Nuclear
Meanings and phrases
adj.
- (weapons) deriving destructive energy from the release of atomic energy; atomic
- of or relating to or constituting the nucleus of an atom
- of or relating to or constituting the nucleus of a cell
- constituting or like a nucleus
n.
- an independent federal agency created in 1974 to license and regulate nuclear power plants; NRC
n.
- ribonucleic acid found in the nucleolus of the cell; nRNA
n.
- a cataract that affects the nucleus of the lens
n.
- a chemist who specializes in nuclear chemistry; radiochemist
n.
- the chemistry of radioactive substances; radiochemistry
n.
- the nations possessing nuclear weapons
n.
- the military doctrine that an enemy will be deterred from using nuclear weapons as long as he can be destroyed as a consequence
- Agni V is primarily for enhancing India's nuclear deterrence against China.
- It was designed to provide the tactical part of French nuclear deterrence during the Cold War.
- Considered vital to the nuclear deterrence posture, accurate determination of the SLBM launch position was a force multiplier.
n.
- the energy released by a nuclear reaction; atomic energy
- Tero Varjoranta is a Finnish with 30 years of experience in nuclear energy.
- South Africa's nuclear programme includes both nuclear energy and nuclear medicine.
- Ritter worked on the German nuclear energy project, also known as the "Uranverein".
n.
- the branch of engineering concerned with the design and construction and operation of nuclear reactors
- and founded the postlauream course in nuclear engineering.
- He graduated with a degree in nuclear engineering in 1965.
- He was named founding chair of Columbia's department of applied physics and nuclear engineering.
n.
- the explosion of an atomic bomb; atomic explosion
- Military commanders did not understand the physics involved in a nuclear explosion.
- Some data seemed to confirm that a nuclear explosion was the source for the "double flash" signal.
- The flash from a nuclear explosion would produce a mark on one or two of the papers within the drum.
n.
- a family consisting of parents and their children and grandparents of a marital partner; conjugal family
- Historically, most marriages in western culture have had a late age of marriage and an emphasis on the nuclear family.
- Anatole lives in a conventional nuclear family, married to the beautiful and supportive Doucette and with six lovely children.
- The series explores the advantages and disadvantages of joint family vis-a-vis nuclear family through the life of these two sisters.
n.
- a nuclear reaction in which a massive nucleus splits into smaller nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy; fission
- One more proposal which utilizes the high nuclear fission rate of Am is a nuclear battery.
- This energy is triggered and released in nuclear fission bombs or in civil nuclear power generation.
- Thus was born the practical nuclear chain reaction by the mechanism of neutron-induced nuclear fission.
n.
- fuel (such as uranium) that can be used in nuclear reactors as a source of electricity
- In 2004–2005 the cruiser's nuclear fuel was unloaded.
- Furthermore, it occurs in spent nuclear fuel.
- The main goods transported were nuclear fuel rods carried in nuclear flasks.
n.
- a nuclear reaction in which nuclei combine to form more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy; fusion; nuclear fusion reaction
- Selenium is not produced directly by nuclear fusion.
- Commercial nuclear fusion is not yet an accomplished technology.
- ), or from nuclear fusion (of lighter elements, primarily hydrogen).
n.
- a nuclear reaction in which nuclei combine to form more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy; fusion; nuclear fusion
n.
- resonance of protons to radiation in a magnetic field; NMR; proton magnetic resonance
- In nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, deuterium has a very different NMR frequency (e.g.
- Developing technologies include nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and ion-trap mass spectroscopy.
- Both have nuclear spin 3/2− and thus may be used for nuclear magnetic resonance, although Br is more favourable.
n.
- the branch of medicine that uses radioactive materials either to image a patient's body or to destroy diseased cells
- Diplomates of the ABNM are called nuclear medicine physicians.
- The ABR certifies radiologists who also practice nuclear medicine.
- These nuclear medicine scans can visualize the perfusion of heart muscle.
n.
- severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping; meltdown
n.
