No, unless you hook it up electronically then it will probably not produce enough energy to light it up as bright or as long as and outlet.
Yes.
Yes they can produce electricity when two different metals are used as electrodes. Though it can take quite a few to light an LED light bulb. But with a Christmas light no for some reason it does not work.
not enough energy/ hormones to produce period.
This releases enough energy to produce up to 38 ATP molecules.
Disadvantages: May not produce enough energy to run appliances, solar radiation
A tsunami requires a lot of energy to produce. Tremors do not have enough force to bring about a tsunami.
Any producer of heat can produce light by reaching enough energy
the cell would not produce enough energy
Chemical energy will produce the light in a firefly, or in a hand-held glow tube. Electrical energy will produce the light in a light bulb. Heating something up to a high enough temperature will produce light. Burning a material may produce light.
Probably not, as we use so much energy. It's a nice idea though!
To produce energy more than any other source can produce. A handful of Uranium can produce enough energy as the same as 4000 Train Load of coal [Given that each train load has around 15,000 Tons of Coal.]
Depends what energy you're talking about... Kinetic energy is the easiest one... you rub it on other stuff long and hard enough and it will produce heat. Chemical energy would produce heat if you mix the right stuff together. Electrical energy will produce heat if it flows through a heating element like in your toaster. . . and so on.