1 carb is 4 calories.
22 x 4 = 88 so 88 calories.
About 55%to60% of energy is gained by alternative energy.
energy is gained!
give out energy
The cyclist has gained potential energy as she reaches the summit. This energy is stored due to her position and height in relation to the ground.
3,600 calories (consumed in one day) will equal one pound of weight gained.
Energy gained by a body due to its motion is called Kinetic energy
In an isolated system, according to the law of conservation of energy, energy lost is equal to energy gained. This means that the total energy of the system remains constant and is simply transferred between different forms.
I
Calories are a unit of measurement quantifying energy. The number of calories measure quantity, not quality. 200 calories of fruit or potato chips are both calories. But one will have a different impact on your body than the other. They can both give you more energy. But chances are that the calories gained from consuming the fruit will be gone sooner than the calories gained from the potato chips, since the sugar in the fruit would effectively cause greater activity and thus be "worked off" more easily and the rest processed quickly through the digestive process. The potato chips, on the other hand, may not have the same effect of giving the sugar-induced power-boost to cause activity and the digestive process is not as efficient due to all the artificial additives in the snack. There is a very popular misconception that "more calories is worse for you." This is not necessarily true. Ask any professional athlete and they can tell you that they often consume more calories than people twice their weight. FAR more important than the QUANTITY of calories is the QUALITY of those calories (=the quality of the food and beverages containing the calories), along with lifestyle (workout schedule, etc).
i gained lcv energy
Kinetic energy gained by an object is directly related to the work done on it. Work done on an object transfers energy to it, increasing its kinetic energy. The work-energy theorem states that the work done on an object is equal to the change in its kinetic energy.
Energy is gained during vaporization. This process requires energy input to overcome the intermolecular forces holding the molecules together in a liquid state, allowing them to transition into the gaseous phase.