I think it would depend on the type of accident and direction of the force. Any Toyota dealer should be able to run diagnostics on the vehicle for you.
gravity
Chemical energy to electrical energy.
Yes, battery is a electrical source.
chemical energy
Chemical energy in the battery is turned into electrical energy when the battery is hooked up to an electrical circuit.
Get a "Settings Keeper" <NOCO brand from Walmart in the automotive section by the car batteries>. Follow directions...basically, you plug a 9-volt battery into the cigarette lighter and that supplies power to keep the computer, radio, etc. settings while you change the battery. The "little electrical box" on top of the battery is not involved at all in replacing the battery!
electrical, chemical, heat, and light energy
A rechargeable battery. (The battery in your cellphone, or the one in your car.) When it's empty, you connect it to a source of electrical energy. The battery stores the electrical in the form of chemical.
"A battery stores electrical energy."
No. There is nothing involved in changing plugs that requires or draws electrical current.
None of them Chemical energy stored in the battery is converted into Electrical (with some heat / thermal 'wasted'). However if you recharge a battery you would get electrical to Chemical.
If the battery were not securely fastened down Any speed could possibly crack the battery. If the battery is securely fastened down it would depend on where the vehicle was hit in the accident.