Many lamps use electrical energy, but some lamps use chemical energy, for example a kerosene lamp or a candle.
a heat lamp is dumb so dont use it
well it depends on the type of lamp but it should say on the packaging
Fluorescent lights use far less energy than any of the others listed.
The lamp has electrical energy, which is converted to light energy when the lamp is turned on.
Whatever you need to make the lamp work. If you plug it into a socket, it uses electrical energy; other lamps may use some chemical energy, for example in the wax or kerosene they burn.
A lamp converts electrical energy into light energy through the use of a light bulb or LED. The electrical energy powers the light source, causing it to emit light.
A lamp typically produces light energy by converting electric energy into light through the use of a light bulb or LED.
That would depend on the sort of lamp it is. If it was a gas lamp it would be chemical energy If it was an electric lamp it would be electrical energy However you should understand that on Earth 99.9 % of the energy comes originally from the Sun. The Sun's energy is the ultimate source of stored chemical energy and the ultimate source of the electrical energy we use.
when you turn on a lamp it is first light energy to chemical energy!
you use up energy and it is turned into heat
Chemical to Radiant. sometimes you might have to use thermal in there too.
light is the type of energy that a lamp has coming down