Yes.
static electricity
gas
All current power reactors are no different than coal or oil power plants, they make heat, the heat turns water to steam, the steam turns turbines, the turbines turn alternators. You have electricity. Just the source of the heat changes.
True
work produces heat
*
Isotopes are used to create energy in at least two ways: # The isotopes are allowed to heat water into steam, and the steam turns a generator. # The isotopes are allowed to heat one end of a "thermopile", and the thermopile powers electronics. (This is how the deep space probes get their power.)
In effect it does. Electricity applied to the heater produces heat. Heat applied to the thermocouple produces electricity.
thermopile
Coal is burned which produces heat, the heat is used to boil water which then is used to drive a steam turbine which then produces electricity.
the production of heat energy or light. heat could be from electricity too.like a light bulb produces heat and it is electricity and light. it is also energy.
static electricity
Use the heat to boil pressurized water. Use the pressurized steam created to spin a turbine connected to a dynamo. The dynamo then produces electricity.
gas
Nuclear fission produces heat energy that produces steam The steam spins the turbines that spins electric generators and hence producing electricity.
effects of electricity: current passes through closed circuit, from higher potential to lower potential,it produces heat
All current power reactors are no different than coal or oil power plants, they make heat, the heat turns water to steam, the steam turns turbines, the turbines turn alternators. You have electricity. Just the source of the heat changes.