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1 anger of nuclear war and the need to abolish nuclear weapons.
2 rrorism by potential biologic, chemical, and nuclear weapons.
3 t related to the production of plutonium for nuclear weapons.
4 kely major health consequences of the use of nuclear weapons.
5 t for efforts to bring about a world free of nuclear weapons.
6 ng a serious danger: an accidental launch of nuclear weapons.
7 s in calling for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons.
8 challenge, remaining from the production of nuclear weapons.
9 emingly unrelated issues, and a fifth, using nuclear weapons against enemy civilians (in survey 1) or
11 ix decades of efforts to limit the spread of nuclear weapons and inspired a generation of scientists
13 rtunity for their global elimination under a nuclear weapons convention arises with the current revie
14 n in support of a verifiable and enforceable Nuclear Weapons Convention would be a major contribution
15 1963 dispersed long-lived radioactivity and nuclear weapons debris including plutonium (Pu), the leg
18 om a medical perspective, the history of the nuclear weapons era since Hiroshima and the status of to
20 xhibit signatures of mixing of Chornobyl and nuclear weapons fallout, with (135)Cs/(137)Cs ratios ran
21 rms race led to a global inventory of 70,000 nuclear weapons, followed by a period of arms control th
22 es to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons is monitored through nuclear safeguards.
23 onuclides associated with legacy wastes from nuclear weapons production as well as wastes generated d
24 of remediating radioactive waste sites from nuclear weapons production has stimulated the developmen
27 tinides, most recently 239Pu from dismantled nuclear weapons, requires effective containment of waste
29 w threats include war between newly declared nuclear-weapon-states and the construction by terrorist
31 can atomic policy and British development of nuclear weapons, taking on a public role for which he wa
32 tions of (129)I are systematically above the nuclear weapon test levels at stations located close to
34 ase of (233)U (7-15 kg) from the atmospheric nuclear weapon testing and pinpointed the (233)U peak si
38 posed populations to the global fallout from nuclear weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s, due to h
40 potheses that some transients are related to nuclear weapons testing or unidentified anomalous phenom
41 hern Marshall Islands, resulting from the US nuclear weapons testing program in the 1940s and 1950s,
42 , which has varied since 1890 as a result of nuclear weapons testing, fossil fuel emissions, and CO2
45 rn due to the (129)I released by atmospheric nuclear weapon tests and with other fluences reported fo
46 the (3)H spikes from global fallout of known nuclear weapons tests to benchmark and evaluate theoreti
49 essary to reduce the large stockpiles of the nuclear weapons that constitute one of the biggest dange
50 d psychologic impact are the detonation of a nuclear weapon, the meltdown of a nuclear reactor, the e
51 is it that someone would approve of using a nuclear weapon to kill millions of enemy civilians in th
52 tal form, plutonium can be readily used in a nuclear weapon, while oxide forms are associated with nu
54 im about a highly sensitive object such as a nuclear weapon without revealing information about the o
55 ystem that could confirm the authenticity of nuclear weapons without sharing any secret design inform
56 f Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and 2) 15,264 male nuclear weapons workers who were hired at the Savannah R
57 aberrations in lymphocytes of healthy former nuclear-weapons workers who were exposed to plutonium ma