An electric motor does that.
Dynamos and turbines. For example: a windmill converts the kinetic energy of the wind into electric energy.
An electric fan converts electrical energy into kinetic energy of the fan blades, which is then transferred to kinetic energy of moving air.
No, it converts it from one form (electrical) to another (kinetic).
Yes, because it is not 100 % efficient at converting electrical energy into kinetic energy.
Motors come in different forms but mainly internal combustion (gasoline and diesel) and electric. Combustion engines use the chemical energy in the fuel, electric motors use electric energy from a power plant.
A solenoid converts electric energy into electromagnetic energy, which then converts into kinetic energy.
your bum
An electric motor converts electrical energy into kinetic energy.
An electric motor converts electrical energy to kinetic energy.
An electric motor converts electrical energy to kinetic energy.
Dynamos and turbines. For example: a windmill converts the kinetic energy of the wind into electric energy.
They don't. An electric motor is designed to convert electrical energy to kinetic energy, not the other way round. A device that converts kinetic energy to electrical energy is called a generator or a dynamo. Sometimes the same device can do both things (convert in both directions), but since the device is especially optimized for one function, it may not be very good at the other one.
A generator in a power plant converts rotating kinetic energy into electrical energy An electric motor is a device which changes electrical energy into kinetic. For example-- Fans could be like electric energy to kinetic energy...
It converts mechanical energy into electric energy.
An electric fan converts electrical energy into kinetic energy of the fan blades, which is then transferred to kinetic energy of moving air.
No, it converts it from one form (electrical) to another (kinetic).
Some options:electric motorsolenoideinstein electromagnetic pump with no moving partsetc.