1,2,3,5
Kinetic energy and thermal energy are forms of energy. Potential energy and electrical energy are also forms of energy.
The four kinds of kinetic energy are mechanical,sound, electrical and thermal energy.
Wind turbines convert the kinetic energy of the wind into mechanical energy, which is then transformed into electrical energy. They do not convert energy directly back into potential, kinetic, or thermal energy.
A hair dryer converts electrical energy into thermal energy and kinetic energy. The electrical energy powers the motor, which drives the fan to produce kinetic energy that blows air. At the same time, the heating element converts electrical energy into thermal energy to heat the air.
Potential energy - gravitational, chemical, nuclear Kinetic energy - mechanical, thermal, electrical, motion, radiant, sound
It converts electrical energy into kinetic energy (and some thermal energy).
thermal,nuclear, chemical, electrical, wave, potential, and kinetic energy
Electrical energy is the energy associated with the flow of electric charge. Thermal energy, on the other hand, is the energy resulting from the movement of particles within a substance, leading to an increase in temperature. When electrical energy is converted to thermal energy, it can be used for heating applications or to power devices such as heaters.
i think its: thermal energy (from source of biomass being heated) ---> kinetic energy (from steam turning the turbine) ---> electrical energy (generator)
thermal , light , electrical , chemical , mechanical , sound
Depending upon its state when measured, potential, kinetic, mechanical (electrical for a battery op), thermal...the output is 'mechanical.'
The three forms of electrical energy are potential energy, kinetic energy, and thermal energy. Potential energy is stored energy due to the position of an object in an electric field, while kinetic energy is the energy of motion due to the movement of charged particles. Thermal energy is generated when electrical energy is converted into heat energy.