Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L01024:front:0:p21
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L01024
Segment Type: other
Provision Reference: 
Character Range: 55853–58775

regions to an integration period consistent with the stated measurement period (Reference: IEEE Std 952‑1997 [R2008] or IEEE Std 1293‑1998 [R2008]).
"States not Party to the Chemical Weapon Convention" (1) are those states for which the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons has not entered into force. (See www.opcw.org)
"States Party to the Chemical Weapon Convention" (1) are those states for which the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons has entered into force. (See www.opcw.org)
"Steady state mode" (9) defines engine operation conditions, where the engine parameters, such as thrust/power, rpm and others, have no appreciable fluctuations, when the ambient air temperature and pressure at the engine inlet are constant.
"Sub‑orbital craft" (9) is a craft having an enclosure designed for the transport of people or cargo, which is designed to:
 (a) operate above the stratosphere;
 (b) perform a non‑orbital trajectory; and
 (c) land back on Earth with the people or cargo intact.
"Substrate" (3) means a sheet of base material with or without an interconnection pattern and on which or within which 'discrete components' or integrated circuits or both can be located.
Note 1: 'Discrete component': a separately packaged 'circuit element' with its own external connections.
Note 2: 'Circuit element': a single active or passive functional part of an electronic circuit, such as one diode, one transistor, one resistor, one capacitor, etc.
"Substrate blanks" (3 6) means monolithic compounds with dimensions suitable for the production of optical elements such as mirrors or optical windows.
"Sub‑unit of toxin" (1) is a structurally and functionally discrete component of a whole "toxin".
"Superalloy" (2 9) means nickel‑, cobalt‑ or iron‑base alloys having a stress rupture life greater than 1,000 hours at 400 MPa and an ultimate tensile strength greater than 850 MPa, at 922 K (649°C) or higher.
"Superconductive" (1 3 6 8 ML18 ML20) means materials, i.e., metals, alloys or compounds, which can lose all electrical resistance, i.e., which can attain infinite electrical conductivity and carry very large electrical currents without Joule heating.
Note: The "superconductive" state of a material is individually characterised by a "critical temperature", a critical magnetic field, which is a function of temperature, and a critical current density which is, however, a function of both magnetic field and temperature.
"Super‑High Power Laser" ("SHPL") (6) means a "laser" capable of delivering (the total or any portion of) the output energy exceeding 1 kJ within 50 ms or having an average or CW power exceeding 20 kW.
"Superplastic forming" (1 2) means a deformation process using heat for metals that are normally characterised by low values of elongation (less than 20%) at the