"Christy pit" meaning in All languages combined

See Christy pit on Wiktionary

Noun [English]

Forms: Christy pits [plural]
Etymology: Named after Canadian-American physicist Robert F. Christy, who worked on the Manhattan Project to produce the first nuclear weapons. Head templates: {{en-noun}} Christy pit (plural Christy pits)
  1. An early design of pit (core of an implosion-type nuclear weapon), used in the detonation over Nagasaki, Japan, in August 1945. Wikipedia link: Manhattan Project, Pit (nuclear weapon)#Christy pits, Robert F. Christy Related terms: Christy gadget (english: weapon design incorporating Christy pit)

Inflected forms

Download JSON data for Christy pit meaning in All languages combined (2.1kB)

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  "etymology_text": "Named after Canadian-American physicist Robert F. Christy, who worked on the Manhattan Project to produce the first nuclear weapons.",
  "forms": [
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  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "noun",
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      "examples": [
        {
          "text": "The principal insight behind the Christy pit was that a solid, subcritical core of plutonium could be compressed to criticality.",
          "type": "example"
        },
        {
          "text": "2017, Demon core, entry in Benjamin C. Garrett, Historical Dictionary of Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare, Bowman & Littlefield, 2nd Edition, page 90,\nNickname given to the Christy pit because of its association with two fatalities during hands-on Dragon Experiments; it replaced “Rufus,” an earlier nickname. The Christy pit, a solid sphere of plutonium-239, was initially fabricated as two hemispheres of an alloy of plutonium and gallium."
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{
  "etymology_text": "Named after Canadian-American physicist Robert F. Christy, who worked on the Manhattan Project to produce the first nuclear weapons.",
  "forms": [
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  "word": "Christy pit"
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-05-06 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-05-02 using wiktextract (f4fd8c9 and c9440ce). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.