You would have to contact the owners and operators of the plant. See the link below for details
like any power plant
Touching a nuclear plant will have no effect on you. You would have to go deep into the plant and bypass many safety precautions in order to be in any danger.
There is no nuclear power involved in a microwave unless the electricity used to power it is from a nuclear power plant.
nuclear energy?It should be any way~(=w=)
The first Indian nuclear power plant was at Tarapur, Maharashtra state. I don't have any information on who was in charge of it.
A nuclear power plant is safe if it's designed on the most advanced safety measures. Its accurate and permanent maintenance issues are essential to keep any nuclear power plant working safely. I think visitors are not allowed in Nuclear Power Plants.
Rejected to the turbine cooling system, but this is the same in any power plant running on the Rankine cycle, whether nuclear or fossil fuelled
No. There is no possibility whatsoever of a nuclear power plant having a nuclear explosion. It is not physically, or even theoretically, possible for the core to be brought into a super-prompt critical geometry and held there long enough to consume enough fuel to "go nuclear".
Protons are a part of every nucleus of every element, so they are involved in any nuclear reaction including nuclear fission.
There is very little similarity between present day power plants which use nuclear fission, and any possible nuclear fusion plant of the future
The average man cannot "help" make nuclear power. Once the plant is online, there is a crew hired by the owner of the plant to run it. I guess you could apply for any job openings at your nearest plant.
No. A nuclear weapon requires a critical amount of highly enriched fuel to be rapidly brought together to cause a sudden explosion. Nuclear plants use low enriched fuel which could never cause a nuclear explosion, and this fuel is dispersed through the reactor in any case so it could not suddenly come together. Any nuclear plant explosions (like Chernobyl) are caused by the presence of high pressure steam and water circuits, not the fact of it being a nuclear plant, though certainly if there is an explosion of a pressure circuit and hence a loss of coolant, and disruption of the nuclear reactor, radioactivity may escape from the plant. This is the chief preoccupation of designers and operators, to keep the plant safe and prevent this ever happening.