An electrical current - and the energy it carries - can travel through any conductor. Quite often, these conductors will be wires.
Electromagnetic energy travels by waves. These waves can travel through space and through many types of matter. Electrical energy of sufficient voltage can arc through space and some matter (lightening for example). More commonly, electrical energy travels through conducting media such as wires of copper. AC electricity could be considered a wave, but not in the same sense as electromagnetic energy.
Electrical energy.
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Heat.
Most resistors convert electrical energy into thermal energy, which is often called heat.
Through electrical wires.
it is cool
Electromagnetic energy travels by waves. These waves can travel through space and through many types of matter. Electrical energy of sufficient voltage can arc through space and some matter (lightening for example). More commonly, electrical energy travels through conducting media such as wires of copper. AC electricity could be considered a wave, but not in the same sense as electromagnetic energy.
Through wires. The exact location of the wires varies, depending on the house.
Electrical energy.
thermal energy travel through anything such as wires and even ice cubes! thermal energy can also be tranferred from one object to another by radation, conduction, and convection
It doesn't. Energy doesn't travel 'around' a circuit. It travels from the supply to the load. And it isn't delivered to the load by the current. It doesn't even travel through the wires. It travels as a result of what is called the 'Poynting's Field' which acts perpendicularly to both the electric and magnetic fields.
The chemical energy stored in batteries gets transformed sets into electrical energy through the wires. This then gets transformed into light energy that you see.
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Conduction allows energy to travel through a medium. Some of its practical uses are making electricity flow in wires, cooking food, telephone conversations and conducting heat through the atmosphere to warm the earth.Another AnswerFurther to the original answer, energy doesn't travel through wires. A conductor allows the drift of current.
They generate electrical energy from nuclear energy, and then distribute it through wires to your house, where it can be used to run your lights, your TV, and your electric can-opener.