Nuclear Physics (disambiguation)
- Nuclear Physics (disambiguation)
-
Nuclear Physics may refer to:
See also
- Institute of Nuclear Physics (disambiguation)
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Nuclear physics — For other uses, see Nuclear Physics (disambiguation). Nuclear physics Radioactive decay Nuclear fission Nuclear fusion … Wikipedia
Nuclear — may refer to: Nuclear DNA In physics: Nuclear engineering Nuclear physics Nuclear power Nuclear reactor technology Nuclear weapon In mathematics: Nuclear space Nuclear operator Nuclear C* algebra See also Nucleus (disambiguation) Nucleolus… … Wikipedia
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Nuclear and radiation accidents — This article is about nuclear and radiation accidents in general. For a list of military nuclear accidents, see List of military nuclear accidents. For a list of civilian nuclear accidents, see List of civilian nuclear accidents. For a discussion … Wikipedia
Nuclear Instrumentation Module — For other meanings, see Nim (disambiguation). NIM standard module connector pin assignments (required by DOE/ER 0457T) Pin # Function Pin # Function 1 Reserved [+3 V] 2 Reserved [ 3 V] 3 Spare Bus 4 Reserved Bus 5 Coaxial 6 Coax … Wikipedia
Nuclear winter — For other uses, see Nuclear winter (disambiguation). Nuclear weapons History Warfare Arms race Design Testing … Wikipedia
Nuclear magnetic resonance — This article is about the physical phenomenon. For its use as a method in spectroscopy, see Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. NMR redirects here. For other uses, see NMR (disambiguation). First 1 GHz NMR Spectrometer (1000 MHz,… … Wikipedia
Nuclear weapon — A bomb redirects here. For other uses, see A bomb (disambiguation). The mushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan on August 9, 1945 … Wikipedia
Nuclear weapons in popular culture — A nuclear fireball lights up the night in a United States nuclear test. Since their public debut in August 1945, nuclear weapons and their potential effects have been a recurring motif in popular culture,[1] to the extent that the decades of the … Wikipedia
N (physics symbol) — For other uses, see N (disambiguation). In general, n or N is a common symbol to use in mathematical equations to stand for a count or value. In physics, n may refer to the recommended symbol for: refractive index, in optics principal quantum… … Wikipedia