- a physicist who specializes in nuclear physics
- They are visited by Rose, who is also a nuclear physicist.
- Atomic recoil was discovered by Harriet Brooks, Canada's first female nuclear physicist.
- Lynch and his sister Rachel were raised in Los Angeles where their father was a nuclear physicist.
n.
- the branch of physics that studies the internal structure of atomic nuclei; atomic physics; nucleonics
- He is known as the father of nuclear physics.
- In nuclear physics, nuclear isomers are excited states of atomic nuclei.
- Randall oversaw Michigan’s substantial growth in atomic physics and nuclear physics.
n.
- nuclear energy regarded as a source of electricity for the power grid (for civilian use); atomic power
- It is a development of the RBMK nuclear power reactor.
- India's nuclear power plant development began in 1964.
- There are no nuclear power plants in Namibia.
n.
- the use of a nuclear reactor either to produce electricity to power an engine (as in a nuclear submarine) or to directly heat a propellant (as in nuclear rockets)
n.
- (physics) a process that alters the energy or structure or composition of atomic nuclei
- They further reported measuring small amounts of nuclear reaction byproducts, including neutrons and tritium.
- Cold fusion Cold fusion is a hypothesized type of nuclear reaction that would occur at, or near, room temperature.
- (When the number of atoms on either side is unequal, the transformation is referred to as a nuclear reaction or radioactive decay.)
n.
- (physics) any of several kinds of apparatus that maintain and control a nuclear reaction for the production of energy or artificial elements; reactor
- See List of small nuclear reactor designs
- The heat source was a uranium 235 fast fission nuclear reactor (FNR).
- Tritium is a radioisotope of concern in nuclear reactor waste streams.
n.
- the resonance absorption of a gamma ray by a nucleus identical to the nucleus that emitted the gamma ray
n.
- a rocket engine in which a nuclear reactor is used to heat a propellant
n.
- a submarine that is propelled by nuclear power; nautilus; nuclear-powered submarine
- Shindo plans to use his nuclear submarine to rejuvenate Godzilla.
- The cruiser department became the new nuclear submarine design unit.
- In 1970, the "Long March I", China's first nuclear submarine, began maritime tests.
n.
- the use of a nuclear device by a terrorist organization to cause massive devastation or the use (or threat of use) of fissionable radioactive materials
n.
- moving a cell nucleus and its genetic material from one cell to another; somatic cell nuclear transplantation; somatic cell nuclear transfer; SCNT
n.
- the warhead of a missile designed to deliver an atom bomb; atomic warhead; thermonuclear warhead; nuke
- All Bomarc Bs were equipped with the W-40 nuclear warhead.
- Payloads usually consist of a conventional warhead or a nuclear warhead.
- Main payload was a nuclear warhead with an estimated yield of 10, 20 or 40 kilotons.
n.
- a weapon of mass destruction whose explosive power derives from a nuclear reaction; atomic weapon
- The first was Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon.
- This was the first such nuclear weapon loss in history.
- The first was the potential for obtaining a nuclear weapon.
n.
- a long period of darkness and extreme cold that scientists predict would follow a full-scale nuclear war; a layer of dust and smoke in the atmosphere would cover the earth and block the rays of the sun; most living organisms would perish
n.
- moving a cell nucleus and its genetic material from one cell to another; somatic cell nuclear transplantation; SCNT; nuclear transplantation
n.
- moving a cell nucleus and its genetic material from one cell to another; somatic cell nuclear transfer; SCNT; nuclear transplantation
E.g.
- These are used in nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons.
- Legislation forbids nuclear weapons entirely.
- (1945), a book detailing the dangers of nuclear weapons.
E.g.
- India's nuclear power plant development began in 1964.
- The MKER-1500 was also proposed for the Leningrad nuclear power plant.
- Godzilla attacks the Ihama nuclear power plant in Shizuoka Prefecture.
E.g.
- The hope was that an all-out nuclear war could be avoided.
