This does not happen, they are quite differenwell sometime chemical change into nuclear by going to thermal energy
No, chemical energy is completely different to nuclear energy
Nuclear energy is turned into thermal energy, not chemical energy
when fireworks go off, the energy released show a chemical reaction. gasses such as carbon dioxide and particles of smoke go up in the air.
I don't think there are any. Chemical bonds are many orders-of-magnitude weaker than nuclear bonds, so I don't think you can convert chemical energy to nuclear energy, at least, not directly.
A battery is chemical energy creating electrical energy. Nuclear is cause by nuclear material either decaying or undergoing fusion, only present in nuclear material. Mechanical energy is a physical force cause by the transfer of kinetic energy.
You can't.
It is a nuclear change not a chemical one. The energy for the yield originates from the nuclei of the atoms and the electrons (where chemical energy resides) are uninvolved in the process.
No, chemical energy is completely different to nuclear energy
Nuclear energy is turned into thermal energy, not chemical energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
That is called chemical energy - assuming conventional fuel. Nuclear fuel has nuclear energy.
Nuclear fusion produces nuclear energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
No. Nuclear energy is a type of energy that is quite different from chemical energy.
when fireworks go off, the energy released show a chemical reaction. gasses such as carbon dioxide and particles of smoke go up in the air.
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear
An energy change is when one form of energy changes to another form of energy. E.g chemical to kinetic.