No because it already is an energy.
Yes, fire is an example of thermal energy. When fuel is burned, the chemical energy is converted into heat and light energy, resulting in the production of fire which is a form of thermal energy.
Fire's heat is a form of thermal energy, which is the energy that comes from the movement of particles within matter.
Wood contains potential energy stored in its chemical bonds, whereas a burning fire releases this energy as heat and light through a chemical reaction called combustion. Consequently, the energy in the wood is transformed into thermal and radiant energy when the fire burns.
Fire is a form of energy, not matter. It results from the rapid oxidation of a material, releasing heat and light energy.
The energy output of a fire is called heat. When a fire burns, it releases heat energy into its surrounding environment, which can be felt as warmth or measured in terms of temperature increase.
Energy: Fire + Air = Energy Fire = Starter Air = Starter
Fuel, oxygen, & an energy (heat) source.
No fire is not an ionization energy
void you get for free when you reach 100 elements plasma is fire and energy
No. Since fires are most often built at night it is not reasonable that they need sunlight. However, when you burn wood the energy which makes the fire hot was stored by the tree the wood came from, and this energy came from sunlight. In this sense fires need sun.
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear
Yes, fire is nonrenewable energy.
Air and fire
Fire is not a source of energy it is a manifiestion of the release of energy.
Fire + energy = plasma.
"Fire energy" is a name for the elemental energies of Fire. "Light energy" is a term I haven't heard before. Energy is often visualized as light, though... if that helps ^_^
Yes, fire is an example of thermal energy. When fuel is burned, the chemical energy is converted into heat and light energy, resulting in the production of fire which is a form of thermal energy.