclist can sustain approximately 200–400W continuously. Peak sprint power can reach 1,000–2,000W for a few seconds. Tour de France riders sustain 400–450W for hours at a stretch. A typical person climbing stairs generates about 100–150W. Elite weightlifters can produce 5,000+ W in a clean-and-jerk, but only for a fraction of a second.

Applications

Engine specification comparison. Electrical circuit design (P = V × I). HVAC sizing (cooling capacity in BTU or kW). Physics problem solving (work, energy, force calculations). Fitness assessment (cycling power meters, stair-climbing tests).

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select the formula and known variables.
  2. Enter values in your preferred units.
  3. Click Calculate for the unknown variable plus unit conversions (W, kW, HP, BTU/hr).

Conclusion

Power is a fundamental physics quantity linking force, motion, and time. Our Power Calculator solves all common power problems with automatic unit conversion, serving physics students, engineers, automotive enthusiasts, and fitness professionals alike.

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