Same way it's used in most other kinds of electrical generation: to turn a turbine.
An electric power plant usually involves a generator that is turned by ... something. That something may be wind (wind power), water (hydroelectric dams), or, most commonly, steam. Where the heat to produce the steam comes from is kind of irrelevant to the actual power generation; it can be from burning coal or natural gas, from focusing sunlight, or from nuclear decay.
In nuclear power plants, nuclear energy is used to produce heat, which is then used to generate steam. The steam drives a turbine connected to a generator that produces electricity. The electricity produced can then be used to power light fixtures, converting nuclear energy to light energy.
Nuclear energy is transformed into usable energy through a process called nuclear fission, where the nucleus of an atom is split to release energy. This energy is usually used to heat water and produce steam, which drives turbines to generate electricity. The electricity produced can then be used to power homes, businesses, and industries.
Nuclear energy is used to boil water in order to produce steam. The steam is used to drive a turbine that can either be mechanically hooked up, i.e. the propeller on a nuclear submarine, or the turbine can be linked to a generator which then powers an electric motor.
Heat from the nuclear reaction changes water to steam.
Nuclear energy transforms to thermal energy (through nuclear fission or nuclear fusion). Thermal energy transforms into kinetic energy (eg produces steam that drives steam turbines). The kinetic energy transforms into electric energy (through electric generators).
Nuclear energy is used to heat water and produce steam in a nuclear power plant. The steam then drives a turbine connected to a generator, converting nuclear energy to thermal energy, which is then transformed into electricity. Another example is using nuclear energy to heat homes or buildings through a nuclear reactor heating system.
The nuclear reactor heats water into steam which is used to drive a turbine which turns a generator.
Nuclear Energy is harnessed in Nuclear Reactors by 'fission' reactions which produces heat (thermal energy). In productive applications it is used to heat water to produce steam to rotate turbine and generate electricity by it.
In a nuclear power plant, nuclear energy is used to produce heat through nuclear reactions. This heat is then used to produce steam, which drives a turbine to generate kinetic energy in the form of mechanical motion. The kinetic energy is ultimately transformed into electrical energy through a generator.
The nuclear reaction produces heat, which is used to boil water. The steam then drives a steam turbine, producing electricity.
Nuclear power plants convert nuclear energy to electrical.sometimes it can be used to enrich radioactive nuclei which can later used in missile warheads. But using thorium as a source of nuclear power we can't enrich nuclei but we can use for electrical power generation which might have more energy than former
When nuclear fission occurs, it heats up water which turns into steam. This steam turns a turbine, which converts mechanical energy into electrical energy. The steam is what you see coming out of the towers of a nuclear power plant. Most of the steam actually condensates before it escapes so it can be reused again to turn the turbine.