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NSF National Science Foundation.
4 ]4 C2 g" L- L0 s* }NSFS Naval Surface Fire Support.
7 L" s& ^. r7 tNSG Naval Security Group.' I2 }3 m4 t# D9 T- x
NSIA National Security Industrial Association, Washington, DC.
8 p/ ~1 s2 Q8 e. Q1 h" T/ GNSIE Network Security Information Exchange.4 V; X6 l, x8 ?+ H5 y4 R S1 N
NSN National Stock Number (ILS term).3 @6 m- ?, n! z% v7 ]
NSNF Non-Strategic Nuclear Forces.2 n( t1 l( [& C$ \
NSOC (1) National Signals Intelligence Operations Center. (2) Navy Satellite
9 ]$ j! v3 K2 e5 A7 L6 tOperations Center.6 f3 m6 I* j; A1 w/ q9 ?
NSP Not Separately Priced.
/ v# ^: H c+ ^; b( M* WNSSC National Space Surveillance Center, CMAFB.0 d* i2 I8 f u# m3 L2 J+ I
NSSD National Security Study Directive.- W' d& x. K* W
NSTAC National Security Telecommunications and Information System Security* C$ g0 E0 D, ~' R: h: C- m
Committee.( t. p2 M/ b9 }7 f) @
NSTC National Science and Technology Council (EOP term).
4 W3 e0 A& v& L$ ~& _5 A' ?NSWC Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, VA.
& b9 q7 @0 V# O) @# ^NSWC/DD Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, VA.* c: T) f A* U7 _' Y
NSWC/PHL Naval Surface Weapons Center, Port Hueneme Division.& @" t' j; e7 d$ [ k \
NTACS Navy Tactical Air Control System.
3 L' \. w/ v: t% cNTB National Test Bed.
% X5 T/ b2 i9 T9 [0 i t2 W6 WNTB/WAN OBSOLETE. National Test Bed/Wide Area Network.
1 E; x7 V% o+ b6 w. ]. ~' C1 zMDA GLOSSARY, VER. 4.0 N2 V5 q8 _5 ^) o( h1 j+ I, I
203( d! {6 a2 V. ?* M* i7 ~% B
NTBI OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Integration.2 Q# k3 ]) ]" N5 s% c
NTBIC OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Integration Contract.% m* V; [! F) V& \4 V% Z* A. ~: q
NTB-JPO OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Joint Project Office." k( i5 | ]6 {
NTBN OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Network.
% I/ y% q' d" j& W' V$ u* WNTC National Training Center, located at Ft. Irwin, CA. A large maneuver area that: p) ^( R) S' O: L, I8 S9 y' P h/ y
serves as the Army’s primary training center for Army maneuver forces. Friendly
% v3 n/ x" d' W2 x3 Bforces are pitted against “enemy” forces to validate proposed procedures and
) r# G6 \. `) J0 Qdoctrine.
& @1 o d! H: o: M# R* cNTIC (1) Navy Tactical Intelligence Center. (2) National Technical Information Center.6 x- a! d a3 Q5 G( ?
NTF National Test Facility.: z+ o. a* J: R" j
NTM National Technical Means./ ~; R* `9 L/ M/ O* Y) _: a
NTU New Threat Upgrade.
! m1 n) k* d2 C* X) J- DNTW OBSOLETE. Navy Theater-Wide. Now referred to as the Sea-Based Midcourse" O3 k" b# _. e8 H! [
Segment of BMDS.5 n; U- `( Y7 D5 p$ v: {2 v5 C/ B% j
NTWD(S) OBSOLETE. Navy Theater-Wide Defense (System).
$ m5 i" E# Y- p( V1 A1 sNuclear,+ M* i$ M, F3 q# h" _
Biological, and" Z: [* }( [' K* c, n
Chemical; x2 o6 b! r9 t1 ~
Contamination
& K; y, }; n) F7 T. D" p, R8 K(NBCC)& o$ `" d9 z2 T
The deposit and/or absorption of residual radioactive material or biological or
) X. P7 I% N1 v- u( w, B8 nchemical agents on or by structures, areas, personnel, or objects.
6 B' k' S2 C+ {5 q•Nuclear Contamination. Residual radioactive material resulting from fallout or
" M% _: `( ], F8 urainout, and residual radiation from a system produced by a nuclear
a1 G- ~& z+ F5 iexplosion, and persisting longer than one minute after burst.* B/ b! S5 y; T+ m; }
•Biological Contamination. Microorganisms and toxins that cause disease in
\' u8 ^; A$ a! Lhumans, plants, or animals or cause deterioration of material.