- McNamara emphasized it was luck that prevented nuclear war.
- Players venture in a post-apocalyptic world scoured by a nuclear war.
E.g.
- There are no nuclear power plants in Namibia.
- The future of fantastical nuclear power plants is then explained.
- It is decommissioning Isar 1 and Unterweser nuclear power plants.
E.g.
- The company is a developer of the nuclear reactors.
- For power reactors, see List of nuclear reactors.
- These are used in nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons.
E.g.
- He was chief of the agency during the Kargil War and Operation Shakti, India's nuclear program.
- In August, during the ASEAN Regional Forum 2018, North Korea's nuclear program was the critical agenda item.
- There was no mention specifically of the Vela incident or of Israeli cooperation in South Africa's nuclear program.
E.g.
- New technologies were developed to clean up nuclear waste sites.
- The Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository is southwest of Groom Lake.
- The new school is adjacent to the Gasworks and nuclear waste reprocessing plant.
E.g.
- During the 1950s, mining operations paused due to nearby nuclear tests.
- A total of seven nuclear tests were performed, with approximate yields ranging from .
- Photographs of nuclear tests often show numerous vertical rope-like lines to one side.
E.g.
- The navy's other nuclear weapon is the air-deployed B61 nuclear bomb.
- For example, after successfully transporting a nuclear bomb to HQ, there is a fly on it.
- After India detonated a nuclear bomb in 1974, Canada stopped nuclear dealings with India.
E.g.
- One usage is the enforcement of nuclear test ban treaties.
- India had carried out a nuclear test in 1974 (codenamed "Smiling Buddha").
- In 2018, a new study made the case for the double flash being a nuclear test.
E.g.
- However, the club was disbanded for Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011.
E.g.
- In these times, everybody knows what that means: nuclear attack.
- One of the most prepared countries for a nuclear attack is Switzerland.
- In the aftermath of the nuclear attack, one third of the populations would be dead.
E.g.
- In 1970, the "Long March I", China's first nuclear submarine, began maritime tests.
- The PRC's first nuclear test was carried out at Lop Nur, Xinjiang, on 16 October 1964.
- It was the first nuclear plant in the world to generate more than 1 gigawatt of power.
E.g.
- Fallout from atmospheric nuclear testing prior to 1980 contributed a small amount of californium to the environment.
- In the 1950s, the mine was exposed to fallout from nuclear testing that was being carried out at the Nevada Test Site.
- Monster Island appeared again in "Godzilla vs. Megalon" (1973), one of many locations suffering the effects of nuclear testing.
E.g.
- He alluded to the use of nuclear propelled rockets for flights to the moon.
- His work in the 1950s led to major advances in nuclear-ship technology and civilian use of nuclear power.
- The use of nuclear weapons in game would have been possible, but limited by a nation's state of emergency.
E.g.
- In nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, deuterium has a very different NMR frequency (e.g.
- Developing technologies include nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and ion-trap mass spectroscopy.
- Both have nuclear spin 3/2− and thus may be used for nuclear magnetic resonance, although Br is more favourable.
E.g.
- In March 1982 some 200,000 people participated in a nuclear disarmament rally in Hiroshima.
- He became an active member of the War Resisters League, advocating for nuclear disarmament.
- While serving in the Australian Air Force, he also became involved in the nuclear disarmament movement.
E.g.
- By 1972, the plan for the nuclear plant was dropped due to environmental concerns.
- 1 nuclear plant".
- It was the first nuclear plant in the world to generate more than 1 gigawatt of power.
E.g.
- Russia used the area to store nuclear warheads.
- The missile was reported to carry new nuclear warheads.
- Both missile types are configurable for either conventional or nuclear warheads.
E.g.
- The missile was reported to carry new nuclear warheads.
- The cruiser department became the new nuclear submarine design unit.
- Days after the anti-nuclear rally, Cabinet decided to ban the building of new nuclear power reactors.
E.g.
- The world outside is dealing with a major disaster at a nuclear power station.
