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JP 1-02, DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms - DMRTI ...

JP 1-02, DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms - DMRTI ...

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As Amended Through 15 March 2012total mobilization — See mobilization.toxic chemical, biological, or radiological attack — An attack directed at personnel,animals, or crops, using injurious agents <strong>of</strong> chemical, biological, or radiological origin.toxic industrial biological — Any biological material manufactured, used, transported, orstored by industrial, medical, or commercial processes which could pose an infectiousor toxic threat. Also called TIB. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-11)toxic industrial chemical — A chemical developed or manufactured for use in industrialoperations or research by industry, government, or academia. For example: pesticides,petrochemicals, fertilizers, corrosives, poisons, etc. These chemicals are not primarilymanufactured for the specific purpose <strong>of</strong> producing human casualties or renderingequipment, facilities, or areas dangerous for human use. Hydrogen cyanide, cyanogenchloride, phosgene, <strong>and</strong> chloropicrin are industrial chemicals that also can be militarychemical agents. Also called TIC. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-11)toxic industrial material — A generic term for toxic or radioactive substances in solid,liquid, aerosolized, or gaseous form that may be used, or stored for use, for industrial,commercial, medical, military, or domestic purposes. Toxic industrial material may bechemical, biological, or radioactive <strong>and</strong> described as toxic industrial chemical, toxicindustrial biological, or toxic industrial radiological. Also called TIM. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-11)toxic industrial radiological — Any radiological material manufactured, used, transported,or stored by industrial, medical, or commercial processes. For example: spent fuelrods, medical sources, etc. Also called TIR. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-11)toxin — Poisonous substances that may be produced naturally (by bacteria, plants, fungi,snakes, insects, <strong>and</strong> other living organisms) or synthetically. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-11)track — 1. A series <strong>of</strong> related contacts displayed on a data display console or other displaydevice. 2. To display or record the successive positions <strong>of</strong> a moving object. 3. To lockonto a point <strong>of</strong> radiation <strong>and</strong> obtain guidance therefrom. 4. To keep a gun properlyaimed, or to point continuously a target-locating instrument at a moving target. 5. Theactual path <strong>of</strong> an aircraft above or a ship on the surface <strong>of</strong> the Earth. The course is thepath that is planned; the track is the path that is actually taken. 6. One <strong>of</strong> the twoendless belts on which a full-track or half-track vehicle runs. 7. A metal part forming apath for a moving object; e.g., the track around the inside <strong>of</strong> a vehicle for moving amounted machine gun.track correlation — Correlating track information for identification purposes using allavailable data.tracking — Precise <strong>and</strong> continuous position-finding <strong>of</strong> targets by radar, optical, or othermeans. (<strong>JP</strong> 3-07.4)<strong>JP</strong> 1-<strong>02</strong> 337

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