Energy and the watt hour
There is an important difference between energy and power. You’ve probably heard the
two terms used interchangeably, as if they mean the same thing. But they don’t. Energy
is power dissipated over a length of time. Power is the rate at which energy is expended.
Physicists measure energy in joules. One joule is the equivalent of one watt of
power, dissipated for one second of time. In electricity, you’ll more often encounter the
watt hour or the kilowatt hour. As their names imply, a watt hour, abbreviated Wh, is
the equivalent of 1 W dissipated for an hour (1 h), and 1 kilowatt hour (kWh) is the
equivalent of 1 kW of power dissipated for 1 h.
An energy of 1 Wh can be dissipated in an infinite number of different ways. A
60-watt bulb will burn 60 Wh in an hour, or 1 Wh per minute. A 100-W bulb would burn
1 Wh in 1/100 hour, or 36 seconds. A 6-watt Christmas tree bulb would require 10 minutes
(1/6 hour) to burn 1 Wh. And the rate of power dissipation need not be constant; it
could be constantly changing.
Figure 2-6 illustrates two hypothetical devices that burn up 1 Wh of energy. Device
A uses its power at a constant rate of 60 watts, so it consumes 1 Wh in a minute. The
power consumption rate of device B varies, starting at zero and ending up at quite a lot
more than 60 W. How do you know that this second device really burns up 1 Wh of energy?
You determine the area under the graph. This example has been chosen because
figuring out this area is rather easy. Remember that the area of a triangle is equal to half
the product of the base length and the height. This second device is on for 72 seconds,
or 1.2 minute; this is 1.2/60 = 0.02 hour. Then the area under the “curve” is 1/2 x 100 x
0.02 = 1 Wh.

When calculating energy values, you must always remember the units you’re using.
In this case the unit is the watt hour, so you must multiply watts by hours. If you multiply
watts by minutes, or watts by seconds, you’ll get the wrong kind of units in your
answer. That means a wrong answer!
Sometimes, the curves in graphs like these are complicated. In fact, they usually
are. Consider the graph of power consumption in your home, versus time, for a whole
day. It might look something like the curve in Fig. 2-7. Finding the area under this curve
is no easy task, if you have only this graph to go by. But there is another way to determine
the total energy burned by your household in a day, or in a week, or most often, in
a month. That is by means of the electric meter. It measures electrical energy in kilowatt
hours. Every month, without fail, the power company sends its representative to read
that meter. This person takes down the number of kilowatt hours displayed, subtracts
the number from the previous month, and a few days later you get a bill. This meter automatically
keeps track of total consumed energy, without anybody having to do sophisticated
integral calculus to find the areas under irregular curves such as the graph
of Fig. 2-7.
