It produces light and heat.
Light, heat and kinetic energy.
One way is if an object has, or is given energy. For example, if you turn a lamp on and leave it, it starts to get hot from the energy being given to it
All bulbs produce heat energy and light energy ,even the CFL (Compact Fluorescent Lamp) there is also some heat energy associated with them.
light energy is present in a ligthed lamp.......
A typical lamp would convert electrical energy into light energy. And lots of heat too.
Light, heat and kinetic energy.
A lamp doesn't produce electrical energy; it utilises it. The power-rating of the lamp will tell you the rate at which that lamp uses expends energy at its rated voltage. For example, a 60-W lamp will expend energy at 60 joules per second.
It is nothing but a simple in incandescent lamp. it produce heat as well as light energy.
It uses less energy, to produce the same light, than the traditional light-bulbs.
One way is if an object has, or is given energy. For example, if you turn a lamp on and leave it, it starts to get hot from the energy being given to it
All bulbs produce heat energy and light energy ,even the CFL (Compact Fluorescent Lamp) there is also some heat energy associated with them.
when you turn on a lamp it is first light energy to chemical energy!
light energy is present in a ligthed lamp.......
A light bulb (technically, a lamp) converts electrical energy into a mixture of heat and light ... the makeup of that mixture depends upon the type of lamp being used. An incandescent lamp produces most of its energy in the form of heat and relatively little light ... a fluorescent lamp produces a higher percentage of light and less heat ... gas/vapor glow lamps (including lasers) produce an even higher percentage of light ... and light-emitting diodes (LED) produce the highest percentage of light presently available.
light is the type of energy that a lamp has coming down
it is eletrical energy
A typical lamp would convert electrical energy into light energy. And lots of heat too.