No, chemical energy is completely different to nuclear energy
I don't think there are any. Chemical bonds are many orders-of-magnitude weaker than nuclear bonds, so I don't think you can convert chemical energy to nuclear energy, at least, not directly.
well basically the sun gets chemical energy from fire and converts it to nuclear energy but i do not think in today's physics there is any possible way to convert them.~answer most likely not correct. answered by 5th grader~
I don't know of any way to do this. Nuclear energy simply provides heat, so could conceivably be used to drive chemical reactions, but I don't think this has ever been done.
Nuclear energy is turned into thermal energy, not chemical energy
This does not happen, they are quite differenwell sometime chemical change into nuclear by going to thermal energy
I don't think there are any. Chemical bonds are many orders-of-magnitude weaker than nuclear bonds, so I don't think you can convert chemical energy to nuclear energy, at least, not directly.
well basically the sun gets chemical energy from fire and converts it to nuclear energy but i do not think in today's physics there is any possible way to convert them.~answer most likely not correct. answered by 5th grader~
mechanical generatornuclear reactorchemical battery
I don't know of any way to do this. Nuclear energy simply provides heat, so could conceivably be used to drive chemical reactions, but I don't think this has ever been done.
Nuclear energy is turned into thermal energy, not chemical energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
That is called chemical energy - assuming conventional fuel. Nuclear fuel has nuclear energy.
Nuclear fusion produces nuclear energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
No. Nuclear energy is a type of energy that is quite different from chemical energy.
Chloroplast convert light energy. Mitochondria convert chemical energy itself
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear