you can burn plants, and fire can be used to boil water to run a turbine. with photosynthesis: photosynthesis makes glucose, which is used for energy in animals and people that eat the plants
Power plants get their energy from burning fossil fuels, from fission of uranium, or the energy of water falling under gravity. There are also plants on a smaller scale that can get energy from the sun, wind, earth's thermal energy, burning biomass, tides and waves. Powerful plants, such as an oddish, or a carnovine, get their energy from synthesis. And if they have enough energy, they can even fire a solarbeam attack! :DDD
plants get there energy from sun
No fire is not an ionization energy
where do plants get energy for photosynthesis
trees are plants and fire kills trees.
Plants get their energy through photosynthesis, and animals get their energy by consuming plants or other animals.
If you mean how plants are used to gain energy, the most common way is to burn them and use the energy of the fire (for instance to boil water for steam power) or the movements of the hot air. If you mean how plants get their energy, this is done through a process called Photsynthesis, where the plant uses solar energy, nutrients from the soil, water and carbon dioxide to produce glucosis, which is energy. The chemical formula for glucosis is C6H12O6, and another byproduct of this reaction is Oxygen, O2.
Yes, fire is nonrenewable energy.
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear
The plants turn the energy into food that they can eat.
Wood has chemical potential energy, when combustion occurs, you have fire. Fire is mostly heat and light energy.