- In 1971, the town of Wyhl, in Germany, was a proposed site for a nuclear power station.
- The Kudankulam nuclear power plant (KNPP) is the single largest nuclear power station in India.
E.g.
- Funding comes from the companies which run 10 nuclear plants in the UK.
- The government also plans to build 19 more nuclear plants by the year 2020.
- Planned nuclear plants were cancelled and existing plants eventually shut down.
E.g.
- He later made his mark as a writer and activist for peace and against nuclear arms.
- In the early 1980s, the revival of the nuclear arms race triggered large protests about nuclear weapons.
- The Cold War between the two nations led to military buildups, the nuclear arms race, and the Space Race.
E.g.
- Depleted boron is a byproduct of the nuclear industry.
- The nuclear industry enriches natural boron to nearly pure B.
- The economy of the city is centered around the nuclear industry.
E.g.
- Moscow even provided some nuclear technology.
- Erbium is used in nuclear technology in neutron-absorbing control rods.
- In April 2010, a delegation of SC held in Tunis Days of Russian nuclear technology.
E.g.
- List of nuclear submarines This is a list of nuclear-powered submarines.
- However, his most important task was converting the shipyard over to the construction of nuclear submarines.
E.g.
- In 2007, Russia and Myanmar did a controversial nuclear research center deal.
- The outbreak of World War II halted any further expansion of nuclear research activities.
- Starting in 1969, he worked for seven years at CISE, a nuclear research center near Milano.
E.g.
- They were trying to minimize the number of nuclear missiles in the world.
- Approximately 60 nuclear missiles are in service, 50 land based and 10 sea-based.
- A group of women protesting nuclear missiles marched from Cardiff to the RAF Greenham.
E.g.
- Initially, 72 Mark 5 nuclear bombs were supplied for the V-bombers.
- South Africa built its own nuclear bombs, possibly with Israeli assistance.
- For their own safety, the crew jettisoned two nuclear bombs, which were never recovered.
E.g.
- Moscow considered a preemptive nuclear strike.
- It was used as a mobile nuclear strike vector, giving the Soviet Army the ability to hit European targets from forward areas.
- A nuclear strike would have been a formidable undertaking in the post-war 1940s due to the limitations of the Mark III Fat Man.
E.g.
- Some 120,000 people demonstrated against nuclear power in Bonn, in October 1979.
- Politically active during the 1960s, Sakharov was against nuclear proliferation.
- He later made his mark as a writer and activist for peace and against nuclear arms.
E.g.
- He also dismantled South Africa's nuclear weapons program.
- They also agreed to pursue the six-party talks over North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
- The North began building a nuclear reactor in 1963, and it began a nuclear weapons program in the 1980s.
E.g.
- The village of Rokkasho, at the southern end of Shimokita Peninsula, home to a range of nuclear facilities.
- The next step would be comprehensive inspections on North Korea's nuclear facilities and nuclear ICBM weapons program by IAEA.
- Especially in the waters of the Persian Gulf, the IRGC is expected to assume control of any Iranian response to attacks on its nuclear facilities.
E.g.
- The crews practised the Low Altitude Bombing System (LABS) for tactical nuclear attacks.
- This panel advocated using tactical nuclear weapons as a standard part of the United States defense arsenal.
- The weapons technician rating was disestablished in 1995 concurrent with the removal of tactical nuclear weapons from the fleet.
E.g.
- See List of small nuclear reactor designs
- RNU12 RNA, U12 small nuclear is a protein that in humans is encoded by the RNU12 gene.
- It was feared that the term "minor trial" might connote that they were small nuclear explosions.
E.g.
- Politically active during the 1960s, Sakharov was against nuclear proliferation.
- Amid fears of nuclear proliferation, these were all certified as transferred to Russia by 1996.
- On foreign fronts allegations of nuclear proliferation damaged Musharraf and Aziz's credibility.
E.g.
- The nuclear missile has already been launched, however.
- As an Air Force officer he served as a nuclear missile operator.
