SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT LUTSYSHIN, A. S. - LVOV, S. N.
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86-00513R002201830005-0
Release Decision:
RIF
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
99
Document Creation Date:
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 19, 2001
Sequence Number:
5
Case Number:
Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
Content Type:
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002201830005-0.pdf | 3.74 MB |
Body:
USSR UDC: 550-837
VAMtSYJY, A. A., KAMMKIY, F. M., LABZHINSKIY, S~. I. ohs
~u e 00tillswo
MZYTJK, L. Ya., TIPOF=, V. M., YAKMVSKIY, Yu. V.,., Insr'It e 0 S2
Mechanics, AcademW of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR
"A Device for Aerogeoelectric Prospecting"
Moscov, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, Proqrshleanyye Obraztsy, Toyarnyye Zhaki,
No 9, Mar 72, Author's Certificate No 332356, Division G, filed 32 Hay 69,
published T Mar 72, p 144
Translation: ThiB Author's Ceetificate introduces a device for aerogeo-
electric prospecting by the method of transient proceoses. Ule device con-
sists of a current Puse generator vhich contains a source of direct current,
a master multivibrator, a frequency divider, a power waplifTer, a current
commutator and an oscillator tank circuit; and a meta,~'r which contains a
receiving tank circuit, a preamplifier, a Igating module, oji accumulator,
a DC amplifier, a registration unit, and a circuit f~~r control and synchro-
nization of the gating module. As a distinguishing feature of the device,
interference. suppression is improved, the,measurement: error is reduced and
the stability of compensation of transient processes caitzed by the conduc-
1/2
USSR
VAKULISKIY, A. A. et al., USSR Author's Certificate Ito 331356
tive fuselage of the aircraft is increased by connecting coincidence gates
in the current pulse generator batveen~the frequency divider and power 8=li-
fier. Some inputs of the coincidence gates are connected to the output of
the master multivibrator, and the other inputs are connected to the outputs
of the frequency divider. A band filter is connected in the meter between
the preamplifier and the gating modulei and a secondary gating block is
connected between the pulse amplifier and the DC amplifier. The secondary
gating block is connected to the control and synchronization circuit, ard
is made in the form of pariLlIel- connected compensation and measurement strobe
pulse multivibrators which are connected through a broad strobe pulse shaping
multivibrator to the primary gating module. Multivibrators for delay and
shaping of narrow strobe pulses fare connected] to cofricidence gates with
some inputs connected to the outputs of, the oscillatai~ frecluency divider,
while the other inputs are connected to the multivibr#or for shaping narrow
strobe pulses, and the outputs of these coincidence g4tes are connected to
the secondary gating block.
2/2
UDC 550.637.73
USSR
X&MENLTSKIY, F. M., YAKL'BOVSKIY, YU- V-, DLIZYUK, L. Y,!~., ~J~' 'I'SKIY, A. A. ,
TMOFEYEV, V. H.. KWAGONOV, P- P., LUt$Y 11-A. S., IIOYKD, V.
"Device for Inductive Aeroelectric Exploration by the Transient Process
0 aVve a Tovarnae Z-. 'J, YO 10"
M
scow. Otkrvtiva, Izobretenlya, Promyshlen
- ObrazIp
811ay 70, p 61, Patent No 270123, Filed 19 Apr 65
Translation: 1. This Author's Certificate intrQduces.a dev:ica for inductiv'L
aeroelectric exploration by the transient process method. The device cozipZiocz,
a pulse generator, a generator circuit, a receiving element, a control vnit,
amplifiers, commutators, storage elements, and a recoTding un--.'t. It is dis-
tinguished by the fact that in order to Improve the neilseproofness of tra--,.:~icnt
process measurements in flight, the generator circuit is executed In t'.-.c fol-.3
of a system made up of the basic generator circuit placed between the aircrzft
-and the receiving element at equal distances from both and zwo auxiliary c1r-
cuits arranged one directly on the hull of the aircra~c and the other, on 6~,e
case of the receiving element.
