Potential Energy
Potential energy is stored energy
and the energy of position — gravitational energy. There are several forms of
potential energy. |
Kinetic Energy
Kinetic energy is motion — of
waves, molecules, objects, substances, and objects. |
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Chemical Energy is energy
stored in the bonds of atoms and molecules. Biomass, petroleum, natural gas,
and coal are examples of stored chemical energy. Chemical energy is converted
to thermal energy when we burn wood in a fireplace or burn gasoline in a
car's engine. Mechanical Energy is energy
stored in objects by tension. Compressed springs and stretched rubber bands
are examples of stored mechanical energy. Nuclear Energy is energy
stored in the nucleus of an atom — the energy that holds the nucleus
together. Very large amounts of energy can be released when the nuclei are
combined or split apart. Nuclear power plants split the nuclei of uranium
atoms in a process called fission. The sun combines the nuclei of
hydrogen atoms in a process called fusion. Gravitational Energy is
energy stored in an object's height. The higher and heavier the object, the
more gravitational energy is stored. When you ride a bicycle down a steep
hill and pick up speed, the gravitational energy is being converted to motion
energy. Hydropower is another example of gravitational energy, where the dam
"piles" up water from a river into a reservoir. Electrical Energy is what is
stored in a battery, and can be used to power a cell phone or start a car.
Electrical energy is delivered by tiny charged particles called electrons,
typically moving through a wire. Lightning is an example of electrical energy
in nature, so powerful that it is not confined to a wire. |
Radiant Energy is
electromagnetic energy that travels in transverse waves. Radiant energy
includes visible light, x-rays, gamma rays and radio waves. Light is one type
of radiant energy. Sunshine is radiant energy, which provides the fuel and
warmth that make life on Earth possible. Thermal Energy, or heat, is
the vibration and movement of the atoms and molecules within substances. As
an object is heated up, its atoms and molecules move and collide faster.
Geothermal energy is the thermal energy in the Earth. Motion Energy is energy
stored in the movement of objects. The faster they move, the more energy is
stored. It takes energy to get an object moving and energy is released when
an object slows down. Wind is an example of motion energy. A dramatic example
of motion is a car crash, when the car comes to a total stop and releases all
its motion energy at once in an uncontrolled instant. Sound is the movement of
energy through substances in longitudinal (compression/rarefaction) waves.
Sound is produced when a force causes an object or substance to vibrate — the
energy is transferred through the substance in a wave. Typically, the energy
in sound is far less than other forms of energy. |
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Source: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/kids/energy.cfm?page=about_forms_of_energy-forms