Briefly:
1. Current flows through the wires in the Stator and the Rotor.
2. A magnetic field is generated in the Stator and the Rotor, caused by the Current Flow.
3. Because of the design of the "Wire Windings" of the Stator and Rotor, there Magnetic Fields are OPPOSITE each other, and REPEL each other.
4. If the Magnetic Fields are strong enough to overcome FRICTION (and any LOAD attached to the Motor), the Rotor begins to turn.
5. The Speed (RPM) of the Motor is either regulated by its design, or the LOAD.
For an electric buzzer, it's electrical energy.
Hydro-electric powerplant
They don't. An electric motor is designed to convert electrical energy to kinetic energy, not the other way round. A device that converts kinetic energy to electrical energy is called a generator or a dynamo. Sometimes the same device can do both things (convert in both directions), but since the device is especially optimized for one function, it may not be very good at the other one.
The potential energy of the falling down water transfers to kinetic energy. The kinetic energy turns turbines that are connected to electric generators where the kinetic energy transfers into electric energy.
The free fall of the object in gravitational field changes its gravitational potential energy to kinetic energy
A generator in a power plant converts rotating kinetic energy into electrical energy An electric motor is a device which changes electrical energy into kinetic. For example-- Fans could be like electric energy to kinetic energy...
Any hydroelectric, wind, or hand-crank generator changes kinetic energy to electrical energy.
Well anything that uses electrical energy to move changes electrical energy to kinetic energy. For example a fan does this.An electric motor does this. So does a speaker (like in an audio system).
An electric motor or a fan would be an example of electrical energy changing to kinetic energy
One example is an electric motor, which turns electrical energy into kinetic energy.
An electric motor converts electrical energy to kinetic energy.
An electric motor converts electrical energy to kinetic energy.
when electrical energy is supplied to the motor of an electric fan, some of the electrical energy is transferred to the fan blade as kinetic energy. The energy is also transformed from electrical to kinetic.
You use an electric motor.
Yes.
Yes, because it is not 100 % efficient at converting electrical energy into kinetic energy.
Electrical energy.