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The "megaton (of TNT equivalent)" is a unit of energy equal to 4.184 petajoules (4.184 × 10 15 J). [7] The kiloton and megaton of TNT equivalent have traditionally been used to describe the energy output, and hence the destructive power, of a nuclear weapon.
7.0349: Hexanitrobenzene explosive: 7 [8] Tetranitrocubane explosive - computed [citation needed] 6.95: Ammonal (Al+NH 4 NO 3 oxidizer) [citation needed] 6.9: 12.7: Tetranitromethane + hydrazine bipropellant - computed [citation needed] 6.6: Nitroglycerin: 6.38 [9] 10.2 [10] ANFO-ANNM [citation needed] 6.26: battery, Lithium–air: 6.12 ...
The International Steam Table British thermal unit is used. For others, see the full list. 1.0 Btu (1.1 kJ) BTU BTU TNT-based units: gigatonne of TNT: GtTNT (none) 1.0 gigatonne of TNT (4.2 EJ) gigaton of TNT: GtonTNT (none) megatonne of TNT: MtTNT (none) 1.0 megatonne of TNT (4.2 PJ) megaton of TNT: MtonTNT Mt kilotonne of TNT: ktTNT (none)
1.0 tonne of TNT (4.2 GJ) ton of TNT: tonTNT (none) kilogram of TNT: kgTNT (none) 1.0 kilogram of TNT (4.2 MJ) millitonne of TNT: mtTNT (none) milliton of TNT: mtonTNT (none) gram of TNT: gTNT (none) 1.0 gram of TNT (4.2 kJ) oil-based units: gigatonne of oil equivalent: Gtoe Gtoe 1.0 Gtoe (42 EJ) megatonne of oil equivalent: Mtoe Mtoe 1.0 Mtoe ...
Template: Convert/list of units/energy/TNT. 5 languages. ... Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikibooks; Wikidata item ...
This article gives a list of conversion factors for several physical quantities.A number of different units (some only of historical interest) are shown and expressed in terms of the corresponding SI unit.
Inflight 125-ton Boeing 767-200 flying at 373 knots (192 m/s) 3.3×10 9 J: Approximate average amount of energy expended by a human heart muscle over an 80-year lifetime [140] [141] 3.6×10 9 J = 1 MW·h (megawatt-hour) 4.2×10 9 J: Energy released by explosion of 1 ton of TNT. 4.5×10 9 J: Average annual energy usage of a standard refrigerator ...
The British imperial units and U.S. customary units for both energy and work include the foot-pound force (1.3558 J), the British thermal unit (BTU) which has various values in the region of 1055 J, the horsepower-hour (2.6845 MJ), and the gasoline gallon equivalent (about 120 MJ). Log-base-10 of the ratios between various measures of energy