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Heat is released to change water to steam.Then the steam turn the bladof a turbine to make electricity.
Nuclear fission (splitting of atoms to release their powerful forces) takes place in a nuclear power station. This produces heat which is used to turn water into steam. The steam is used to spin turbines which in turn run generators. A generator is a machine that produces electricity.
Through machinesMy answer is short and simple, although not as much as the first one, lol. Nuclear power plants create electricity much the same as any other power plant the difference is the fuel used. The nuclear fission is the energy used to heat water that creates steam to turn a turbine which generates electricity.
Nuclear fission generally produces a lot of energy. In a nuclear power plant, this energy is used to create steam to turn a turbine and generate electricity.
In either case, the heat from the fuel is used to make steam which is used to turn large turbines attached to electricity generators. So whether the power plant uses fossil fuel, or nuclear fuel, the method of electricity generation is the same - the nuclear fuel is simply cleaner, more environmentally freindly, more efficient, and more easily renewed.
The useful product of both nuclear fission and of the combustion of fossil fuels is heat. That makes both types of power plants the same. We'll see both a nuclear plant and a fossil fuel plant using heat to turn water to steam. Then we'll see the steam used to drive a generator to make electricity.
The ultimate product of a nuclear power plant is binding energy, released as heat and radiation. The usual byproduct of that is steam, converted from water, which is used to spin turbines to turn generators to make electricity.
The ultimate product of a nuclear power plant is binding energy, released as heat and radiation. The usual byproduct of that is steam, converted from water, which is used to spin turbines to turn generators to make electricity.
Heat, which is used to produce steam, which is used to turn a steam turbine-powered generator, which is used to produce electricity.
In a nuclear plant, the thermal energy from the fissioning atoms is used to heat water around the fuel rods. This hot water is converted to steam which is used to turn turbines and generate electricity.
steam turn turbine generates electricity? your question is vague: are you referring to power generation of heat-dispersion mechanisms to prevent meltdown?
Nuclear fuels like uranium or plutonium release huge amounts of heat energy, this heats water which tuns to steam. This steam turns turbines, which turn a generator, whch creates electricity.