It comes along wires in the street that take the power from a transformer. The transformer is fed by wires working at a higher voltage, and there are usually several transformer stages at different voltage levels leading back to the nearest power plant.
electricity comes from power stations which generate power through manipulation of elements and transference of motion
electrical energy comes from natural ages and wood mainly that in burned to create electricity.
The electricity found in homes is generated at a power plant. The power is transmitted along electrical lines to the home.
through toilet power
Depends on where you live.
electrical to mechanical
The device in question needs energy to work; the energy has to come from somewhere. In the case of electrical devices, they have been specifically designed to take their energy from the electrical network - or in some cases, of a battery.
A Resistor or Resistance
Electrical energy
Energy is converted from chemical energy to electrical energy.
mechanical energy or chemical energy,radiant energy,and electrical energy
nuclear energy
All home kitchen appliances use electrical energy.
It doesn't. If you mean the TV set at your home, it USES electrical energy.
Electrical fan, Lightbulb & treadmill.
A toaster converts electrical energy into thermal energy. Some of that electrical energy may have come from a nuclear power plant.
The kettle uses heat energy. Depending on your type of stove, that heat will usually come from chemical energy (in a gas stove), or electrical energy (in an electrical stove).
Electrical energy is transformed into heat, microwaves, light
The unit of measurement for electrical energy used in the home is the kilowatt hour, and this is the unit which the electricity supply company uses to work out your bill.
Electrical energy is useful because it is fairly easy to convert mechanical energy (from turbines, for example) into electrical energy, it is fairly easy to transport electricity over long distances, and it is fairly easy to convert the electrical energy (for example, in your home) into several other types of energy.
the chemical energy of the fluids inside the wand
Think of any device that needs to be plugged in, or that is connected to the power network.Light-bulbs: convert electrical energy to light.Toaster: converts electrical energy to heat.Refrigerator: uses electrical energy as a heat pump (takes heat out of the inside, into the outside).Computer: uses the electrical energy in electronic circuits; eventually the energy gets converted to heat. (In other devices, the electrical energy also gets converted to heat, eventually.)Computer monitor: converts the electrical energy to light energy.Loudspeaker: converts the electrical energy to sound.Etc.