6 {% S( g: M/ u9 r( F•Chemical Contamination. Chemical substances intended for use in military
# t3 i6 u' P* J- o5 [operations to kill, seriously injure, incapacitate, or temporarily irritate humans.* J1 y/ l5 z" [% M
Nuclear,
^, g, d6 Q4 v: ]! EBiological, and2 M2 y3 n& s0 m( m
Chemical. {( R! w0 D8 s% ?" B; t( R
Contamination
' \) L' ]. h! R8 CSurvivability* D+ [* Z6 E$ z+ Z
The capability of a system and its crew to withstand a NBCC environment and/ p) X. L: L7 [# u" ]" u
relevant decontamination without losing the ability to accomplish the assigned$ o3 Y! O5 P' f" R
mission. A NBCC survivable system is hardened against NBCC and
9 _. d" h( C8 I* k% c8 @decontaminates; it can be decontaminated, and it is compatible with individual6 C9 x H: ?# K
protective equipment.* z0 d2 I* K" z q( L* ?0 A
•Hardness. The capability of material to withstand the materiel -damaging
8 g8 y( j/ i" l {1 {effects of NBCC and relevant decontamination.
9 @5 ?( X a8 W•Decontamination. The process of making personnel and materiel safe by
6 C- M$ \ y% ~' W8 Jrendering harmless or removing radioactive, chemical, or biological material.$ O, d! H8 X& o1 b
•Compatibility. The capability of a system to be operated, maintained, and resupplied by persons wearing individual protective equipment, in all climates) ]; {6 h/ j7 P2 O
for which the system is designed, and for the period specified in the& [+ Z! H. Z1 v$ Y3 t2 m
operational requirements document.% g! S: h, e8 S
Nuclear Cloud See Radioactive Cloud.
% R1 S2 F' X1 jNuclear Directed
1 t* @% H! \; i5 oEnergy Weapon
1 P& A5 S; S, ^! ~(NDEW)2 f+ h, h# a& D9 i/ Y
A directed energy weapon for which the source of energy is a specially designed& M2 z5 r9 P! ?: n2 v: Y
nuclear device.
1 R! s3 c K. ?0 UMDA GLOSSARY, VER. 4.0 N
6 A( k6 P) D) P) J/ G204
& L$ r% R4 u' ?* p' y% @8 \0 A0 pNuclear
7 F+ y H* o) ^* q$ i+ zEnvironment
+ N5 H. z+ u3 ?0 V# MThe environment, which results from the detonation of nuclear weapons. Some% H+ K& T. [$ J( z9 o
components of this environment are directly emitted by the nuclear weapon and
2 h$ [2 F$ y/ yother collateral effects are created by the interaction of the emitted nuclear
$ ?3 s7 s, l. ?2 }) gradiation with the earth’s atmosphere, the earth’s surface and the earth’s
- o3 P" T1 }$ ~1 Zmagnetic field. The nuclear environment consists of radiation, blast, shock,
; @8 z3 q, Y. p6 V, a" k3 s" Bthermal, electromagnetic pulse (EMP), emissions from radioactive debris, trapped
* S0 K& p% z# M. Q" b7 a/ `electrons, and disturbances to the atmosphere and to the propagation paths for2 k. P4 O: Y( n- U, o: T
radar and communications. The nuclear environment exists in the' C; O1 G4 Y& b1 a4 _/ x" u4 h
exoatmospheric, atmospheric and ground BMD operational regimes.
/ e+ x5 F- C! U4 ^, XNuclear% [; A( H: {; r2 d- c# F
Hardness. P+ S Q7 T4 j( E6 y; P
A quantitative description of the resistance of a system or component to
- Q% ] l+ o8 N# }" kmalfunction (temporary and permanent) and/or degraded performance induced
8 g. v, S0 l2 f/ Cby a nuclear weapon environment. Resistance to physical quantities such as3 H) n" v6 W( N& g9 L
overpressure, peak velocities, energy absorbed, and electrical stress measures
- K v w8 ^4 R3 k! U" g7 hhardness. Hardness is achieved through adhering to appropriate design
" q% E& i) Y8 I8 |: u7 Zspecifications and is verified by one or more test and analysis techniques.
0 T& ]/ J$ Q3 p. `6 ENuclear
9 g9 f6 A6 i; G& M( Z5 W, _( R6 ]Radiation
, N# O. \( z P& D3 Z O9 [Particulate and electromagnetic radiation emitted from atomic nuclei in various
5 v6 R8 E. n5 p! U7 b+ P9 P6 N$ nnuclear processes. The important nuclear radiations, from the weapons standpoint, are alpha and beta particles, gamma rays, and neutrons. All nuclear: w$ ~8 I+ m9 [, ^; R+ L
radiations are ionizing radiations, but the reverse is not true; x-rays, for example,, m$ x& k3 h$ ^+ g, U5 d
are included among ionizing radiations, but they are not nuclear radiations since
5 d$ ?% Y; B* b6 p5 ?+ b3 Lthey do not originate from atomic nuclei. (See Ionizing Radiation and X-Rays.) |
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