Answer + Explanation:
<u>When an electric stove is turned on, </u><u>electric</u><u> energy changes to </u><u>both heat and light energy.</u> Lets look a little more closely at how this process occurs.
First, electrical energy must travel through a medium that allows electron flow, referred to as a conductor. Some substances allow the electrons to flow more easily and some give more resistance to the electron flow. In cases where the electrons meet more resistance while trying to move, they lose some energy. Since energy cannot be created or destroyed it must go somewhere. In the case of an electrical stove, the energy is released as heat. As a conductor heats up it may also begin giving off energy as light as well. An example of this is when a heating electrical stove is seen glowing an amber-orange color. A number of important factors go into this process, and certain conductors function much better as components of an electrical stove than others. Technology today allows the user to control the amount of electricity that is flowing into the conductor, effecting how much heat it will give off.
Answer:
Something is done by someone regularly / everyday / as expected...
Active : The gardener waters the flowers every evening.
Passive: The flowers are watered by the gardener every evening.
Active : Helen doesn't drink anything in parties.
Passive: Nothing is drunk by Helen in parties.
Active : Who sells umbrellas?
Passive: Who are umbrellas sold by?
Active : My mother doesn't paint the walls.
Passive: The walls aren't painted by my mother.
Hope this helped :)
When you had to go through a tough time like: a big injury. Say how you felt. And say what happened how the injury happened.
Brown Vs Board of Education sparked debate on civil rights as described in the Constitution.
Roe Vs Wade was about women's right to abortion.
Bush Vs Gore determined who won the election in Florida and ultimately the presidential election.
In the last case, state law in Florida required recount of ballots if the totals were very close. But Gore only requested recounts in four counties. FL Supreme Court ordered a statewide recount instead. US Supreme Court stepped in and ruled that FL court's action violated the Equal Protection Clause in the Constitution by using different standards of counting in different counties. The recount was stopped and Bush won.