Incandescent bulbs produce the most heat for a given amount of light; fluorescent lights produce much less heat, and LED produces the least.
an incandescent bulb
INCANDESCENT
From chemical to heat and light. Batteries are chemical energy, the bulb emits lights but also gives out heat.
(Assuming you're asking about a light bulb.) No (By the way, you should specify what kind of bulb, and you need an indefinate article, such as "a" or "an" before your noun (which in this case is bulb) in this sentence.)
Electricity is the type of energy that is used when you turn on a light bulb. When you leave a room, you use more energy by leaving the light on than if you turn it off and back on when you return.
You need a wind power generator to make the electric energy to hook your light to. Maybe charging a battery with the wind generator and running the light bulb off the battery will provide better service.
newdiv
A light bulb uses electrical energy, and produces light, as well as heat.
An LED, laser, or light bulb.
It is the Incandescent light bulb. Most of the energy are lost as heat
It kinda depends on what kind of bulb incandescent lights use filaments and emit heat, for example
From chemical to heat and light. Batteries are chemical energy, the bulb emits lights but also gives out heat.
battery ---> light bulb chemical energy ---> electromagnetic energy (heat and light)
Mainly heat and light. Heat is carried away through convection, but also radiated away as infrared light, a kind of electromagnetic wave (as is light).
A little more heat and a little less light than a regular incandescent light bulb.
A light bulb is not energy, but is a device that uses electrical energy to create electromagnetic energy in the form (in part) of visible light and heat.
A little more heat and a little less light than a regular incandescent light bulb.
Mostly heat, and a little bit of light. A lot like an incandescent light bulb.
The sun gives off heat, light, and radiation energy