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jet |
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jetIn earth science, hard, black variety of lignite, a type of coal. It is cut and polished for use in jewellery and ornaments. Articles made of jet have been found in Bronze Age tombs. JETResearch facility at Culham, near Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England, that conducts experiments on nuclear fusion. Opened in 1984, it is the focus of the European effort to produce a safe and environmentally sound fusion-power reactor. On 9 November 1991, the JET tokamak, operating with a mixture of deuterium and tritium, produced a 1.7 megawatt pulse of power in an experiment that lasted two seconds. In 1997, isotopes of deuterium and tritium were fused to produce a record 21 megajoule of nuclear fusion power. JET has tested the first large-scale plant of the type needed to process and supply tritium in a future fusion power station. On 1 January 2000, the European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA) took over the operation of the JET machine. Future work at JET will pave the way for a new European fusion reactor to be built at Cadarache in southern France and expected to begin operation in 2016. jet
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9 SHANK G ANHYDROUS APPLICATOR N/A G 14 shank NH3 applicator, Blue Jet valve N/A F 12R NH3 12-knive applicator N/A G NH3 bar N/A G NH3 bar N/A E 13 or 17 knife NH3 bar, spring shank, coulters N/A F 28% NH3, PT, Dickey John monitor N/A G 12R-30 NH3 applicator, Raven 440 monitor Condition ratings: E=Excellent, G=Good, F=Fair, P=Poor; Location sold: NCIL = north-central Illinois, etc. Scientists say the rare gigantic jets are part of Earth's global electric circuit--which includes the ground, thunderstorms, the ionosphere, blue jets, and even exotic forms of electricity called "sprites" and "elves" (see below). One scientist presented calculations that showed that a single blue jet, which lasts one-tenth of a second produces more nitric oxide than any other source does in a year. |
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