The light sensor in a digital camera, known as a Charge-Coupled Device (CCD), is photoelectric in nature and does not produce energy via chemical means. However, virtually every digital camera uses a battery to power it, which is electrochemical in nature, producing electricity from chemical energy stored in the battery's cells.
Digital cameras use electrical energy stored in the batteries as chemical energy.
Chemical and electrical energy are used. They power a camera.
chemical energy to electrical energy to sound energy
solar
Electromagnetic energy
The energy that enters any kind of camera through the lens is called light.
the light of the flash, the heat from the batteries and the memory.
Food is chemical energy
The example of conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy is the process occurring in the batteries.
example of an object of chemical energy
Chemical energy
It stores chemical energy and when you burn wood, that chemical energy is converted to light energy and heat energy.