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blast |
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blast (blast) 1. an immature stage in cellular development before appearance of the definitive characteristics of the cell; used also as a word termination (see -blast ). 2. blast cell (2). blast (blast) the wave of air pressure produced by the detonation of high-explosive bombs or shells or by other explosions; it causes pulmonary concussion and hemorrhage (lung blast, blast chest), laceration of other thoracic and abdominal viscera, ruptured eardrums, and minor effects in the central nervous system. blast, 1 a primitive cell, such as an embryonic germ cell. 2 a cell capable of building tissue, such as an osteoblast in growing bone. blast 1. an immature stage in cellular development before appearance of the definitive characteristics of the cell; used also as a word termination, as in ameloblast, etc. 2. the wave of air pressure produced by the detonation of high-explosive bombs or shells or by other explosions; it causes pulmonary damage and hemorrhage (lung blast, blast chest), laceration of other thoracic and abdominal viscera, ruptured eardrums, and effects in the central nervous system. blast cells blast noun Hematology A general term for a primitive blood cell. See Blast cell, Blast crisis. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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XCOR will provide engineering design and testing support to help Alliant Techsystems develop a heavyweight prototype version of a 7,500-pound thrust liquid oxygen/methane engine that NASA's Crew Exploration Vehicle could use for maneuvering in space or blasting off from the moon. The mechanism unfolds so quickly that the pollen experiences 800 times the gravitational force that an astronaut does blasting off in the space shuttle. Blasting off on May 6, 2004, Space Day is designed to use space-related activities, such as building models of Mars Rovers and meeting NASA astronauts, to motivate teens to go into careers in science, technology, engineering and math. |
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