steady-state poisoning

  • 111Carbon nanotube — Not to be confused with Carbon fiber. Part of a series of articles on Nanomaterials Fullerenes …

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  • 112Orca — Taxobox name = Orca status = LR/cd | status system = IUCN2.3 status ref = image caption = Transient Orcas near Unimak Island, eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska image width = 250px image2 caption = Size comparison against an average human regnum =… …

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  • 113Ozone depletion — Image of the largest Antarctic ozone hole ever recorded (September 2006) Ozone depletion describes two distinct but related phenomena observed since the late 1970s: a steady decline of about 4% per decade in the total volume of ozone in Earth s… …

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  • 114Alprazolam — Alprazolam …

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  • 115César Franck — The title of this article contains the character é. Where it is unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as Cesar Franck. César Franck, photographed by Pierre Petit César Auguste Jean Guillaume Hubert Franck (10 December 1822 – 8… …

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  • 116Neon sign — …

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  • 117Crisis management — is the process by which an organization deals with a major event that threatens to harm the organization, its stakeholders, or the general public. The study of crisis management originated with the large scale industrial and environmental… …

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  • 118Nuclear reactor physics — See also: Critical mass Nuclear reactor physics is the branch of science that deals with the study and application of chain reaction to induce controlled rate of fission for energy in reactors. Most nuclear reactors use a chain reaction to induce …

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  • 119nuclear weapon — an explosive device whose destructive potential derives from the release of energy that accompanies the splitting or combining of atomic nuclei. [1945 50] * * * or atomic weapon or thermonuclear weapon Bomb or other warhead that derives its force …

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  • 120technology, history of — Introduction       the development over time of systematic techniques for making and doing things. The term technology, a combination of the Greek technē, “art, craft,” with logos, “word, speech,” meant in Greece a discourse on the arts, both… …

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