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Nonnuclear

Nonnuclear is an adjective describing something that does not involve the nucleus or nuclear processes, or that arises outside of the cell nucleus. The term is used across disciplines, and its exact meaning depends on context.

In biology, nonnuclear refers to structures or processes located outside the cell nucleus. Many cellular activities

In energy and policy contexts, nonnuclear refers to energy sources, technologies, or strategies that do not

In medicine and imaging, nonnuclear imaging modalities use non-nuclear processes. This includes magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),

Nonnuclear can be written with or without a hyphen as nonnuclear or non-nuclear; style guides vary. In

occur
in
the
cytoplasm
or
in
organelles
such
as
mitochondria
and
chloroplasts,
which
contain
their
own
DNA
and
protein
synthesis
machinery
yet
are
not
part
of
the
genomic
nucleus.
The
term
is
also
used
when
contrasting
nuclear
and
extranuclear
genomes;
for
example,
mitochondrial
and
chloroplast
genomes
are
nonnuclear.
involve
nuclear
fission,
fusion,
or
weapons-grade
materials.
Nonnuclear
energy
sources
include
solar,
wind,
hydro,
geothermal,
and
biomass,
while
nonnuclear
weapons
imply
conventional
weapons
that
do
not
rely
on
nuclear
reactions.
ultrasound,
optical
imaging,
and
X-ray–based
techniques
that
do
not
depend
on
nuclear
reactions;
nuclear
imaging
specifically
relies
on
radioactive
tracers
and
is
discussed
separately.
general,
the
term
is
used
to
emphasize
absence
of
nuclear
involvement
rather
than
to
imply
a
comprehensive
negation
of
all
nuclear-related
aspects.