| containment |
?the structures which enclose the reactor, designed to prevent the escape of radiation from the reactor to the outside environment. Some reactors of the former Soviet Union (ie Chernobyl ?
Ãâó: www.sce.com/SC3/PowerandEnvironment/PowerGeneratio...
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| containment |
[Fire Control] A fire surrounded by a control line is considered contained. It does not mean the fire has stopped burning or is under control within the lines.
Ãâó: www.dfr.state.nc.us/glossary/glossary_c.htm
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| containment |
the doctrine put forward by George F. Kennan and adopted by the USA in March 1947 as the basis for its policy towards the USSR during the Cold War. It involved providing assistance to any government threatened by "Communist Expansionism".
Ãâó: teaching.arts.usyd.edu.au/history/hsty3080/3rdYr30...
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| containment |
The gas-tight shell or other enclosure around a reactor to confine fission products that otherwise might be released to the atmosphere in the event of an accident.
Ãâó: www-pub.naz.edu:9000/~menglis6/glossary.htm
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| containment |
The foreign policy strategy pursued by the US after WWII where it found it's first application in the Truman Doctrine of 1947. In there it stated that the US would try to stop the spread of Communism by creating alliances and helping weak countries to resist Soviet advances.
Ãâó: students.ithsnyc.org/flor2550/globalvoc2.html
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