2. A second device like item I is introduced, but Lz is dis,ia
by the fact that in order to obtain the required power in the basic ga4izrator
circuit directly from the lad-voltage ai-board metworjr and also to incr4!at;e
tho steepness of tho pulse fronts, 04 b4alc Agntratoir circlAt in 4xacutcd Jn
."ON:
MWETSKIY _ytiya, Izobreteniya, PrirmvsjIorrvve ObL
F. M.,et al., Otkr
Toyarnyve 2nald, No 16. 8 May 70, Patent No 1670123, Filed 19 Apr 65
the form of several sections co=uted by individual awitchea with a co=zoii
Control circuit.
ij
USSR UDC. S39.311
LUTSYSHIN, R, M., KUL-CHITSKIY,. L. 0., 'Drogobych
"Bending of a Strip with a Curved Crack"
Kiev, Prikladnaya Mickhanika, Vol 18, No 8, Aug 73, pp 76-82.
Abstract: The stress-strain state of a strip (beam) with an "overlapping"
crack in the form of a circular arc is studied. The ~strip is loaded by dis-
tributed forces and bending moments at the ends, the friction between the
edges of the crack is not considered. Conditions are produced for determina-
tion of critical loads. As an illustrationh the distribution curves of
stresses along the circle of the crack -are presented.
I f 2 020 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE-160CT70
-ITLE--CONTACT PROBLEM FOR A PLATE:WEAKENEU BY A CORVILINEAR SLIT -U-
.,i,_AUTHOR--LUTSYSHIN, R.M.
~,`~,,_COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
R pe 93-98
~."SOURCE-PRIKLADNAIA MEKHANIKAt VOL. 6v MA 1970t
0 AT EPUBLISHED---MAR70
-_MECH.s INDst CIVIL AND MARINE ENGRi PHYSICS
,.,SUBJECT AREAS
,:'-TOPIC TAGS-STRUCTURE FORMt PLATE STRUCTUREP ISOTROPIC PROPERTYP STRAINt
STRESS
,,:-,CONTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
.DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
-.PROXY REEL/FRAME-1995/0870 STEP NO--UR/0198170/006/000/0093/0098
--c-IRC-ACCES-SION
212 020 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--16OCT70
CIRC ACCESSION '40--AP0116380
--ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-Q- ABSTRACT. DISCUSSION 01: AN INFINITE
ISOTROPIC PLATE WEAKENED BY A CURVILINEAR SLITv 114 THE CASE WHERE THE
EDGES.OF THE SLIT ARE IN CONTACT AT THE SLIT TIPS DUE TO THE Acrioti OF A
~GIVEN?LOAD AT.INFINITY. THE STRESS STRAIN STATE OF THE PLATE AND THE
~.,-.~.':CONXACT STRESSES AT THE TIPS OF THE SLIT ARE DETERMINED. THE SOLUTION
.08TAINED-IS ANALYZED. FACILITY. LIVOVSKII GOtUDARSTVENNYI
'UNIVEkSITET,,LVQV9 UKRAINIAN SSR.
- Z- -! ,:~;~ -- -. .,- I --r-T-T
LkCL4SSIFIEC F;~CCFSSINIG CAT;-:--Q3JUL7C
4T
E CT CF.FCLIC ACIC, -ETC TR E XO, I EANE ThYPIKE CF SYNTHESIS CF
A T I P'C Cl E5. -.L-
lk--;-LETS* L IV of!
