It's entirely a matter of how much electricity (Megawatt hours or days) they deliver to the company that manages the grid system, which will pay the nuclear plant owners a rate per unit delivered. There may be penalties for not delivering when it has been agreed or scheduled, if it is due to some fault or breakdown in the plant.
123412
Elenventy Billion! and 12 cents
In 2007 it was about 2600 Terawatthours. See the link below for how this figure is arrived at for all countries with nuclear power
See the attached link below for a survey of the economics of nuclear power
This is not really possible to estimate as unlike coal, hydroelectric, and nuclear power plants which are single large facilities, wind and solar power facilities are incremental distributed facilities involving many separate small units distributed over a large area that can be built slowly over many years and brought on line individually producing usable power as soon as each such tiny unit is finished.
Indiana has no nuclear power plants.
There are no nuclear power plants in that province
I don't think it is much different to those working in conventional power plants, but one additional type of duty is Radiation Health Physics, which is not needed except on nuclear plants
About 20 percent of total electricity produced is by nuclear power plants, in the US
1.7billion
they save over 100,000,000
One use is in nuclear power plants to produce steam and turn turbines to generate electricity.Nuclear bombs ^.^
uranium, plutonnium, and not much more except chemicals.
Pretty much nothing; they're constructed specifically to avoid this.
The world's power needs could be met with 7500 well placed reactors.
2,598,000,000,000 kWh a year, that was estimated in 2008.
Its being created because nuclear power plants are giving of to much radiation