it burns 10 minutes per hour although that's what I think it is correct me please
A nuclear power plant does use uranium as fuel It "burns" it in the nuclear sense not the chemical sense
You need to know certain variables the pilot is using, like the speed, engine power, and the payload
Some power plants do. Any plant that burns oil, coal, or gas from underground resources could be considered a "fossil fuel" plant. There are however nuclear, solar, hydro-electric and wind powered power plants.
A fossil fuel power plant is a system of devices for the conversion of fossil fuel energy to mechanical work or electric energy
Power plants that burn fossil fuels and nuclear power plants are very similar in their manner of creating steam. The main difference between the two types of power plants are that fossil fuel plants emit more pollution.
It is the efficiency of the power plant.
Biomass power stations. (Regular power stations that burn coal can easily be converted to burning biomass (vegetation), reducing pollution, just by changing the fuel.)
Lean Burn = higher air-fuel ratio, Less power, more economical Rich Burn = lower air-fuel ratio, More power, less economical
A power plant that runs on waste wood and similar biological fuel.
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People burn fossil fuels when they drive a car or a lorry, or they run a gas cooker. In all these appliances, fossil fuel is directly burned in the appliance, which gives off carbon dioxide. People also burn fossil fuels indirectly when they use electric energy in the home. In this case the burning takes place in the nearest working power plant, where the fuel is used to generate steam that drives a turbine and that in turn drives the electrical power generator. Most power plants run on fossil fuel, but not all of them. In a power plant the fuel usage is closely linked to the amount of energy being taken. So turning off appliances that are nor being used reduces the fuel used and the carbon dioxide put into the atmosphere.