double flash

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See also: double-flash

English

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Etymology

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From double +‎ flash.

Noun

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double flash (plural double flashes)

  1. The characteristic visual phenomenon produced by the atmospheric detonation of a nuclear weapon, consisting of a very brief, bright flash of light which dims rapidly, followed by a second, gradually brightening flash.
    • 2010 May, Norman Dombey, “Double Flash”, in London Review of Books[1] (blog), London: LRB Limited:
      On 22 September 1979 at about 1 a.m. GMT, a US Vela satellite passing over the South Atlantic detected a double flash of light in the vicinity of Prince Edward Island.
    • 2015 July, Eileen Patterson, “The Double Flash Meets the Bhangmeter”, in Clay Dillingham, editor, National Security Science[2], Los Alamos National Laboratory, archived from the original on 1 November 2020, page 12:
      One of the sensors on satellites in the U.S. Nuclear Detonation System uses a relatively simple device to detect the “double flash” of a nuclear detonation anywhere on earth.
    • 2019 September, William Burr, Avner Cohen, Lars-Erik De Geer, Victor Gilinsky, Sasha Polakow-Suransky, with Sokolski, Henry, Weiss, Leonard, and Wright, Christopher, “Blast From the Past”, in Jonathan Tepperman, Ravi Agrawal, Dan Ephron, Cameron Abadi, Sasha Polakow-Suransky, Kathryn Salam, Sarah Wildman, James Palmer, Benjamin Soloway, Nina Goldman, editors, Foreign Policy[3], The Slate Group:
      The detected signal was a “double flash” characteristic of nuclear test signals recorded on 41 previous occasions by Vela satellites.
  2. (engineering) A system using two flash separators to separate phases of a working fluid.

Further reading

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