Electric stoves are not as good as gas stoves, it's hard to change or lower the temperature in an electric stove, but it is a cheaper option than a gas stove.
An electric stove uses Alternating Current to operate.
The electrical energy is converted to heat.
Almost none, after it has been used for the first few days.
Depends on the stove, the kind of stove, and when. Do you mean a wood burning kitchen range from 1900 or a heating stove from 1940, or an electric range from 1960? Parts of the early Sears catalogs are available on line, and you can look at the price of things from around 1902.
It doesn't do anything! It is just another kind of stove.
Forces are measured in Newtons, whether they are electric or of another kind.
That would depend on the kind of stove that you have.
The wires must first be heat resistant. For that the best wires that can be used are wires made up of superconductors.
A gas stove uses natural gas or propane.
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.
NO
They're all thermostats of on kind or another: home, car, stove, hot-water heater,