Muscles store chemical energy from the food your body broke down, then your muscle turn those chemical energy to mechanical energy when they contract.
lactic acid. heat energy. kinetic energy. and energy...
muscles use chemical energy in glucose , as the bonds in glucose break, chemical energy changes to mechanical energy and the muscle contracts.. well there you go that how you produce mechanical energy :)
Contraction
During respiration in a muscle cell, the energy lost is in the form of heat. This heat is a byproduct of the metabolic processes that occur to produce ATP for muscle contraction.
If you move the drumsticks with your hands, then obviously you are using energy provided by your muscles. The energy in our body follows a complicated path, but eventually it comes from the food we eat.
it produces lactic acid and energy
muscles. The cells need to produce more energy
at the end of metabolism there will be production of energy and heat
Mitochondria in muscle cells produce energy through a process called cellular respiration, generating ATP (adenosine triphosphate) that fuels muscle contractions. This energy production enables muscle cells to sustain prolonged contractions during physical activities.
your muscle cells produce lactic acid or something like that. did you get that question on a worksheet? i did...
Mitochondria that produce ATP.
No, muscles convert chemical energy (ATP) into mechanical energy to generate force and movement. They cannot directly convert mechanical energy back into chemical energy.