What are you smoking?
Nuclear energy is used to produce power in nuclear power plants. Fission in the reactors produces heat, which is typically used to boil water. The steam powers a turbine, which drives a generator to produce electrical power. The power is put on the electrical power grid, where it is used by business, industrial and residential customers.
No, they produce energy from the wind turning a turbine. This energy is then sent to a power station, where it is stored and/or sent to different locations (cities/town, oil refineries, etc.)
Nuclear energy is produced by a controlled nuclear chain reaction and creates heat—which is used to boil water, produce steam, and drive a steam turbine. The turbine can be used for mechanical work and also to generate electricity.
Nuclear power plants produce electricity by using nuclear energy
Nuclear energy as applied to power plants uses uranium, which can be made to produce a chain reaction in which atoms of uranium are constantly splitting and releasing energy in the form of heat. The heat is then used to produce electricity through a steam turbine/generator.
Electric. The nuclear energy produces heat, heat boils water, steam drives turbine, turbine makes electircity.
Nuclear power stations collect nuclear energy, and produce heat energy and electrical energy.
They use nuclear energy to produce power for the grid.
Nuclear energy originates from the splitting of uranium atoms – a process called fission. This generates heat to produce steam, which is used by a turbine generator to generate electricity. Because nuclear power plants do not burn fuel, they do not produce greenhouse gas emissions.
Heat. Which is used to boil water which turns a turbine. The turbine generates electricity.
Nuclear power as used in present day nuclear reactors comes from the fission of U-235 and also Pu-239. This is released as heat in the fuel rods which is then used to produce steam for a conventional steam turbine/generator
The fissioning of uranium and plutonium nuclei releases energy as heat, which is then used to produce steam to drive conventional turbine/generators.