When is nuclear energy expected to be easily accessible to the general public?
(may be broke/outdated!)
When is nuclear energy expected to be easily accessible to the general public?
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3 Responses
It is not expected to be easily accessible… whoever said that is a tard.
You must understand how nuclear energy works in the first place.
Essentially, you either have fission or fusion.
Fission is when a radioactive molecule is essentially hit with a neutron, then it breaks into some pieces of itself. A massive amount of energy is released in the process, which in turn heats a steam engine.
In fact, the amount of energy released is so high that matter is actually created from energy(a main part of the basis in which atheist base are theories on… off topic).
So, this power heats up the water in the steam engine, which then turns the gears and so on… and you get electricity, which is then easily accessible to the public.
It is right now in some parts of the US and the rest of the world. Despite the fact that there have been no new nuclear power plants built in the US in decades, there are some that are in operation and there are new plants being built in other countries now.
If you are looking for a personal nuclear reactor to power your house, don’t look for that in your lifetime.
It is now. Nuclear energy doesn’t necessarily mean a nuclear reaction where atoms are either split or fused. Pace makers use the heat of decay of radio active elements to produce a small amount of power to keep a heart beating steadily. Units the size of jet engines have been developed that can run of nuclear decay for 30 years and keep a plane aloft for the entire time. Not used yet (to my knowledge), but could be soon probably on military planes.