Galvanic, pitting, concentration cell, intergranular, stress cracking, Uniform etch, crevis corrosion
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The United States has the largest air force in the world, followed by Russia, China, and India. Egypt has the fifth largest air force, with an estimated 900 combat aircraft.
The Nieuport, Albatross, Sopwith Camel. Spad, and Fokker. == Many airplanes were used in WW1 and quite a few were not that common. So, my list of famous planes is quite long as it includes all types of aircraft used from 1914 to 1918. The early planes were quite popular but were eventually replaced by aircraft that had more power, performance and armament. The list includes Trainers, Bombers and Seaplanes. Avro 504 Trainer DeHaviland DH-2 and DH-4 Royal Aircraft SE 5 Nieuport 11 and 17 Albatross D-III and D-V Sopwith Type 9400 or 1-1/2 Strutter & Pup & Camel & Triplane & Snipe & Dolphine SPAD VII and XIII Fokker E-III monoplane & Dr-1 Triplane & D-VII Gotha Bomber GI thru GIV Handley Page O/400 bomber Hansa-Brandenberg W-29 seaplane/fighter Roland C-II 2-seat fighter-bomber "Whale" Bristol F2.B 2-seat Fighter, aka "Brisfit" Ansaldo S.V.A. Scout (Italy) - a great fighter that some consider better than the Fokker D-VII Siemens-Shuckert D.III - small, powerful German fighter Linkabout WW1 A/C and Aces: http://www.greatwarflyingmuseum.com/aircraft/aircraft.html
This is an impossible question to answer fully without writing a book (see Campbell's "Naval Weapons of World War II). In summary, anything and everything was used. here's a list of headings: guns (incl dual-purpose, anti-aircraft, cannon, machine guns), torpedoes, depth charges, mortars, rockets, aircraft, bombs, mines, explosive boats, suicide weapons ..... You also need to consider detection and targetting with optical, acoustic and radar devices.
July 28, 1957, Over the Atlantic Ocean - A C-124 transport aircraft that was having mechanical problems jettisoned two nuclear weapons without their fissile cores off the east coast of the United States. That is thefirst event in the list below.
If you are referring to the flight manifests for each aircraft then yes, there is a list of the men from the 82nd & 101st Airborne Divisions that landed in Holland on Sept. 17, 1944. Richard V. Horrell WW 2 Connections.com