No, milk and gasoline are not examples of the same state of matter. Milk is a liquid, while gasoline is a volatile liquid.
Two examples of chemical energy are gasoline in a car's fuel tank, which powers the engine through combustion, and food that is digested by the body, releasing energy for cellular processes.
Examples of the conversion of chemical energy to thermal energy include burning wood or gasoline to produce heat, igniting a matchstick to generate a flame, and combining chemicals in a chemical reaction that releases heat energy.
Substances that can undergo combustion to produce heat or energy are considered fuels. Common examples include gasoline, diesel, natural gas, coal, and wood.
Milk and gasoline are examples of liquid matter. They are substances that take the shape of their container and have a definite volume, but not a definite shape.
Fossil Fuels
chemical and potential energy
Some examples are gasoline, iron ore, coal, natural gas, oil, and natural gas.
Energy that is stored into something and released by a chemical reaction is known as chemical energy. Some examples of these are batteries, gasoline, coal, and food.
gasoline, coal, gas and wood
No
gasoline, coal, gas and wood
Oil and fossilized coal.
No, milk and gasoline are not examples of the same state of matter. Milk is a liquid, while gasoline is a volatile liquid.
Coal cannot be used to produce gasohol. Gasohol has two components, gasoline and alcohol. The gasoline is derived from petroleum (also known as oil) and the alcohol is derived from fermented vegetable matter of some kind (often corn). Coal cannot be processed into either gasoline or alcohol.
Two examples of chemical energy are gasoline in a car's fuel tank, which powers the engine through combustion, and food that is digested by the body, releasing energy for cellular processes.
im pretty sure Plants can be renewed some examples of nonrenewable resources are * Gasoline * Coal * Oil Mainly any type of fossil fuels are Nonrenewable resources.