Joule is newton-meter, newton is kg m/s2. Therefore:J/kg= Nm/kg= kg m2/s2 kg= m2/s2.So, the answer is no.
No, though you could have: 1 kg = 1 J s2/m2.To see this checks out, just consider the following equations:1. force = mass x acceleration, thus 1 N = 1 kg m/s2.2. work = force x distance, thus 1 J = 1...
10 kilowatts
10,000 joules per second.
1 joule per second = 1 watt