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Some Related Sentences

CNO and also
Under the authority of the Secretary of the Navy, the CNO also designates naval personnel and naval resources to the commanders of Unified Combatant Commands.
CNO may also refer to:
Other less convincing theories, such as CNO cycle unbalancing and core helium flash have also been proposed as mechanisms for carbon enrichment in the atmospheres of smaller carbon stars.
The VCNO may also perform other duties that the CNO assigns to him.
Since September 1947, the CNO has held the additional position of Chief of Staff of the U. S. Navy, and he is the highest-ranking naval officer except when the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is also a U. S. Navy officer.

CNO and all
Although there are various paths and catalysts involved in the CNO cycles, simply speaking all these cycles have the same net result:
Some fraction of elements beyond helium were created in the Big Bang, as the protons and neutrons collided with each other ( lithium, beryllium, and perhaps some boron ), but all of the " heavier elements " ( heavier than carbon, element number 6 ) that we see today, were created inside of stars during a series of fusion stages, such as the proton-proton chain, the CNO cycle and the triple-alpha process.
Based on recommendations made during a comprehensive briefing by Task Force Uniform on Feb. 24 2006, CNO Michael G. Mullen agreed to production of both a BDU-style working uniform for all Sailors E-1 to O-10 and a more practical, year-round service uniform to withstand day-to-day classroom and office-like environments where the service uniform is typically worn.

CNO and other
The CNO cycle ( for carbon – nitrogen – oxygen ) is one of two sets of fusion reactions by which stars convert hydrogen to helium, the other being the proton – proton chain.
Like the other joint chiefs, the CNO is an administrative position and has no operational command authority over United States naval forces.
Boorda was the first CNO to have risen from the enlisted rates, one of only two such modern service chiefs ( the other being Air Force General Larry D. Welch ).
* other training certified by Chief of Naval Education and Training ( CNET ) or approved by the Chief of Naval Operations ( CNO ).

CNO and functions
Benson was heavily involved in defining the functions of the new CNO position and strengthening the Navy during a period marked by internal Navy Department tensions, U. S. interventions in the Caribbean and Central America, and the world war.

CNO and under
Lieutenant Commander Towers, while assigned to the aviation desk under CNO, is credited with the development of the Naval Aviators badge, which were designed and ordered in 1917.
The rail line that it operates, the Cincinnati Southern Railway, is owned by the City of Cincinnati and is leased to the CNO & TP under a long-term agreement.
-Signals Intelligence / EW tasks assigned under CNO authority ( generally afloat ) and DIRNSA ( ashore )

CNO and assigned
The Chief of Naval Operations ( CNO ) is a statutory office () held by a four-star admiral in the United States Navy, and is the most senior naval officer assigned to serve in the Department of the Navy.
The CNO reports directly to the Secretary of the Navy for the command, utilization of resources and operating efficiency of the operating forces of the Navy and of the Navy shore activities assigned by the Secretary.

