There are lots of different units for electricity, depending what aspect you want to measure (power, energy, current, voltage, frequency, etc.).For a power plant, some relevant units include:
* Volt, for voltage
* Ampere, for current
* Watt, for power
* Hertz, for frequency
It is measured in megawatts.
Electricity does flow back to the power plant. This electricity is what forms the circuit needed to actually deliver the electricity to you when you need it.
Because the power plant is the source of electricity
Some machines that make electricity are:generatoralternatorthermo-electric generatorbatterysolar cellsetc.
wind
they provide higher amount of power and electricity than normal power plants.
electricity is made in a power plant.
electrisity leaves the power plant and is transformed for a long distance at voltages
Electricity does flow back to the power plant. This electricity is what forms the circuit needed to actually deliver the electricity to you when you need it.
A power plant is designed to produce electricity.
a power plant is a factory that produces lots of electricity. It might even produce electricity to your whole state
Because the power plant is the source of electricity
The unit of power is the watt? Other than that, the question makes no sense. I mean, The power plant is ?? of electricity? Still not obvious...................... generator?????
a nuclear power plant produces electricity from uranium 235
In a nuclear power plant
Yes, nuclear power plants produce electric power (electricity).
By generating electricity.
Electricity from solar power is the same as electricity from a coal-burning power plant. It's all the same, and it can be used to power anything that runs on electricity.