Infra red part of light is responsible for heat.
Chemical energy from the battery gets converted to electricity; in the light-bulb, assuming the old-fashioned incandescent light-bulbs, the electricity gets converted to heat, and the heat gets converted to light (part of it; a significant part gets converted to useless heat).Chemical energy from the battery gets converted to electricity; in the light-bulb, assuming the old-fashioned incandescent light-bulbs, the electricity gets converted to heat, and the heat gets converted to light (part of it; a significant part gets converted to useless heat).Chemical energy from the battery gets converted to electricity; in the light-bulb, assuming the old-fashioned incandescent light-bulbs, the electricity gets converted to heat, and the heat gets converted to light (part of it; a significant part gets converted to useless heat).Chemical energy from the battery gets converted to electricity; in the light-bulb, assuming the old-fashioned incandescent light-bulbs, the electricity gets converted to heat, and the heat gets converted to light (part of it; a significant part gets converted to useless heat).
It Doesn't!!! Light sources sometimes emit heat as Infra Red radiation which is part of the electromagnetic spectrum, like visible light, but you can't see it. It Doesn't!!! Light sources sometimes emit heat as Infra Red radiation which is part of the electromagnetic spectrum, like visible light, but you can't see it. Light = Energy = Heat = Can make light?
the core
The core.
Fu*king donkeys
The core of the sun is responsible for generating the heat and light that we receive on Earth through nuclear fusion reactions.
The part of the wire that actually produces all the heat and light is the "filament".
Yes. Part of the energy is converted to light, part to heat. The percentage depends on the type of light bulb. Fluorescent and LED light bulbs are more efficient than incandescent light bulbs. A 60-watt incandescent bulb will be uncomfortable to remove from the socket with your bare hands after turning it off. However, a 100-watt bulb will burn you if you remove it with your bare hands after turning it off.
No. Part of the energy is wasted, mainly as heat.
The sun is a big ball of hydrogen and helium. It's gravity is so strong that the inside squashes the hydrogen into helium releasing light in every part of the electromagnetic spectrum and part of it is infra red which is heat in the form of light.
When electricity passes through the thin wire in a lightbulb, it is changed to light and heat energy. The electrical energy produces heat in the wire, causing it to glow and produce light.
The core of the Sun is the part responsible for giving off heat and light through nuclear fusion reactions. This is where hydrogen atoms are converted into helium, releasing large amounts of energy in the form of heat and light.