It gets converted into energy.
The answer is Energy.
Energy can be transferred to material things by pushing or pulling AND moving it through a distance. The push or pull is a force, and the amount of energy is the magnitude of the force multiplied by the distance through which it acts. No matter how hard you push or pull, if your force doesn't move through any distance, then no energy is transferred to the thing you're pushing or pulling.
when energy cannot move through the object(s)
The physical state, or phase, that has the greatest kinetic energy is gas. In a gas, the molecules are more free to move and they move more rapidly than in the other phases, and it is this motion that constitutes kinetic energy.
They move up and down, but do not move forward (NJASK8 Earth Science)
Food Chains
Water carbon nitrogen
Hello
Energy and matter (mass) move through ecosystems from the bottom of the pyramid to the top. The bottom contains most of the matter and therefore the most energy. About 10% is passed to the second level. About 10% of that 10% is passed to the third level. Most ecosystems have three levels as there is not enough energy for a fourth level. Except in tropical rainforest they are fourth levels but no where else.
Energy flows in one direction from producer to consumer to decomposer.
In a food chain from producers to consumers .
kwento mo sa PAGONG
Energy in an ecosystem flows in whats called the 10% rule. Meaning, as you move up the pyramid 10% of energy is lost.
Well if I new I wild be a lot more smarter
Yes, energy can move matter. In the context of physics, energy can cause matter to change position or speed through various forms such as kinetic energy or mechanical energy. For example, heat energy can cause particles in matter to vibrate, move, or change phase.
Matter moves through an ecosystem in a cycle, starting with producers like plants absorbing nutrients from the soil. Consumers then eat the producers, transferring the nutrients up the food chain. Decomposers break down dead organisms, returning nutrients to the soil. This cycle impacts all components of the ecosystem by providing energy for growth and maintaining balance within the system.
Matter is always in the form of particles (atoms, molecules, etc.). For it to flow, the atoms have to move from one place to another. Energy can move from some matter to other matter without moving the matter. Example: an ice cube warming up but not yet melting has energy flowing into it, but matter is not flowing. When it starts to melt, matter (in the form of water molecules) flows out.