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NSF National Science Foundation.
3 d; ]1 E. \1 \( e! p* GNSFS Naval Surface Fire Support.
$ K. A4 m5 |: FNSG Naval Security Group.
* {, A9 C' [- x2 F- X" mNSIA National Security Industrial Association, Washington, DC.
6 P, t b9 o. E7 n) T" Y7 m8 JNSIE Network Security Information Exchange.
9 C8 R. ~9 B. t1 x, {- ]1 zNSN National Stock Number (ILS term).
7 a) R$ S+ `) ]. Z6 x, @. F1 Q4 INSNF Non-Strategic Nuclear Forces.$ {1 Y, {9 A7 V/ r5 I
NSOC (1) National Signals Intelligence Operations Center. (2) Navy Satellite! ~7 ]1 \1 ^+ A* J! P6 C
Operations Center.9 Z- G8 O0 C& @ e4 w6 N' K" y
NSP Not Separately Priced.( P/ [! V3 q0 k) S; x
NSSC National Space Surveillance Center, CMAFB.! P, Z& |7 f% S' X; `
NSSD National Security Study Directive.
- h8 R, B1 f9 H/ ~9 n+ |NSTAC National Security Telecommunications and Information System Security7 j5 C+ I, k/ b7 _8 Q- r
Committee.
7 N5 w* Z7 b1 W* vNSTC National Science and Technology Council (EOP term).' _) `) W3 }: c6 I% ^
NSWC Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, VA." }7 `7 N" d, _$ H; K7 p
NSWC/DD Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, VA.& ] @4 D# F; d0 Y0 F0 N: a
NSWC/PHL Naval Surface Weapons Center, Port Hueneme Division.7 m1 d; C9 m- A+ R. ?2 M1 j% W
NTACS Navy Tactical Air Control System.
( r) O5 L1 l! g2 NNTB National Test Bed.
1 L6 e: a" L4 k( t/ vNTB/WAN OBSOLETE. National Test Bed/Wide Area Network.# Y: g; Q, T& H: o% K
MDA GLOSSARY, VER. 4.0 N
2 M9 r" [, Q0 B, r203
% {- K8 H1 A4 D$ Q6 WNTBI OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Integration.( G7 S: U7 u/ r7 b
NTBIC OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Integration Contract.
6 J9 l4 o2 Y/ N7 M4 iNTB-JPO OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Joint Project Office.
6 Q+ M+ v: {) g; a8 @NTBN OBSOLETE. National Test Bed Network./ N3 M7 |: @( @, l
NTC National Training Center, located at Ft. Irwin, CA. A large maneuver area that- X0 a" d6 K) {+ D1 J
serves as the Army’s primary training center for Army maneuver forces. Friendly
# U3 M8 V2 ^: X' _: e' r1 ]* \- |8 Hforces are pitted against “enemy” forces to validate proposed procedures and
5 ]; J* r4 [* ~8 hdoctrine.% ? K6 C* k; {% t* K
NTIC (1) Navy Tactical Intelligence Center. (2) National Technical Information Center.# @" t; ?' a( O8 D
NTF National Test Facility.
. e$ i8 l ]% V1 qNTM National Technical Means.* Y9 |8 u6 G# D9 Q& j
NTU New Threat Upgrade.
X" H, l2 p$ ?6 rNTW OBSOLETE. Navy Theater-Wide. Now referred to as the Sea-Based Midcourse# h7 P- m6 v+ ?( ]! J! z
Segment of BMDS.
7 j A( O q: vNTWD(S) OBSOLETE. Navy Theater-Wide Defense (System).+ d" k. N7 c6 c3 g
Nuclear,6 Q2 p5 z! y8 `3 T; M7 @- x
Biological, and* ~1 q5 {4 l+ O. S1 I' k( J. _
Chemical8 F+ N2 ]7 O* j# @
Contamination( H0 R6 b& W3 `! B. u g. P4 \% W
(NBCC); @3 w* n! v5 m0 b
The deposit and/or absorption of residual radioactive material or biological or
, Q* G- q0 R/ q3 vchemical agents on or by structures, areas, personnel, or objects.
. T) P' @8 C9 u6 a•Nuclear Contamination. Residual radioactive material resulting from fallout or
8 u% z% e+ n3 U3 i! k! Arainout, and residual radiation from a system produced by a nuclear' D, n+ g v4 A3 u) m
explosion, and persisting longer than one minute after burst.- R0 K9 f) T! J; Z L+ U$ k" i7 _6 @
•Biological Contamination. Microorganisms and toxins that cause disease in
) a, @$ ~; q! U9 _2 ahumans, plants, or animals or cause deterioration of material.
