by Daniel Brouse
February 18, 2026
Thermal energy (internal energy associated with molecular motion) can be transferred or converted into several other forms of energy, depending on the physical process involved.
Here are the main ones:
1. Kinetic Energy
When temperature gradients create motion, thermal energy becomes bulk motion.
-
Atmospheric circulation → wind
-
Ocean currents
-
Convection cells
-
Storm intensification
In thermodynamics, this is how heat engines work:
temperature differences → pressure differences → motion.
Example:
Solar heating warms the surface → warm air rises → pressure gradient forms → wind (kinetic energy).
2. Potential Energy
Thermal energy can increase gravitational potential energy.
-
Warm air rises in the atmosphere
-
Warm water expands and becomes less dense
-
Heated fluids lift mass upward
Example:
Convection lifts moist air → water vapor rises → later releases energy when condensing.
3. Latent Heat (Phase Change Energy)
Thermal energy can drive phase changes:
-
Ice → water
-
Water → vapor
This energy becomes stored as latent heat in water vapor and is later released during condensation (fueling storms and hurricanes).
This is one of the most powerful energy transfers in the climate system.
4. Radiant (Electromagnetic) Energy
All matter above absolute zero emits thermal radiation.
-
Earth’s surface emits infrared radiation
-
Hotter objects emit shorter wavelengths
Thermal energy → electromagnetic radiation.
5. Chemical Energy
High temperatures can drive chemical reactions.
-
Combustion
-
Atmospheric chemistry reactions
-
Industrial processes
Thermal energy can overcome activation barriers → new chemical bonds form.
6. Electrical Energy (Indirectly)
In power plants:
Heat → steam → turbine motion (kinetic) → generator → electricity.
Thermal → kinetic → electrical.
7. Mechanical Work
In engines and turbines:
Heat differences → pressure → expansion → work.
This is the foundation of:
-
Internal combustion engines
-
Steam turbines
-
Gas turbines
Big Picture (Thermodynamics)
Thermal energy is not “lost” — it is redistributed or transformed according to the First Law of Thermodynamics.
However, the Second Law of Thermodynamics tells us:
Energy transformations increase entropy, meaning not all thermal energy can be converted into useful work.
That’s why heat engines are never 100% efficient.
In Climate Terms
Excess trapped thermal energy in the Earth system converts into:
-
Stronger winds (kinetic)
-
Higher storm intensity (latent + kinetic)
-
Sea level rise (thermal expansion)
-
More evaporation (phase change)
-
Increased infrared radiation
Heat doesn’t just “sit there.”
It reorganizes into dynamic forms.
Extreme Energy Events: How a Warming Planet Converts Heat Into Destruction