the nuclear reactor makes steam wich drives turbines wich drive generators that make the electricity
Nuclear energy is obtained by the fissioning of nuclei of uranium235, in a controlled chain reaction in a nuclear reactor, which produces heat that can be converted to electricity by normal power plant methods.
a nuclear reactor converts binding energy into heat. a nuclear power plant uses a nuclear reactor to generate electricity.
yes
Typically the nuclear energy is converted to electricity and the electricity powers the device. No much differently than the chemical energy in fossil fuels is often converted to electricity and the electricity powers the device.
From the nuclear reactor comes thermal energy (heat), which is then turned into electricity.
nuclear fission
The nuclear reactor heats water into steam which is used to drive a turbine which turns a generator.
If you mean energy produced by nuclear reactors, then "heat" and "light" would be the answers (Just think of the sun)
The nuclear energy - which is a type of potential energy - gets converted to gamma rays (photons). Inside a reactor, or inside the Sun, these will soon be absorbed and converted into heat energy.
You rip apart an atom which releases great energy in the form of heat. The energy causes water to evaporate which turns a turbine. The turning turbine creates electricity. This is how a nuclear reactor works.
Nuclear energy is obtained by the fissioning of nuclei of uranium235, in a controlled chain reaction in a nuclear reactor, which produces heat that can be converted to electricity by normal power plant methods.
Not directly, but in when converted into electricity, yes.