Yes.
The kettle uses heat energy. Depending on your type of stove, that heat will usually come from chemical energy (in a gas stove), or electrical energy (in an electrical stove).
No, boiling water in a kettle on a stove is an example of conduction - the heat from the stove directly transfers to the kettle, heating the water inside.
the stove is used if it is a heat kettle otherwise it is electrical based
Heat transfer in a kettle occurs through conduction. The heat from the stove is transferred to the bottom of the kettle, which then spreads throughout the kettle via conduction, causing the water inside to heat up. Heat is also transferred through convection as the hot water rises and circulates within the kettle.
When you heat water on a stove, thermal energy is transferred. Heat from the stove moves to the water, and then the water absorbs it.
An example of thermal energy being transformed into sound energy is when a heated metal object, such as a kettle on a stove, produces a whistling sound when the water inside reaches boiling point. The heat causes the metal to expand and vibrate, creating sound waves that we hear as a whistle.
A stove.
Conduction
Conduction
Energy in the form of rapidly moving molecules that are transferred to the kettle, which transfers to the water itself. The heat is caused by the friction of the molecules caused by the heating source.
A stove is a device that converts chemical energy (from fuel like gas or wood) into thermal energy through combustion. The thermal energy generated heats up the stove elements or burners, which in turn transfer the heat to cookware or food placed on them.