Convert Femtojoules to Horsepower-Hours
Convert Femtojoules (fJ) to Horsepower-Hours (hp·h) instantly and accurately.
Conversion Formula
hp·h = fJ × 3.725061360e-22
About Femtojoules
A femtojoule (fJ) is 10⁻¹⁵ J - the scale of gamma-ray photons, molecular motor work, and state-of-the-art digital logic. The electron rest-mass energy is 81.87 fJ; a 100 keV X-ray photon carries 16.02 fJ. A single myosin II motor protein power stroke dissipates ~5-40 fJ. ATP hydrolysis under cellular conditions yields ~80-100 fJ of free energy. Advanced 3 nm CMOS gates switch at ~0.1-1 fJ per operation. Ultrafast fiber laser oscillators produce pulses of 0.1-10 fJ before amplification. 1 fJ = 10⁻¹⁵ J = 6.242 keV.
About Horsepower-Hours
A horsepower-hour (hp·h) is the energy from one mechanical horsepower (745.6999 W) for one hour - exactly 2,684,519.54 J ≈ 2.685 MJ. James Watt coined the horsepower to compare his steam engines with mine horses; billing in hp·h preceded the kilowatt-hour tariff. The metric horsepower (PS = 75 kgf·m/s = 735.499 W) gives a slightly smaller metric-hp·h = 2,647,795 J, used in European and Japanese engine datasheets. Today the hp·h appears in marine engineering logs, mining energy accounting, and vintage industrial equipment. 1 hp·h = 2.6845 MJ = 0.74570 kWh = 641.19 kcal.
Quick Reference Table
| Femtojoules (fJ) | Horsepower-Hours (hp·h) |
|---|---|
| 1 fJ | 3.725 × 10-22 hp·h |
| 2 fJ | 7.45 × 10-22 hp·h |
| 5 fJ | 1.863 × 10-21 hp·h |
| 10 fJ | 3.725 × 10-21 hp·h |
| 25 fJ | 9.313 × 10-21 hp·h |
| 50 fJ | 1.863 × 10-20 hp·h |
| 100 fJ | 3.725 × 10-20 hp·h |