CNO and by
Under typical conditions found in stellar plasmas, catalytic hydrogen burning by the CNO cycles is limited by proton captures.
The position of CNO replaced the position of Aide for Naval Operations, which was a position established by regulation rather than statutory law.
The proton – proton chain reaction is one of several fusion reactions by which stars convert hydrogen to helium, the primary alternative being the CNO cycle.
Most of the energy produced at Vega's core is generated by the carbon – nitrogen – oxygen cycle ( CNO cycle ), a nuclear fusion process that combines protons to form helium nuclei through intermediary nuclei of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen.
This problem was solved, in principle, according to Dr. Bussard by use of the stellar CNO cycle in which carbon is used as a catalyst to burn hydrogen via the strong nuclear reaction.
Hydrogen fusion can occur in a stable manner on the surface through the CNO cycle, causing the enormous amount of energy liberated by this process to blow the remaining gases away from the white dwarf's surface.
*" Arleigh Burke: The Last CNO " by David Alan Rosenberg-Biographies in Naval History-Naval Historical Center
In May 2010, the company renamed itself as CNO Financial Group, but the Conseco name was retained by the Fieldhouse.
The school was the end result of a study, published in May 1968, by USN Captain Frank Ault who, at the direction of the CNO, researched the failings of the US air to air missiles used in aerial combat in the skies over North Vietnam.
Reportedly, his term as CNO was marked by unceasing pressure for economy, Congressional unhappiness over base closings, diplomatic efforts to achieve naval limitations, internal Navy Department conflicts over organization and the best ways to manage new technologies, plus the naval fallout of the Teapot Dome scandal.
Relieved as CNO in mid-1923 by Admiral Edward W. Eberle, Coontz was able to return to sea as Commander in Chief of the U. S. Fleet.
This order commanded that the offices of the Chief of Naval Operations ( CNO ) and Commander-in-Chief, United States Fleet ( COMINCH ) would be held by a single naval officer, and Admiral King received the designation of CNO in addition to that of COMINCH.
In June 2009, the Navy's Inspector General found that the Deputy Chief of Chaplains, RDML Alan Baker, took actions which " reprised against " his former Executive Assistant during a promotion board in 2008 and was subsequently not recommended for his second star and selection to Chief of Chaplains by the CNO.
Kelso was succeeded as CNO by Admiral Jeremy M. Boorda on April 23, 1994.

CNO and duties
Upon assuming the duties of CNO, Boorda immediately re-established the historic program, naming it " Seaman to Admiral ", as part of a STA-21 initiative for young sailors to earn their commission and become naval officers.
His exact duties vary, depending on the CNO, though he generally devotes much of his time to traveling throughout the Navy observing training and talking to sailors and their families.
In the event that the Chief of Naval Operations ( CNO ) is absent or is unable to perform his duties, the VCNO assumes the duties and responsibilities of the CNO.

CNO and administration
Admiral Burke as CNO was intimately involved in the Eisenhower administration discussions of " how much is enough?
The CNO oversees the administration of recruiting, organizing, training, equipping, supplying, and mobilizing the ROK Navy .< ref >" Main Tasks of Each Troop ".

CNO and name
In December 2011, CNO Financial Group changed the name of the Fieldhouse to Bankers Life Fieldhouse, based on one of their subsidiaries, Bankers Life and Casualty.
On May 11, 2010, the board of directors officially approved changing the holding company's name to CNO Financial Group.

CNO and .
Unlike the proton – proton chain reaction, the CNO cycle is a catalytic cycle.
Theoretical models show that the CNO cycle is the dominant source of energy in stars more massive than about 1. 3 times the mass of the Sun.
A self-maintaining CNO chain starts occurring at approximately, but its energy output rises much more rapidly with increasing temperatures.
At approximately, the CNO cycle starts becoming the dominant source of energy.
The Sun has a core temperature of around and only of nuclei being produced in the Sun are born in the CNO cycle.
In the CNO cycle, four protons fuse, using carbon, nitrogen and oxygen isotopes as a catalyst, to produce one alpha particle, two positrons and two electron neutrinos.
Because of the long timescales involved, the cold CNO cycles convert hydrogen to helium slowly, allowing them to power stars in quiescent equilibrium for many years.
This cycle is now recognized as the first part of the larger CNO nuclear burning network.
In a separate capacity as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff () the CNO is a military adviser to the National Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, the Secretary of Defense, and the President.
The Chief of Naval Operations is an administrative position based in the Pentagon, and while the CNO does not have operational command authority over Naval forces as the title implies ( that is nowadays within the purview of the Combatant Commanders who report to the Secretary of Defense ), the CNO does exercise supervision of Navy organizations as the designee of the Secretary of the Navy.
The CNO is a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and is thus the principal adviser to the President of the United States, the Secretary of Defense and to the National Security Council on the conduct of naval warfare.
By statute, the CNO is appointed as a four-star admiral.
It remained the residence of the CNO until 1974, when Congress authorized its transformation to an official residence for the Vice President.
Mike Mullen | Mullen ( CNO in December 2006 ) with some of his predecessors: Vern Clark | Clark, James D. Watkins | Watkins, Thomas B. Hayward | Hayward and Jay L. Johnson | Johnson

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