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Atom U Boot Definition

Coll
(v. t.) To embrace.
Nuclear
(a.) Of or pertaining to a nucleus
Submarine
(a.) Being, acting, or growing, under water in the sea
Submarine
(n.) A submarine plant or animal.

nuclear-powered submarine; nuclear submarine; nuke sub [coll.] Bedeutung

submarine ball
submarine pitch
a pitch thrown sidearm instead of overhead
somatic cell nuclear transplantation
somatic cell nuclear transfer
SCNT
nuclear transplantation
moving a cell nucleus and its genetic material from one cell to another
nuclear terrorism 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, assaults on nuclear power plants is one form of nuclear terrorism
nuclear deterrence the military doctrine that an enemy will be deterred from using nuclear weapons as long as he can be destroyed as a consequence, when two nations both resort to nuclear deterrence the consequence could be mutual destruction
anti-submarine rocket a shipboard system to fire rockets at submarines
atomic warhead
nuclear warhead
thermonuclear warhead
nuke
the warhead of a missile designed to deliver an atom bomb
attack submarine a military submarine designed and armed to attack enemy shipping
auxiliary research submarine a submarine for research purposes
fleet ballistic missile submarine a submarine carrying ballistic missiles
nautilus
nuclear submarine
nuclear-powered submarine
a submarine that is propelled by nuclear power
nuclear-powered ship ship whose motive power comes from the energy of a nuclear reactor
nuclear reactor
reactor
(physics) any of several kinds of apparatus that maintain and control a nuclear reaction for the production of energy or artificial elements
nuclear rocket a rocket engine in which a nuclear reactor is used to heat a propellant
nuclear weapon
atomic weapon
a weapon of mass destruction whose explosive power derives from a nuclear reaction
submarine
pigboat
sub
U-boat
a submersible warship usually armed with torpedoes
submarine torpedo a torpedo designed to be launched from a submarine
nuclear medicine the branch of medicine that uses radioactive materials either to image a patient's body or to destroy diseased cells
radiochemistry
nuclear chemistry
the chemistry of radioactive substances
nuclear physics
atomic physics
nucleonics
the branch of physics that studies the internal structure of atomic nuclei
nuclear engineering the branch of engineering concerned with the design and construction and operation of nuclear reactors
nuclear explosion
atomic explosion
the explosion of an atomic bomb
seaquake
submarine earthquake
an earthquake at the sea bed
f bomber
grinder
hero
hero sandwich
hoagie
hoagy
Cuban sandwich
Italian sandwich
poor boy
sub
submarine
submarine sandwich
torpedo
wedge
zep
a large sandwich made of a long crusty roll split lengthwise and filled with meats and cheese (and tomato and onion and lettuce and condiments), different names are used in different sections of the United States
nuclear club the nations possessing nuclear weapons
nuclear family
conjugal family
a family consisting of parents and their children and grandparents of a marital partner
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
NRC
an independent federal agency created in to license and regulate nuclear power plants
nuclear chemist
radiochemist
a chemist who specializes in nuclear chemistry
nuclear physicist a physicist who specializes in nuclear physics
Bushnell
David Bushnell
Father of the Submarine
American inventor who in designed a man-propelled submarine that was ineffectual but subsequently earned him recognition as a submarine pioneer (-)
atomic energy
nuclear energy
the energy released by a nuclear reaction
atomic power
nuclear power
nuclear energy regarded as a source of electricity for the power grid (for civilian use)
nuclear winter 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
nuclear resonance the resonance absorption of a gamma ray by a nucleus identical to the nucleus that emitted the gamma ray
nuclear magnetic resonance
NMR
proton magnetic resonance
resonance of protons to radiation in a magnetic field
nuclear propulsion 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)
fission
nuclear fission
a nuclear reaction in which a massive nucleus splits into smaller nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy
fusion
nuclear fusion
nuclear fusion reaction
a nuclear reaction in which nuclei combine to form more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy
meltdown
nuclear meltdown
severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping
nuclear reaction (physics) a process that alters the energy or structure or composition of atomic nuclei
nuclear cataract a cataract that affects the nucleus of the lens
nuclear fuel fuel (such as uranium) that can be used in nuclear reactors as a source of electricity
nuclear RNA
nRNA
ribonucleic acid found in the nucleolus of the cell
microwave
micro-cook
zap
nuke
cook or heat in a microwave oven, You can microwave the leftovers
submarine attack by submarine, The Germans submarined the Allies
atom-bomb
nuke
bomb with atomic weapons
nuke
atomize
atomise
zap
strike at with firepower or bombs, zap the enemy
submarine control a submarine
submarine bring down with a blow to the legs
submarine throw with an underhand motion
submarine move forward or under in a sliding motion, The child was injured when he submarined under the safety belt of the car
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Atome sind die Bausteine, aus denen alle festen, flüssigen oder gasförmigen Stoffe bestehen. Alle Materialeigenschaften dieser Stoffe sowie ihr Verhalten in chemischen Reaktionen werden durch die Eigenschaften und die räumliche Anordnung der Atome, aus denen sie aufgebaut sind, festgelegt. Jedes Atom gehört zu einem bestimmten chemischen Element und bildet dessen kleinste Einheit. Zurzeit sind 118 Elemente bekannt, von denen etwa 90 auf der Erde natürlich vorkommen. Atome verschiedener Elemente unterscheiden sich in ihrer Größe und Masse und vor allem in ihrer Fähigkeit, mit anderen Atomen chemisch zu reagieren und sich zu Molekülen oder festen Körpern zu verbinden. Die Durchmesser von Atomen liegen im Bereich von 3 Â· 10?11 m bis 2 Â· 10?10 m, ihre Massen in einem Bereich von 10?27 bis 10?25 kg.