- During the Cold War, Derazhnia was the location of a secret nuclear missile base.
E.g.
- Conducted worldwide strategic bombardment training missions and providing nuclear deterrent.
- The motto indicated their base's new role in the nuclear deterrent role and the bull symbolised that deterrence.
- The development of the Sineva is part of a program tasked with "preventing the weakening of Russia's nuclear deterrent."
E.g.
- Furthermore, it occurs in spent nuclear fuel.
- Curium isotopes are inevitably present in spent nuclear fuel with a concentration of about 20 g/tonne.
- A tonne of spent nuclear fuel contains about 100 grams of various americium isotopes, mostly Am and Am.
E.g.
- Stage I: The nuclear material is disposed axially into filaments.
- Citing the amount of missing nuclear material Yusuf potentially had at his disposal (some 15–18 lbs.
- Nuclear engineers work with the handling of nuclear material and operations of a nuclear power plant.
E.g.
- Such "zoo" signals which mimicked nuclear explosions had been received several times earlier.
- It was feared that the term "minor trial" might connote that they were small nuclear explosions.
- The characters attribute the phenomenon to the effects the nuclear explosions have on the atmosphere.
E.g.
- Furthermore, it occurs in spent nuclear fuel.
- Curium isotopes are inevitably present in spent nuclear fuel with a concentration of about 20 g/tonne.
- A tonne of spent nuclear fuel contains about 100 grams of various americium isotopes, mostly Am and Am.
E.g.
- It is at present the second largest of the five nuclear power stations in the country.
- Sabotage can damage electrical sources for the power grid, including civilian nuclear power stations.
- Measurement towers are also used in other contexts, for instance near nuclear power stations, and by ASOS stations.
E.g.
- After the war he returned to the Bureau of Ships, where he was involved with the development of nuclear propulsion.
- He strongly supported the rapid development of nuclear submarines and especially the development of an SSBN program.
- After a second year he left the agency and organized a statewide initiative to limit the development of nuclear power plants in California.
E.g.
- The UK's nuclear arsenal is based in Scotland.
- At one time, the Soviet Union maintained the world's largest nuclear arsenal in history.
- Were two conventional armies to fight, the loser would have redress in its nuclear arsenal.
E.g.
- In nuclear reactors, curium is formed from U in a series of nuclear reactions.
- He obtained his Ph.D from University of Chicago in 1940, where researched nuclear reactions of lithium-6.
- The star has an overabundance of lithium in its atmosphere, a metal that is destroyed by nuclear reactions in stars.
E.g.
- It works as an authority in the area of radiation protection and nuclear safety.
- HAF stands for "he anquan fagui" (核安全法) and means "nuclear safety laws" in Chinese.
- Fessenheim has become a flashpoint in renewed debate over nuclear safety in France after the Fukushima accident.
E.g.
- The incidents also came just a day after the US announced it was withdrawing from the Iranian nuclear deal.
- DeSantis opposed the Iran nuclear deal framework, calling it "a bad deal that will significantly degrade our national security."
- He was one of 29 leading US scientists who wrote Obama a strongly supportive letter about his administration's 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
E.g.
- has a plot focused on the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant and the nuclear accident there.
- The bulk of the radioactivity in nuclear accident fallout is more long-lived than that in weapons fallout.
- The fourth meeting was held in the wake of the nuclear accident at Fukushima and the natural disaster in Japan.
E.g.
- The school once served as a potential nuclear fallout shelter.
- In the episode, Del buys a nuclear fallout shelter and, anticipating a nuclear war, the Trotters decide to build it.
- Lijon Eknilang Lijon Eknilang (March 1, 1946 – August 2012) was a Marshallese activist and nuclear fallout survivor.
E.g.
- propose a Weakless Universe in which the weak nuclear force is eliminated.
- The protons and neutrons in the nucleus are attracted to each other by the nuclear force.
- Under certain circumstances, the repelling electromagnetic force becomes stronger than the nuclear force.
