Nuclear power released in a nuclear reactor is simply thermal energy, which is transferred to the water/steam in the secondary circuit to produce electrical power from the generator. There is no loss of energy between it being created by the nuclear fission process and being transferred to the steam turbine inlets. The steam cycle itself which is a Rankine cycle, has a thermodynamic efficiency of about 33 percent, that is 1/3 of the reactor output in MW appears as electric power, and 2/3 is rejected into the cooling water in the turbine condenser. Perhaps this is what you mean by 'exhaust'.
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Usually the stack in a nuclear power plant is of smaller diameter as we go up from base to stack top. This is to increase the drift velocity of the exhaust to get out from the stack. It is a matter of fluid mechanics design.
There is no nuclear power involved in a microwave unless the electricity used to power it is from a nuclear power plant.
Nuclear power plants produce electricity by using nuclear energy
Nuclear fission
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nuclear power
by nuclear power ¬.¬
It doesn't require oxygen to operate. That means there is no smoke exhaust and no need to surface to power electrical batteries. They can stay under water as long as their is food for the crew.
Nuclear power is produced through two processes: Nuclear Fission and Nuclear Fusion.
Usually the stack in a nuclear power plant is of smaller diameter as we go up from base to stack top. This is to increase the drift velocity of the exhaust to get out from the stack. It is a matter of fluid mechanics design.
There is no nuclear power involved in a microwave unless the electricity used to power it is from a nuclear power plant.
No. Nuclear power is not based on biology. It is based on nuclear physics.
Nuclear power plants produce electricity by using nuclear energy
It is 28% nuclear power.
nuclear power
The Chashma Nuclear Power Complex and Karachi Nuclear Power Plant are in Pakistan.