Depends on the type of power station.
it con be as fuel for nuclear power station
You mean Kingsnorth in the UK? It is not nuclear, coal is used there.
The international space station makes use of solar power.
carry fuel with you
Not enough information. Is it turbocharged? Is it a piston engine? What type of fuel does it use? If you know its rate of fuel use and its efficiency you can find the power produced.
they have larger engines, therfore it takes more fuel to provide the massive power that they need.
None, they are cute toys that run on the sun's power.
In a power station, energy is transferred from a fuel source (such as coal, natural gas, or nuclear fuel) into thermal energy, which is then used to convert water into steam. The steam then drives turbines that are connected to generators, where mechanical energy is transformed into electrical energy. This electrical energy can be transmitted to homes, businesses, and other locations for use.
Your question is far too broad to be answered specifically. The number of different metals used in a nuclear power station is huge. If you just want to know what is used for fuel, that is generally an isotope of Uranium.
1. Can be made in much greater output plants 2. Steam plants can use a variety of fuel sources including nuclear fuel, whilst diesel fuel is more expensive and best reserved for transport use.
Natural gas power stations typically have the shortest start-up time among fossil fuel power stations. This is because natural gas power plants can ramp up to full capacity quickly compared to coal or nuclear power plants.
Inputs of a power station is the air inside it produced. :) But seriously: The input to a power station is the source of energy use to make electricity. This can be water, oil, gas, coal, nuclear. In less conventional terms, wind turbines and tidal schemes are 'power stations'.