See the link below for the yield of fission products against atomic number. You can identify the element names from the Periodic Table
It sits there in the cooling pond forever because there is no place else for it to go.
Nuclear waste in the form of spent fuel rods.
none
Nuclear power plant fuel cells are functional for approximately 5-7 years, so in the first year, there will be only low-level waste (not the dangerous stuff you think of when you hear "nuclear waste"). After the 5-7 years of the fuel cells, they all would be considered waste, and it all depends on the size of the power plant. A typical size power plan produces 27MWd of electricity, running on 105 tons of fuel, so after those 5-7 years, you would have 105 tons of the high-level waste, but would have generated (27MWd*365.25 days*7 years*1000 kW/24 hours) = 1.659 billion kWh.
For reference, 105 tons of coal would produce roughly 210 million kWh, or 0.21 billion kWh - only 12.5% of the energy, and coal would still produce it's own waste that is much harder to manage as coal is burned and therefore the waste is in the form of a gas.
popcicles
nuclear fusion make more energy and they both make energy and have waste products
No. There are several problems with nuclear energy - mainly, managing the waste products - and as a result, there are many protests against the user of nuclear energy.
More radioactive waste products to store safely
Nuclear Energy
water
Nuclear Energy.
Nuclear waste. Consumable Energy. Heat.
The products which are created as a result of nuclear fission are Pu-239 and a lot of nuclear waste.
Nuclear Energy produces radioactive waste because if there isnt any sign of nuclear waste/energy in the sullotion/object then it wouldnt be counted as 'Radioactive'.
Nuclear waste products can leave isotopes that contaminate the environment and cause heath problems.
Radioactive waves