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TNT, the Power Within You (with Claude Bristol; 1957) How To Turn Failure into Success (1958) How to Use the Power of Prayer (1958) How To Make ESP Work For You (1964) How to Solve Mysteries of Your Mind and Soul (1965) Wonder Healers of the Philippines (1967) Your Mysterious Powers Of ESP (1969) How to Foresee and Control Your Future (1970)
Tell No Tales is the third studio album by the Norwegian rock band TNT. It was the best-selling TNT album in the U.S., according to their bass guitarist Morty Black. [2] This album diverted from the power metal style of Knights of the New Thunder into a more glam metal direction. [3] Rock Candy Records reissused a remastered CD of the album in ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... The Best of TNT is a compilation album by Norwegian rock band TNT.
Durden, Robert F. James Shepherd Pike.Republicanism and the American Negro, 1850–1882 (Duke University Press, 1957).ISBN 0-313-20168-4; Durden, Robert F. "Pike, James Shepherd"; American National Biography Online February 2000
Quantum Mechanics (French: Mécanique quantique), often called the Cohen-Tannoudji, is a series of standard ungraduate-level quantum mechanics textbook written originally in French by Nobel laureate in Physics Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Bernard Diu [] and Franck Laloë; in 1973.
Trinitrotoluene (/ ˌ t r aɪ ˌ n aɪ t r oʊ ˈ t ɒ lj u iː n /), [5] [6] more commonly known as TNT (and more specifically 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, and by its preferred IUPAC name 2-methyl-1,3,5-trinitrobenzene), [1] is a chemical compound with the formula C 6 H 2 (NO 2) 3 CH 3.
The song's title is a reference to the explosive chemical TNT. A slightly modified line from the song, "Lock up your daughters", was used as the title of AC/DC's first headlining tour of Great Britain in 1976 after the band's move from Melbourne, Australia, to London, earlier that year.
A kiloton of TNT can be visualized as a cube of TNT 8.46 metres (27.8 ft) on a side. The "megaton (of TNT equivalent)" is a unit of energy equal to 4.184 petajoules (4.184 × 10 15 J). [3] The kiloton and megaton of TNT equivalent have traditionally been used to describe the energy output, and hence the destructive power, of a nuclear weapon.