LTFG Y KIP
,- :~'CCLN -F,Y C F, INFC--L
S C L C f- U K R A Y N SK I Y I C K F I V I G F N I Y L h U R.r% A L19 7 CVCL 42, Nv, 1, PP 12-15
E~t f EF L & L I SE C- - - - - - -7C
-SLEJ FCT AREAS-PICI-CGICAL AND VEOIC.41. SCIENCES
TCPIC 7AGS--PFAklvfCCLCGYt ANTIeCOYt F-10CFE'llISTRY
C C ti T R C LlktFi\I~C--hC FESTI~TCTIONS
DCLUMEN'T CLAI-S--U%CLASSI~I~D
'PIZCXY PELL/ f-RAPi C-1 ;79/0744
STEP KC--LR/C30C/70/t~42/CGI/0012/CO15
C pC
Ref. Code:
Ace. Nrt
AP0047237
PRIMARYSOURCE: Ukraynalkiy Biokhimichniy Zhurnal, 1970,,
Vol 42, Ur 10 pp
EFFECT Of FOLICACID, ME-TOTREXATE AND THYMINE
OF SYNTHESIS OF kNTIBODIES
M. ~. L~'isyu
Department of Biochem istrL?Aedical jn~!itute, Kursk
S~mmary
The influence of folic acid deficit as well as the effect of its anfirnelabolite-
metotrexate and thymine were studie& on the synthois of hemolysins, incomplete
antibody and V-iki, V-C-agglutinini in albino rats and inice immunized bv means of
ram erythrocytes. It is esCablished that wilh.deficit of folic acid c,,%used I)v 11s exclusion
from food or by administration of melotr"ato the syntluisis of all kinds' of anfibodie-q
particularly of y-G-agglutinins sliarply lowers. Intro ucing melotrexate to the animals
after immunization decreases disfincly the level of 1-IG-immunoglobulin formation,
without noticeably affecting the total serological activity of sera. The parenteral admi-
nistration of thymine immediately after, Immunization restates to a considerable extent
the immune response inhibited by metot~rexate but. has oo effect on the syrthesis of
y-G-aggjutinits at all.
REZ L/PRAM
19719:0744
00
Ifl 03
UDC: 681.327.8
MAYPITTS, V. I., LUTTSO.
"ADevice for Automatic Telephone and Videotelephone Cl)nmuzfl.critions"
Moscow, Gtkrytiya, Izobretenlya, Promyshlennyye Obraztsy, Tavfirn~rye Zaaki
~No 10, Apr 72, Author's Certificate No 332583, Division H, riled 13 Apr 70,
published 14 Mar 72, p 227
Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces a deirice for automatic
*deotelephone communications which contiains (tutomatic of-
telephone and vii
fices with connecting lines, a video attachment, anal a video diarxel cam,
mutator matrix. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the device is
designed for uniting the videotelephone and telephone mystinis while re-
ducIng the equipment complement, vhich is accompliskied by usting a recog-
nition device for the called party to control the video chazinel matrix.
This, recolpition device is connected by;a control circuit '.a a marker
generator. The marker generator is connected throilgh a telephone sub-
scriber identifier to the lines of the automatic offices with video at-
tachments in such a way thet the recognition device is connecLed to the
video, channel comutation matrix by the contactors in a matri.r which Is
1/0
USSR
MAYANTS, V. I., LUTTSO, V. P., USSR Author's Certificate No 332583
connected to the subscriber lines by a delwj circuit. The recognition
device is made in the form of parallel circuits conae4.,ted to the outpu,
of the marker generator. Each of these circuits is cowected into the
corresponding line of the video subscriber's nutomatic office, which is
connected in turn to a NOR logic stage whose output is connected to the
"'OR cir-
recognition device for the called party. The first ftput of the T.
cuit is connected to one conductor of the lines-throu& an inverter whose
output is connected to the matrix through the deIV circuit. I'he second
input of the NOR circuit is connected to. the input of a flil)-flop. One
input of the flip-flop is connected to the: second contractor of the line,
band the output of the telephone subscriber identifierlis coiniected to the
other input of the flip-flop.
2/2
-tv
a -mer toa6:
AP0.049156- CHDIICAL ABST; 5to
470f Uquid-Liqtua-vapor e", Jn~ Jil"4cyclo-
ni"
o4
l
:oTon'. iind ia.p' f, ihe 2 bi;
43(1)~ 1-22" (Rti;s), ;'Th~ , .. ! .1 nary
heteidareotropes n4rc~yclohenne and 4dZeZone
oxhne (rl)-HtO were detd. . 71* ~ompfti of. tile 2 4. Ph4es. and
vapoc phase in equil, 4 the te~";Fyj system I-11 HtO %w ~ also
detd. The results indbe qted thcje;LObilit~ Of Of I
V g~ nxixls
this was o nW b -a trial
and H by adding RD iud distj.~ I
fmctionation. 4arry ~ragts
REELIFR~ME
198009G3
027 UNCLASStFlEb OROCESSING DATE-30OCT70
'-T,ITLE-THE PECULIAR STAR CH CYGNI IN 1968.1--u-
L*
;:COUNTRY OF INFG-USSR
_~:SOURCE-ESTI NSV TEADUSTE AKAOEEMIA, TOIMETISED, FUUSIKA-MATEMAATIKAP VOL.
