Well, isn't that a happy little question! When you enjoy a burger made from corn-fed beef, you're receiving a portion of the energy stored in the corn that the cows ate. It's like a beautiful cycle of energy flowing from the sun to the corn to the cows to you, creating a lovely connection between nature and your meal.
Corn produces energy through photosynthesis, where it converts sunlight into chemical energy stored in the form of glucose. This process occurs in the leaves of the corn plant using chlorophyll, water, and carbon dioxide. The stored energy in corn is then used for growth, development, and reproduction.
If you ment to say "What CANNOT be created or destroyed but can be changed from one to another" than you are looking for matter and energy. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change form. for example, the sun shines light on to a corn plant, which powers photosynthesis. this is a transfer from radiation energy to chemical energy, stored in the cells of the corn. when you eat this corn, and use that energy to jump up and down, that is a transfer of chemical energy to kinetic energy.Mass can also (at least in theory) be converted into energy in accordence with E=Mc2 with E=energy, M=mass, and c=the speed of light
Bioenergy is most closely related to the harvesting of a corn crop. Corn can be processed into biofuels like ethanol, making it a renewable energy source derived from plants.
A cornpicker is a type of agricultural machinery used to harvest corn. It typically consists of a series of rotating rollers or snapping units that strip the corn ears from the stalks and collect them in a hopper. The harvested corn is then processed and stored for further use or sale.
In the long run, ALL energy is solar energy. When the Sun is shining down on us, we can use photovoltaic solar panels to directly convert the light into electricity. When the Sun is not shining on us (because it is cloudy or at night) we continue to use stored energy, in several forms. First, we might have set up batteries to store electricity from our solar panels; today's solar power stored for tonight. Or, we could use a fuel like alcohol, sometimes produced from grain, corn or other plants. The plants grew in the sunlight, we fermented the grain into alcohol and we're using last YEAR'S solar energy today. We make our campfires out of wood. The trees grew in the sunlight over the course of years, so when we cut down the trees and burn the wood, we're using solar energy stored up 50 or 100 years ago. Coal, oil, and natural gas; solar energy stored in plants that died millions of years ago, trapped in the dirt and converted to petroleum by pressure, heat and time.
Corn produces energy through photosynthesis, where it converts sunlight into chemical energy stored in the form of glucose. This process occurs in the leaves of the corn plant using chlorophyll, water, and carbon dioxide. The stored energy in corn is then used for growth, development, and reproduction.
Corn does not pop due to stored energy. There is moisture inside the hard kernel of corn. When heated, the heat changes that to steam, which expands, and blows open the kernel. Heat is transformed to mechanical energy- but the heat energy comes from outside, not inside.
Corn plants get their energy from the sun through a biochemical process called photosynthesis. Petrol energy is also from the sun in that, even though it comes from underground, it is the remains of plants and animals from millions of years ago which got their energy in the same fashion that corn plants do now. (The plants used the photosynthesis; the animals ate those plants.)A:Ultimately, it can be said that the energy from petrol and corn oil come from the Sun. Corn oil is produced from corn. Corn gets the energy needed for its survival by photosynthesis, which needs light. The energy from that light(which comes from the Sun) is stored in chemical substances, such as corn oil. Petrol is formed from dead organisms over the course of millions of years. These organisms, when they were alive, consumed plants(such as corn). The energy from the corn(remember, it comes from the Sun) is stored in the meat of the animals. After they die, this energy is now stored in Petrol, after millions of years.Energy from the Sun -----> Energy in Plants -----> Energy in Animals -----> Energy in Petrol
Corn plants get their energy from the sun through a biochemical process called photosynthesis. Petrol energy is also from the sun in that, even though it comes from underground, it is the remains of plants and animals from millions of years ago which got their energy in the same fashion that corn plants do now. (The plants used the photosynthesis; the animals ate those plants.)A:Ultimately, it can be said that the energy from petrol and corn oil come from the Sun. Corn oil is produced from corn. Corn gets the energy needed for its survival by photosynthesis, which needs light. The energy from that light(which comes from the Sun) is stored in chemical substances, such as corn oil. Petrol is formed from dead organisms over the course of millions of years. These organisms, when they were alive, consumed plants(such as corn). The energy from the corn(remember, it comes from the Sun) is stored in the meat of the animals. After they die, this energy is now stored in Petrol, after millions of years.Energy from the Sun -----> Energy in Plants -----> Energy in Animals -----> Energy in Petrol
The kinetic and potential energy stored in the corn.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
Hot dogs, corn dogs and Burgers.
"Crib" is the word you're looking for, although corn is rarely stored in cribs nowadays. Cribs were used to store whole-ear corn, whereas most corn now is stored without the cob in its "shelled" state.
Using corn for energy is an example of biomass.
It was easy to preserve food such as corn for long a long period of time
Starch is produced in green plants and used as stored energy. It is synthesized in the leaves. Some foods that are in the starch category are corn, pasta, grains, and potatoes.