How to use in-sentence of “nuclear”:
+ USS “Ronald Reagan” is a nuclear reactornuclear-powered naval ship in the service of the United States Navy.
+ Many countries have tested nuclear weapons.
+ Nevertheless, they have taken steps to increase their political cooperation, mainly as a way of influencing the United States position on major trade accords, or, through the implicit threat of political cooperation, as a way of extracting political concessions from the United States, such as the proposed nuclear cooperation with India.
+ A peak was reached in 2002 when there were 444 nuclear reactors operating.
+ He was well known for his many publications and summer-school lectures in nuclear and particle physics, as well as his widely used graduate text on classical electromagnetism.
+ This resulted in the United States dropping two nuclear bombatomic bombs over Hiroshima.
+ It talked about nuclear reactions inside stars, showing how these reactions tear apart blocks of matter and put it together again differently.

Example sentences of “nuclear”:
+ The strong nuclear force keeps the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
+ Phosphoric acid with a certain isotope of phosphorus is used for nuclear magnetic resonance.
+ The fear of nuclear proliferation influences some international nuclear energy policies.
+ In 2007, nuclear power plants made some 2600 TWh of electricity and provided 14 percent of the electricity used in the world, which represented a fall of 2 per cent compared with 2006.
+ Iraq had done research in making biological and nuclear weapons.
+ According to some public health experts, the health impact of nuclear fallout from the Fukushima nuclear disaster is under-estimated.
+ Most nuclear fuels contain heavy “fissile” elements which to undergo a nuclear fission chain reaction in a nuclear reactor.
+ Today, the United States and Russia have the most nuclear weapons.
+ There is a debate about the use of nuclear power.
+ Nuclear bombs also release fallout, which is nuclear material and dust that has been irradiated and become radioactive.
+ The strong nuclear force keeps the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
+ Phosphoric acid with a certain isotope of phosphorus is used for nuclear magnetic resonance.
+ The fear of nuclear proliferation influences some international nuclear energy policies.
+ A nuclear family is a part of an extended family.
+ Power in nuclear warfare.
+ In January 2011, five Japanese young people held a hunger strike for more than a week, outside the Prefectural Government offices in Yamaguchi, YamaguchiYamaguchi, to protest site preparation for the planned Kaminoseki Nuclear Power Plant near the environmentally sensitive Seto Inland Sea.
+ The process is called somatic cell nuclear transfer.
+ Because of the nuclear war the world was radiated very badly.
+ In the new Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union were enemies and each had many nuclear weapons, but they did not dare to use them against each other, either directly or by attacking the other country’s allies.
+ A near meltdown at the nuclear plant becomes the focus of an October surprise for Republican nominee Senator Arnold Vinick during the 2006 presidential election, due to Vinick’s strong pro-nuclear stance and revelations of his active lobbying for the construction of the plant.
+ The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons is a global civil society group working to support and promote the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
More in-sentence examples of “nuclear”:
+ The nucleus is actually held together by another force known as the strong nuclear force.
+ It was rated at level 7, the most severe level, on the International Nuclear Event Scale.
+ The nucleus is actually held together by another force known as the strong nuclear force.
+ It was rated at level 7, the most severe level, on the International Nuclear Event Scale.
+ In 1969, the Lucens reactor, an underground nuclear reactor started operation in Lucens.
+ This causes the nuclear reaction to stop.
+ Torness nuclear power station was the last of the United Kingdom’s second generation nuclear powernuclear power stations to be commissioned.
+ Most large modern military submarines are powered by nuclear reactors.
+ He was known for working in nuclear physics and elementary particle physics.
+ The Chernobyl disaster was a nuclear disaster which occurred on April 26, 1986 at the Chernobyl power plantnuclear power plant in Pripyat, Ukraine.
+ Scientists from Joint Institute for Nuclear Research proposed the name “Becquerelium” in honour of french physicist Henri Becquerel.
+ An ion thruster needs electricity to run, so the spacecraft has to also carry solar panels or a nuclear reactor.
+ Most large submarines get power from nuclear reactors inside them.
+ Countries around the world who already have their own bombs include Britain, France, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea; as all kinds of technology tend to become cheaper and easier to get and use, there is a fear that nuclear weapons could become available to countries with unstable governments.
