No, not at all. We should probably be making a lot more use of it than we are, because it is rather paradoxically a kind of "green" energy, in the sense that it is minimally polluting.
better for the enviorment
Nuclear energy is released from the nucleus when U235 fissions, it appears initially as kinetic energy of the fission fragments, these are then stopped in the fuel material and turned to thermal energy. We can't use the nuclear energy directly.
Yes. There are virtually no physical limitations to where nuclear power can be used. Nuclear reactors have already been used on land, air and sea... and submerged and in space. Not only we humans use nuclear energy, but it is the primary source of energy in natural processess in the world too. Life on earth depends on the sun's energy, which in part is produced by nuclear fusion in the heart of the star.
The conversion of Hydrogen into Helium (nuclear fusion).
One use is in nuclear power plants to produce steam and turn turbines to generate electricity.Nuclear bombs ^.^
All material uses nuclear energy.
Nuclear energy and renewable energy are not related. Renewable energy does not use nuclear energy.
Batteries use chemical energy to create voltage to drive current flow. They do not use nuclear energy.
there was nuclear energy in the science experiment
All material uses nuclear energy.
Anything that uses electricity may use nuclear energy
The use of nuclear energy
we use nuclear because it helps save energy
We use nuclear fission in nuclear reactors to tap nuclear energy.
In nuclear fission reactors
The main use of nuclear energy is to produce electricity. Nuclear energy is also used in the field of medicine and military purposes.
The stars are powered by nuclear fusion, so this is widespread. Nuclear fission is more unusual and probably only occurs in certain planets where there is a lot of uranium.