a spinning top has bothRotational kinetic energy and angular momentum in play as it spins...
Gravity.
Anything moving has energy. The formula for kinetic energy is energy equals mass times the square of the speed. So yes, spinning turbine blades have energy.
when a coin is falling it is losing kinetic energy when it lands it is gaining potential. kinetic energy is the energy of movement. potential is the energy of stillness.
The spinning top has uniform motion.
Mechanical Energy
Spinning Coin was created in 1995.
A spinning top is a moving mass, and this represents a form of mechanical energy we call kinetic energy, which is the energy of motion.
Yes it is spinning.
a spinning top has bothRotational kinetic energy and angular momentum in play as it spins...
First of all, I believe that you have the question a bit wrong. I think that what you want to ask is "What type of energy is in wind" rather than what type of energy is stored in wind. Wind would be kinectic energy which means "energy in motion".
The Earth rotates on its axis, and it revolves around the sun. Rotation is the same as spinning, and this is what a top does, or a coin that has been set spinning on its edge on a table. In the case of a coin spinning on its edge, the 'axis' goes right up through the flat dimension of the coin.
A plate, whether spinning or not, is matter, not energy. However, it possesses kinetic energy if it's moving.
Yes, you could do that.
Gravity.
Anything moving has energy. The formula for kinetic energy is energy equals mass times the square of the speed. So yes, spinning turbine blades have energy.
There are 2 * 6 or 12 outcomes for flipping a coin and spinning a spinner that has 6 different colored sections.