E.g.
- In the middle of this, he decides to purchase a nuclear device to use against them.
- They build and improvised nuclear device and plan to set it off at a summit in Geneva.
- The resulting overpressure from the detonation simulated the approximate equivalent airblast of an 8 kiloton nuclear device.
E.g.
- The government and the nuclear power industry agreed to phase out all nuclear power plants by 2021.
- The marchers demanded that Germany close all nuclear plants by 2020 and close the Gorleben radioactive dump.
- This results in total nuclear disarmament, the exile of all nuclear physicists to a doomed island, and an eventual end to conventional warfare.
E.g.
- It is localized to the nucleus and has a nuclear localization signal.
- There are also 4 nuclear localization signals and 7 O-linked glycosylation sites.
- It also contains possible nuclear localization signal sequences between 1100 - 1107 aa.
E.g.
- It's an assault on our attempts to control the spread of dangerous nuclear materials.
- Today, he works to further a national commitment to basic scientific research and the safe management of nuclear materials.
- The nuclear materials Ulof needs to better his invisibility machine are extremely rare and kept under guard in government facilities.
E.g.
- As Gary is wheeled out of the courtroom, Ted says to Chris, "If there's ever a nuclear holocaust, stand next to Gary Blondo.
- Trump described the Iran deal as a "disaster", "the worst deal ever", and so "terrible" that could lead to "a nuclear holocaust".
- He explains that when he traveled to the future, he discovered that there was a nuclear holocaust that occurred on October 21, 2045.
E.g.
- The nuclear envelope of a typical mammalian cell contains 3000–4000 pore complexes.
- The nuclear envelope surrounds the nucleus, separating its contents from the cytoplasm.
- RanGAP is cytoplasmic in yeast and bound to the nuclear envelope in plants and animals.
E.g.
- The 1st SMG was an army unit armed with 18 S2 strategic nuclear ballistic missiles.
- By May, Khrushchev and Castro agreed to place strategic nuclear missiles secretly in Cuba.
- However, missile defense is no longer limited to interception of strategic nuclear weapons.
E.g.
- Protests have escalated in the wake of Japan's Fukushima I nuclear accidents.
- Following the Fukushima I nuclear accidents, anti-nuclear opposition intensified in Germany.
- Following the 2011 Fukushima I nuclear accidents, around 1,000 people took part in a protest against nuclear power in Paris on March 20.
E.g.
- Days after the anti-nuclear rally, Cabinet decided to ban the building of new nuclear power reactors.
- In 2009 the NDA sold land near three existing reactor sites for expected new nuclear power stations, for over £200m.
- Voters banned the approval of new nuclear power plants since the late 1970s because of concerns over radioactive waste disposal.
E.g.
- This panel advocated using tactical nuclear weapons as a standard part of the United States defense arsenal.
- The weapons technician rating was disestablished in 1995 concurrent with the removal of tactical nuclear weapons from the fleet.
- The PLA was believed to have atomic demolition munitions, and there were unconfirmed reports that it also had tactical nuclear weapons.
E.g.
- These openly targeted the Indian nuclear programme.
- South Africa's nuclear programme includes both nuclear energy and nuclear medicine.
- Heffermehl is an outspoken supporter of Mordechai Vanunu, the technician who revealed the Israeli nuclear programme.
E.g.
- In principle, berkelium-249 can sustain a nuclear chain reaction in a fast breeder reactor.
- Thus was born the practical nuclear chain reaction by the mechanism of neutron-induced nuclear fission.
- Rutherford died too early to see Leó Szilárd's idea of controlled nuclear chain reactions come into being.
E.g.
- Two major concerns were the development of quantum theory and the discovery of the strong and weak nuclear forces.
- There are two "nuclear forces", which today are usually described as interactions that take place in quantum theories of particle physics.
- The French Force de Frappe nuclear forces include both land and sea-based bombers with Air-Sol Moyenne Portée high speed medium range nuclear cruise missiles.