No. Fire is a chemical reaction, oxidation actually, just a very fast form.
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear
nuclear energy
sun, fire ,and stove are all examples of heat energy!For example heat released during chemical reactions, nuclear fission, nuclear fusion, etc.
Nuclear energy is produced through processes like nuclear fission, where atoms are split to release energy. A common example is nuclear power plants, where this energy is harnessed to generate electricity.
nuclear power station generates electric
Yes- fire is chemical - the sun is nuclear.
No. Nuclear energy is a type of energy that is quite different from chemical energy.
Yes, radioactive decay results in the release of nuclear energy. The radioactive decay of an atom is the result of changes in the atom's nucleus, so energy released will be nuclear energy by definition.
Nuclear is a exothermic nuclear processes. This is also known as nuclear energy or power.
light energy: sun heat energy: fire, heater kinetic energy: moving cars mechanical energy: television potential energy: a compressed spring sound energy: thunder chemical energy: battery nuclear energy: nuclear submarines thermal energy:a piece of paper moving over a candle
Nuclear power stations.
One type of atom (element or isotope) is converted to another. This is called nuclear reaction.