" N& B* d+ S# e& j! E+ N" p/ j- J•Chemical Contamination. Chemical substances intended for use in military
1 _, q+ g9 ^$ Qoperations to kill, seriously injure, incapacitate, or temporarily irritate humans.' F3 J) i" o2 d U; Z
Nuclear,- `) [! ~; u. I" ?- J$ {; D
Biological, and
! x) M$ p8 W1 n- f( F Q6 e3 n# WChemical
* e/ A% R! _. T( f `1 O) nContamination! M7 K D/ S& s8 ?1 q. p
Survivability
# l/ m, x5 m) Q% S! A N4 {2 pThe capability of a system and its crew to withstand a NBCC environment and
# b$ D, p7 p' l/ drelevant decontamination without losing the ability to accomplish the assigned9 m: p2 W; V% ~& R7 ?* k
mission. A NBCC survivable system is hardened against NBCC and% O$ L, W0 D2 W# Y( R3 V
decontaminates; it can be decontaminated, and it is compatible with individual0 C, c0 m, }$ P- j, D) `
protective equipment.+ x) n1 l0 v W2 H
•Hardness. The capability of material to withstand the materiel -damaging
9 B0 Z5 m9 K9 u8 W; u6 g9 peffects of NBCC and relevant decontamination.6 F- |* C+ U6 n( l
•Decontamination. The process of making personnel and materiel safe by
; N& I) `& ]% drendering harmless or removing radioactive, chemical, or biological material.
- |& m: u/ A8 W: v; B, }•Compatibility. The capability of a system to be operated, maintained, and resupplied by persons wearing individual protective equipment, in all climates
" Q/ o- y. I" Q! |- Ufor which the system is designed, and for the period specified in the
/ E. \- b( `& G) G. Koperational requirements document.
. |# {' \( g q6 U$ @% m8 P' y9 GNuclear Cloud See Radioactive Cloud.7 B$ s4 x- M8 ^
Nuclear Directed
! A1 G. m2 j ]% p# g' `1 n/ ZEnergy Weapon4 d& z4 M5 C& `0 w
(NDEW)
# e2 Z% S! d! o! W/ @A directed energy weapon for which the source of energy is a specially designed, ]4 V6 L8 h8 D. e. o
nuclear device.
* ^" W# @8 T7 O" Q# {# VMDA GLOSSARY, VER. 4.0 N% w. T8 Q1 J+ s0 g
2040 _8 L7 ` K7 a- I( _
Nuclear6 a7 } }3 B5 s: c) R3 m* m% a& `
Environment* C8 [' {0 }& e! h3 r7 T" W6 A
The environment, which results from the detonation of nuclear weapons. Some e8 X7 ^' b5 L, j# H0 ~9 N
components of this environment are directly emitted by the nuclear weapon and
) Q% m2 t7 J! n$ Z# Z+ o4 G: fother collateral effects are created by the interaction of the emitted nuclear3 f8 M3 c* T4 P. j) r" C
radiation with the earth’s atmosphere, the earth’s surface and the earth’s
- Q( p, K ]# L# s; wmagnetic field. The nuclear environment consists of radiation, blast, shock,
7 ]( K( `1 ^2 G& t5 y3 R. P% nthermal, electromagnetic pulse (EMP), emissions from radioactive debris, trapped
4 q; C' j7 I" ~6 z% [electrons, and disturbances to the atmosphere and to the propagation paths for$ J$ f, ]& V& }3 A: x
radar and communications. The nuclear environment exists in the
0 I! a2 L$ |! b8 u8 A- Sexoatmospheric, atmospheric and ground BMD operational regimes.
. J/ y/ \0 ^6 A/ K8 `/ Y8 hNuclear0 {0 a) y' k2 T2 T2 Z( K
Hardness$ C' G. n' O# ^* m: K
A quantitative description of the resistance of a system or component to5 E' J3 ^! G3 P V0 Y0 S
malfunction (temporary and permanent) and/or degraded performance induced/ v$ m; m% R: K+ _
by a nuclear weapon environment. Resistance to physical quantities such as' l7 |2 X. T* C
overpressure, peak velocities, energy absorbed, and electrical stress measures
6 `7 u# D- V7 @hardness. Hardness is achieved through adhering to appropriate design( X6 E6 F& G: W& N$ i
specifications and is verified by one or more test and analysis techniques.- v- b3 |; f3 {" ]( i% k# E
Nuclear! e* T& j( W" T4 [8 `7 j
Radiation# N' i$ z) z, k2 O: {) i+ N* q
Particulate and electromagnetic radiation emitted from atomic nuclei in various
6 T9 ~; `) z5 d- @: k8 `. ]& Nnuclear processes. The important nuclear radiations, from the weapons standpoint, are alpha and beta particles, gamma rays, and neutrons. All nuclear, p: C2 {0 m' _% C( n% F
radiations are ionizing radiations, but the reverse is not true; x-rays, for example,$ @' `! c9 i f* U; `, @, D2 Z
are included among ionizing radiations, but they are not nuclear radiations since
~8 J z8 O. B2 _% }4 R. Wthey do not originate from atomic nuclei. (See Ionizing Radiation and X-Rays.) |
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