No the turbines are turned of while the reactors are being refuled.
The nuclear reaction produces heat The heat is used to make steam The steam makes the turbines spin The turbines make electricity
water is heated up by nuclear fission and turned into steam, that steam then turns massive turbines which generate electricity.
It is used for electricity in nuclear power plants == == Nuclear power is used to heat steam which then turns turbines, which generate electricity in nuclear power stations and also to provide propulsion and power on board nuclear submarines.
Thermonuclear plants are power stations. They use nuclear fission reactions to generate heat. This boils water to generate steam, which turns the turbines to generate electricity.
Nuclear fissions in nuclear fuels generate heat and electricity.
If you mean nuclear fission, then this does not generate electricity directly. The energy released is essentially light/heat energy and this is used to heat water to produce steam. The steam is then used to drive turbines/generators to produce the electricity.
nuclear power
nuclear power
It is true. The heat can flash water to steam, which spins turbines, which generates electricity.
Nuclear fission. The combining of Plutonium and Uranium atoms releases energy, which is used to heat water. The steam produced turns turbines which generate electricity.
Nuclear, Coal, Solar, Hydro and Gas Turbines. There are moves afoot to also generate power as byproducts of various factories.
Nuclear material is allowed to heat in a controlled environment. That heat is used to make steam. the steam runs giant turbines that generate electricity.