A type of energy resource that takes millions of years to form and is used up faster than it can be replaced
Nonrenewable Energy Resource
(also would accept fossil fuels)
Which of these is an example of the conversion of kinetic energy into gravitational potential energy?
A. a bicyclist coasting down a long hill
B. a car engine moving the car forward
C. a roller coaster car moving toward the top of a rise in the tracks.
D. a thrown tennis ball falling toward the ground after passing through the top part of its motion
C. a roller coaster car moving toward the top of a rise in the tracks.
Which of the following has kinetic energy?
A. a book sitting on a shelf
B. hat and gloves on a table
C. a child kicking a soccer ball
D. cars parked in a parking lot
C. a child kicking a soccer ball
energy transmitted in waves or a stream of particles; this type of heat transfer can travel through space and other types of matter.
Radiation
the energy an object has due to its motion
Kinetic Energy
Energy resources that can be replaced in a relatively short amount of time and produce very little pollution
Renewable Energy Resources
A soccer ball is sitting at the top of a ramp. as the soccer ball rolls down the ramp, the potential energy of the soccer ball decreases. What happens to the potential energy as the soccer ball moves?
A. It is lost as gravitational energy.
B. It is converted to kinetic energy.
C. It is destroyed as the ball moves.
D. It is used to make the ball slow down.
B. It is converted to kinetic energy.
Which of the following has the most kinetic energy?
A. a 25-kg fish tank sitting on a table
B. a 50-g fish swimming in a fish tank
C. a 7,500-kg car parked on a steep hill
D. a 50-kg boulder suspended from a cliff
B. a 50-g fish swimming in a fish tank
the movement of heat or electricity through matter; this type of heat transfer occurs through direct contact
Conduction
energy stored in an electric field or transported by an electric current
Electrical Energy