No.Ligtning is not a heat source.Unless u think that the electric of the lightning have heat.<<Previous answer:Yes.Fire is a heat source and a light source.
If you were meaning light bulbs, then yes again. The electric current flowing through the filament (excuse spellings) causes the wire to glow (creating the light) and generate heat. This is caused by the resistance in the wire.
Even tiny little leds generate heat and light.
I may be wrong here.... but I dont think any light source does not generate heat of some kind.
Heat is light radiation in the near and far infra-red range. You can have light sources that generate very very very little infra-red light, for example flourenscent lights produce light in the visible range almost exculsively BUT yes all light sources do produce some heat as an unavoidable energy loss.>>
Lightning is a heat source. It is electricity rapidly flowing through a column of ionized air. Thunder is the shock wave it generates in the atmosphere. Think of the crackling noise a static filled blanket makes. Move it in the dark and you can see the static letting go - like lightning in miniature.
electricity, solid fuel, fire(using wood), infrared light, light bulb or heat lamp, gas e.t.c
The sun is the source of heat and light for plant-life.
if you mean to have commas between heat, light, magnetism, and electrical charges then there is none. if heat light magnetism is all one thing then you're on your own.
the earth interior
nthng
no
No, not all light sources produce heat. Some light sources, such as LEDs, produce very little heat because they are highly efficient at converting electricity into light. However, incandescent bulbs and halogen bulbs do produce heat as a byproduct of producing light.
fire for heat,light and sun for light.
Artificial heat sources include electric heaters, gas furnaces, and wood-burning stoves. Artificial light sources include incandescent light bulbs, fluorescent lights, and LED lights.
The three natural sources of heat and light are the sun, fire, and lightning. These sources provide heat and light through processes such as nuclear fusion, combustion, and electrical discharge.
the sun.... its both.....
Sources of heat include the sun, fire, and electrical heaters. Sources of light include the sun, light bulbs, and candles.
Heat and light can be generated from various sources such as the sun, fire, electricity, or chemical reactions. The sun is the primary source of both heat and light for Earth, while artificial sources like light bulbs and heaters use electricity to produce heat and light.
Lamps or light fixtures with incandescent bulbs can provide both light and heat. Additionally, a fireplace or a stove can also function as sources of both light and heat in a home.
Fire, Sun, and lights.
fire
No. Part of the energy is wasted, mainly as heat.