how am i meant to know you
a nuclear reactor converts binding energy into heat. a nuclear power plant uses a nuclear reactor to generate electricity.
nuclear fission
Nuclear energy is produced in the core of a nuclear reactor, where controlled nuclear fission reactions occur. These reactions release heat energy, which is then used to generate electricity through steam turbines.
In a nuclear reactor the nuclear energy released by fission appears as heat in the fuel rods, which is then transferred to the reactor coolant (ie water in PWR and BWR)
Yes, that is how the nuclear energy is transferred to the turbine/generator
Steam from the heat of the reactor.
No, a nuclear reactor produces thermal energy and ionising radiation, no magnetic effects.
An artificial nuclear reactor is a device that initiates and controls a sustained nuclear chain reaction. This reaction produces heat, which is used to produce electricity in nuclear power plants. The fission process in these reactors generates energy by splitting atomic nuclei.
I think is energy produced by the reactor in a second...
Nuclear energy, because uranium is a nuclear fuel for nuclear power reactors.
In a nuclear reactor, energy is transferred from the fission process of uranium atoms to heat energy. This heat energy is then used to produce steam, which drives turbines to generate electricity.
A nuclear power reactor, mainly PWR and BWR types.