by spininning a turbine electrons bounce off and you have electrical current.
Because a fan needs mechanical power to turn the shaft. The power in Watts equals the torque (Newton-metres) times the angular speed (radians per second), which is the revs/sec times 2.pi.
Electrical energy to mechanical energy. The fan does mechanical work in shifting the air which flows through it.
electrical energy to mechanical energy(kenetic energy) to heat energy
=electric fan-electrical energy to mechanical energy!=
Yes.
fan converts electric energy into magnetic and further mechanical energy
An electric fan is not "an mechanical energy". An electric fan converts electrical energy into mechanical energy (the movement of the fan blades, and hence, the movement of the air).
Electrical energy to mechanical energy. The fan does mechanical work in shifting the air which flows through it.
chemical to mechanical energy
Mechanical energy
electrical energy to mechanical energy(kenetic energy) to heat energy
=electric fan-electrical energy to mechanical energy!=
Yes.
chemical to mechanical energy
fan converts electric energy into magnetic and further mechanical energy
-- radio transmitter = electrical energy into electromagnetic energy -- microwave oven = heat energy -- electric motor = mechanical -- toaster = heat -- light bulb = heat and light -- battery charger = chemical -- blow drier = mechanical -- coffee percolator = mechanical -- electric fan= mechanical -- flashlight = light -- electric kitchen mixer = mechanical
It turns into mechanical energy-a mass of air is being pushed through the fan so the air molecules are being given kinetic energy (I'm saying mechanical energy includes kinetic energy)
mechanical energy