+ Countries could venture into nuclear energy production to help meet the rising energy demand, to help conserve the environment by avoiding air pollution, and also as a long lasting replacement for the depleting fossil fuels sources of energy, but would have to ensure the ongoing safety of production and waste storage.
+ The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty is a 1987 agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union.
+ In 1986, a nuclear meltdown occurred in a place named Chernobyl accidentChernobyl.
+ The other way nuclei can change is through nuclear fusion, when two nuclei join together, or fuse, to make a heavier nucleus.
+ There is “no obvious sign that the international nuclear industry could eventually turn empirically evident downward trend into a promising future”, and the Fukushima nuclear disaster is likely to accelerate the decline.
+ That very discovery of Fermi’s led to the development of the first nuclear bomb code-named ‘Trinity’.
+ Beams with even higher energies can be used to create nuclei at very high temperatures, and there are signs that these experiments have produced a phase transition from normal nuclear matter to a new state, the quark-gluon plasma, in which the quarks mingle with one another, rather than being segregated in triplets as they are in neutrons and protons.
+ This was nuclear transmutation, changing nitrogen gas into oxygen gas.
+ The United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs aims to control nuclear technology and nuclear hardware; foster commercial relations with foreign nations; and safeguard American business abroad.
+ In this episode, Bart catches a three-eyed fish in a river downstream of the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant.
+ He works as a Safety Inspector at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant.
+ Most people think that is why Iran was willing to promise to change how it used nuclear material in order to end these rules.
+ Some of the incidents in the early nuclear age were not well documented or were kept secret.
+ Jürgen Trittin, the Minister of Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety, reached an agreement with energy companies on the gradual shut down of the country’s nineteen nuclear power plants and a cessation of civil usage of nuclear power by 2020.
+ Although both mitochondrionmitochondrial and the cell nucleus may have DNA damage, nuclear DNA is the main subject of this analysis.
+ It especially wanted to limit nuclear weapons in these countries.
+ His presidency helped modernise the country through his creation and growth of TGV and support of nuclear power as France’s main energy source.
+ Organisations such as Global Zero, an international non-partisan group of 300 world leaders dedicated to achieving nuclear disarmament, have also been established.
+ The strong and weak interactions are forces at the smallest distances and explain nuclear interactions.
+ In 1937, GermanyGerman chemist Otto Hahn became the first person to create nuclear fission in a laboratory.
+ The two countries would get along and sign treaties that would limit the production of nuclear weapons between both sides.
+ There were 4.4 million households that had their electricity supply cut off, including 11 nuclear power plants.
+ The most famous image from the movie was of an American pilot sitting on a nuclear bomb as it fell to earth from an airplane.
+ This was the world’s first recorded nuclear fission reaction.
+ String theory tries to mathematical modelmodel the four known fundamental interactions—gravitation, electromagnetism, strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force—together in one theory.
+ Other experimental observations can be explained by combining the overall expansion of space with nuclear physics and atomic physics.
+ It carried the United Kingdom’s first nuclear weapon, called “Blue Danube”.
+ Hitachi is involved with small electrical items and large-scale projects, including one of the nuclear reactors at the Fukushima nuclear power plant.
+ Ouchi was reported to have received 17 sieverts of radiation, Shinohara 10 sv and Yokokawa 3 sv; 8 sieverts is considered a fatal dose, and 50 milli sieverts is the maximum limit of annual dose allowed for Japanese nuclear workers.
+ They make it to the nuclear power plant in Berlin.
+ They claim they detected nuclear fission tracks in a special type of glass with a microscope showing that a new element was there.
+ The discovery of Flerovium in December 1998 was reported in January 1999 by scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia.
+ Date is about 60km north-west of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
+ The United Kingdom’s nuclear weapons are controlled by the Royal Navy.
+ Containment systems for nuclear power reactors are distinguished by size, shape, materials used, and suppression systems.
+ The term “nuclear meltdown” is commonly used by the public and by news media, but nuclear engineers usually refer to it as a core melt accident.
+ A nuclear meltdown is sometimes called the “China syndrome”, which refers to a scenario, not meant to be taken literally, where a reactor core could melt through the Earth “all the way to China”.
+ The four have created the Nuclear Security Project to advance this agenda.
