nuclear-rocket
1nuclear rocket — branduolinė raketa statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. nuclear rocket; nuclear powered rocket vok. Kernrakete, f rus. ядерная ракета, f pranc. fusée à énergie nucléaire, f; fusée à propulsion nucléaire, f; fusée nucléaire, f …
2nuclear rocket engine — branduolinis raketinis variklis statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Raketinis variklis, kuriame reaktyvinė trauka sudaroma vykstant branduolinei arba termobranduolinei reakcijai. Branduoliniams raketiniams varikliams sudaroma kur kas didesnė… …
3nuclear rocket — noun a) A rocket with a nuclear reactor aboard. b) A rocket where a nuclear process, especially an onboard fission reactor, enables thrust to be produced …
4nuclear rocket — noun a rocket engine in which a nuclear reactor is used to heat a propellant • Hypernyms: ↑rocket, ↑rocket engine …
5Nuclear propulsion — includes a wide variety of propulsion methods that fulfil the promise of the Atomic Age by using some form of nuclear reaction as their primary power source. Contents 1 Surface ships and submarines 2 Cars 3 Aircraft …
6Nuclear thermal rocket — Sketch of nuclear thermal rocket …
7Rocket engine — RS 68 being tested at NASA s Stennis Space Center. The nearly transparent exhaust is due to this engine s exhaust being mostly superheated steam (water vapor from its propellants, hydrogen and oxygen) …
8Nuclear lightbulb — A nuclear lightbulb is a hypothetical type of spacecraft engine using a Fission reactor to achieve Nuclear propulsion. Specifically it would be a type of Gas core reactor rocket that separates the nuclear fuel from the coolant/propellant with a… …
9nuclear-thermoelectric rocket — noun a rocket with a thermal ion engine, whereby the ions are ionized by electricity from a nuclear reactor, and the fluid that is the source of the ions is heated by that nuclear reactor to increase specific impulse. See Also …
10nuclear-electric rocket — noun a rocket with an ion engine powered by a nuclear reactor See Also: nuclear rocket, nuclear thermal rocket, nuclear pulse rocket, electric rocket …