Black coal will be used in steam generators.
its a type of propigation either the leaf, root, or steam. how this works is they take a peice of the root leaf and or stem into the soil with a piece of the plant sticking out of the soil. what happens is an the plant grows from these they will star growing roots and root hairs(which absorbs water and nutrients)
A broad leafed plant.
Sadabhar plant have parallel venation.
umm
A Plant organism.
nothing
It depends on the type of power plant. Some of the most common is coal (which is used to make steam to create power) one of the least common in the us is nuclear power.
Coal fired steam driven power stations are still in use
Mechanical energy.
A coal plant can produce different amount of energy. It depends on the size of the plant.
By burning it - usually (but not always) in order to turn water into steam, and using the steam to turn turbines.
A thermal power plant is where electricity is produced by steam turning turbines which drive generators. The steam can come from burning any kind of fuel, namely, fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), or nuclear fusion. It can also come from renewable energy (solar, geothermal, ocean thermal, biomass and biofuel).
Coal fired, Nuclear Power, Gas Fired, Hydro, Wind Power.
Anything that will burn hot enough to boil water and produce steam. In the old days coal and coke were among the best, but wood was also be used. Modern steam turbines can be run from a variety of heat sources.
Condensed plant material smushed into a rock like thing from millions of years ago
Vogelzang offers a variety of heat generating products. These include wood stoves, wood circulators, coal furnaces, wood furnaces as well as parts and service packages.
Same way it's used in most other kinds of electrical generation: to turn a turbine. An electric power plant usually involves a generator that is turned by ... something. That something may be wind (wind power), water (hydroelectric dams), or, most commonly, steam. Where the heat to produce the steam comes from is kind of irrelevant to the actual power generation; it can be from burning coal or natural gas, from focusing sunlight, or from nuclear decay.