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Department of the Navy

R. N. Lyon, ed., TiquidMetals Handbook, Atomic Energy Commission and Department of the Navy, Washington, D.C., 1952. [Pg.510]

MIE-STD-1629 (SHIPS), Proceduresfor Performing a Eailure Mode and Effects Mnalysisfor Shipboard Equipment, Department of the Navy, Naval Ship Engineering Center, HyattsviUe, Md., 1974. [Pg.15]

Amery, B.T. (1976), 6th Symposium on Detonation AC-R-221, Office of Naval Research, Department of the Navy, Arlington, VA, pp. 673-681. [Pg.70]

Burns, R.S. (1990) The Design, Development and Implementation of an Optimal Guidance System for Ships in Confined Waters, Proc Ninth Ship Control Systems Symposium, Naval Sea Systems Command, Department of the Navy, Bethesda, USA, 9-14 September, 3, pp. 386-401. [Pg.428]

The feasibility of using these elastomeric foams as fire retardant thermal insulation has been demonstrated by a Department of the Navy-National Bureau of Standards Test Program (54). [Pg.238]

Structures to Resist the Effects of Accidental Explosives," Department of the Army Technical Manual TM 5-1300, Department of the Navy Publication NAVFAC P-397, Department of the Air Force Manual AFM 88-22, Department of the Army, Navy and... [Pg.56]

Procedures for Performing a Failure Mode and Effect Analysis, U. S. Department of the Navy, MIL-STD-1629A (1977), Washington, DC. [Pg.197]

Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Defense Operations. Marine Corps Warfighting Publication (MCWP) 3-37 MAGTF. Washington, D.C. Department of the Navy, Headquarters United... [Pg.480]

Litton Bionetics, Inc. 1979. Mutagenicity evaluation of Otto Fuel number 2 in the Ames Salmonella/ microsome plate test. Segment report. Report by Litton Bionetics, Inc., Kensington, Maryland submitted to Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, Virginia, ADA112227. [Pg.124]

Both the Departments of the Army and the Navy have used mineral-insulated band heaters for various superheating applications. For example, the Department of the Navy uses similar equipment to test chemical stability of components within artillery shells (AEA, 2001a). In addition to high watt densities, these heaters provide even temperature profiles and fairly precise temperature control. [Pg.64]

Navy Primary and Secondary Batteries, Design and Manufacturing Guidelines, Department of the Navy, Sept 1991 p 85. [Pg.222]

We gratefully acknowledge support by the National Science Foundation (DMR 80-15318) and the Department of the Navy (N00024-81C-5301). [Pg.245]

The authors thank Victor S. Natiello for his effective assistance in obtaining the burning rate data used for this paper we acknowledge also the excellent work of C. R. Felsheim in preparing the many propellant specimens of good quality used in this program. This work was sponsored by the Power Branch, Office of Naval Research, Department of the Navy under contract NONR 1958(32). [Pg.300]

Department of the Navy F-Stoff Ger desgn for TiCl, smoke-... [Pg.784]

S. G. Hill, E. E. House, and J. T. Haggatt, Final Report Advanced Thermoplastic Composite Development Contact N 00019-77-C-0561, Naval Air Systems Command, U.S. Department of the Navy, Washington, D.C., May 1979, pp. 7—9. [Pg.278]

Received April 1, 1953. The opinions expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of the Navy. [Pg.66]

The organizers of the symposium on which this book is based acknowledge with thanks the partial support in the form of travel funds provided for 13 of the speakers under the Department of the Navy Grant N00014-80-G-0031 issued by the Office of Naval Research. [Pg.345]

The research described in this briefing was prepared for the United States Department of Energy. This research was conducted within the RAND National Security Research Division, which conducts research and analysis for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the Unified Commands, the defense agencies, the Department of the Navy, the U.S. intelligence community, allied foreign governments, and foundations. [Pg.62]

Department of the Army (DA) (1990b). Potential military chem-ical/biological agents and compounds. Field Manual FM 3-9 (NAVFAC P-467, AFR 355-7). Headquarters, Department of the Army, Department of the Navy, Department of the Air Force, Washington, DC. [Pg.62]

Defense Metals Information Center, Batelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, Ohio Department of the Navy dissolved oxygen Department of Defense (US) symbol for diphosgene (trichloro-methyichloro form ate) (CWA) direction ranging distant range Defense Research and Engineering... [Pg.784]

I shouldn t say I didn t. It did cost me a job at one time. This was when I was a statistician at the Census Bureau in Washington in 1940 or so, and I d learned about another job with the government, a job as a mathematician in the Department of the Navy, for which I applied. I was granted an interview by some Naval officers, and I was asked to wait outside, and whether this was done deliberately or not I ll never know but I overheard them in their discussion referring to me as smarty Jew. ... [Pg.304]

FIGURE 9.3. Built at Wilmington, Delaware, in 1860, this 747-ton side-wheeler was originally used for oommeroial purposes. Seized by Louisiana when war broke out in April 1861, the EUa and Annie was known to carry pharmaceutical cargoes and became one of the Confederacy s most successful blockade-runners until her capture on November 9, 1863. Photo courtesy of the Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy, Washington Navy Yard. [Pg.198]

Received May 3, 1962. Work supported by the Bureau of Naval Weapons, Department of the Navy, under NOrd 7386. [Pg.49]

On 1 September 1959, the Joint Army-Navy-Air Force Thermochemical Panel was formed under the sponsorship of the Bureau of Naval Weapons, Department of the Navy Office, Chief of Ordinance, Department of the Army Air Research and Development Command, Department of the Air Force and the Advanced Research Projects Agency, Department of Defense. The panel operated in accordance with the Rules of Operations of Solid Propellant Panels as adopted by representatives of the above offices on 1 September 1959. [Pg.4]

There are two central themes in this report the first is the belief of the authoring committee in a serious potential threat to U.S. naval forces from chemical or biological weapons the second is the fact that the Department of the Navy needs to establish a more robust defensive posture against these threats. The following brief chronologies drive these themes home. [Pg.1]

The establishment of the Department of Homeland Security and the significantly increased investment by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in medical countermeasures and vaccines are leading to increased activities in these areas, which should in turn impact the Joint CBD Program. The committee believes, however, that its recommendations remain applicable. The Department of the Navy should follow closely and leverage any such future activities to accelerate developments appropriately in the Joint CBD Program. [Pg.9]

There is, in fact, a finite number of drugs, vaccines, and antidotes available to support medical CW or BW defense. Vaccines could provide the most comprehensive defense against BW agents, but the Department of the Navy should be under no illusions that there will be a stream of effective approved vaccines (besides those for smallpox and anthrax) available in the near term to mid-term based on DOD priorities alone.5 In the absence of adequate supplies of effective vaccines, casualties must be anticipated, but observant sailors, corpsmen, clinicians, and commanders, in combination with modem diagnostic tools, will allow early medical interventions to save lives, minimize contamination and further... [Pg.12]


See other pages where Department of the Navy is mentioned: [Pg.108]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.529]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.2888]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.150 , Pg.160 ]




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