light and heat are given off as a result of converting the input energy which I would guess is electrical energy or in the case of gas or oil it is chemical energy
Depending upon what kind of lamp is being used, the energy given off is light. Incandescent lamps also give off heat due to electricity passing through a coil of fine wire - the filament - while flourescent lamps create light by exciting inert gases inside a sealed tube. Of course, this light is that which falls between the wavelengths of infrared and ultraviolet, that is, the light that allows our eyes to see.
Non renewable if the gas comes from natural reserves.
Renewable if it comes from anaerobic digestion. Both of which are chemical energy
A lamp can use electrical energy or energy from burning gas or oil.
Electrical and heat energy. Some lamps ( halogen ) give of thermal energy
That really depends on the type of lamp. Two common options are electrical energy, and - if the lamp uses kerosene, or some similar fuel - the chemical energy from the fuel.
That depends on the lamp. Light bulbs usually use electrical energy. Lamps that have a wick will use chemical energy.
i would say i have electrical energy because it need electricity to power it on to fuel it
A typical lamp would convert electrical energy into light energy. And lots of heat too.
Light and heat Energy.
heat and light energy
A neon lamp.
You save energy on a lamp when, if having to decide between buying a lamp which uses more energy to illuminate, you buy the one that uses less. Since you pay for the amount of energy you use, you save money.
a heat lamp is dumb so dont use it
Fluorescent lights use far less energy than any of the others listed.
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.
Electric Energy.
A typical lamp would convert electrical energy into light energy. And lots of heat too.
Many lamps use electrical energy, but some lamps use chemical energy, for example a kerosene lamp or a candle.
Light and heat Energy.
heat and light energy
any lamp oil.
well it depends on the type of lamp but it should say on the packaging
oil lamp
A neon lamp.