yes.
An electric stove uses the Potential Energy of electricity and transforms it into Thermal Energy.
The kettle uses heat energy. Depending on your type of stove, that heat will usually come from chemical energy (in a gas stove), or electrical energy (in an electrical stove).
The heat energy from the stove, which in turn comes from the burning of the chemical energy in the gas that is burning, or from the electrical energy, depending on the type of stove.
A gas stove uses natural gas or propane.
with a stove or a grill or more
When it comes to chemical energy the type of things that are household that use chemical energy are things like pots and pans. What I mean by this is they only use chemical energy if they are doing something like cooking or scrambling an egg.
If it is a gas stove it will use kinetic energy from a chemical reaction, adding it as potential energy (molecular motion) to the molecules of whatever is heated. In an electric stove, electrical energy becomes radiant thermal energy, some of which becomes potential energy in whatever is heated.
The electrical energy is converted to heat.
Gas stoves typically use chemical energy stored in natural gas (methane) as their primary source of energy. When the gas is ignited, it undergoes combustion, releasing heat energy that is used for cooking.
When a stove is boiling water, electrical energy from the stove is being transformed into thermal energy as the stove heats the water. The thermal energy then causes the water to boil and turn into steam.
Strictly speaking, an electric stove converts electricity into heat. That heat can be used to create motion, like water circulating in a pot of boiling water, but the direct conversion is to thermal energy.
It isn't. Saying that some physical object is any type of energy is completely misleading. A stove is a piece of metal, not some sort of energy.An object may use, produce, or transformdifferent types of energy.