NO. 29 1970v P. L77-183
',~I)ATFE PUBLISHE-0---70
,~.$UBJECT AREAS-ASTRCNOMYeASTROPHYSICS
~_'TOPIC TAGS-STAR, SPECTROSCOPY, PHOTOELEORIC ME:THODr UPPER ATMOSPHERE
~,-~._CCNTRGL MARKINCr-NO RESTRICTIONS
OCCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
~..~PROXY REEL/FRAME--2000/1482 STEP NC~--UR/0458~70/019/002/0177/0183
-,CIRC ACCESSICN NO-AP0125110
777
2/2 027 UNCLAS S I F IE'D PROCESSING DATE-30OCT70
C IRC ACCESSION NO-AP0125110
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. SPECTROSCOPIC AND PHOTOELECTRIC
INVEST'IGATIGN OF CH CYGNIt CHAFLACTERIZEO:BY IRREGULAR LIGHT VARIATIONS
WITH AN EXTREMELY SHORT PERIOD ANO BY.A PECULIAR~~SPECTRUM. IT IS SHOWN
THAT THE BRIGHTNESS VARIATION IN ULTRAVtOLET LIGHT I&AN ABNORMAL
NONSTATIONARY RANDOM FUNCTION OF TIME* VARIOUS PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
OF CH CYGNI ARE STUDIED. IT IS SHOWN THAT THERI PECULIARMES ARE
-:."PROBABLY,CAUSED BY THE PERTURBATLON OF THE UPPER:ATHOSPHERE OF A RED
15AINT BY k VARIABLE HOT SATELLITE. FACILITY: AKAVEMIIANAUK
'~':-';~:ESTGNSKOI SSR# INSTITUT FIZIKII ASTRQNCMIl# TARTUr ESTONIAN SSR*~
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR UDC 5W3,0: 5,19,216
Bonz = S. Z., J, V.G.,et al
"The Phase Composition of ThreadZLike Cobalt Cz7.,~,,stal
M
Vol, 16, No 2, pp 4404,41,
Abstract: The low-te=Dera-ture state of thread-like c:ryztals of -O'b4!'dt prcducedl
perature polym-irphic conve ~ sion at 7200C, by ~plroFgen reducticn of
by high-tez-
r
CoB2 is studied. The crfstals measure 10-100 ~k in !the tran-sverse direAlor
x 2 -111
and several- = in length. In most spec-erns, the dir-action "-)f tlie a. i us
irrational, i.e.-, did no-t zorresporad to the
The invest-igations showLd that there are three typeil of ct-ys-La13 as z-o-cenn-
'ticn. The- first type incluties:cryorrds in -4iic~i t,-~ e
type of phase c=pos.
polymorphic conversion has continued to coppletion, and --'-(..-y ccntain no traces
of the residual cubic phase. The Eecond 'hype inclutk!s tI:xc!-ad-1i!:e crystals
in which t~ie cunversicn has utyt been coi ii leti-.~d. The third tape
!p
ptve~unaergone g1jo P, lyniorp ii a
includes thread-like cryztals h C
:112 GO UNCLASSIFIEO' PROCE-ISSING 0ATE--?ONUV7C
,,-TITLE--If%OCULANT FOR CAST IkON -U-
V.S., KUCHLIMASOV, YU.S.
AUTHOR-03)-LUZAN, P.P., Sh!J-'IIKHLNo
'-.'~.CCUNTFY LF INFO-USSR
~'-SUURCEE-U.S.S.R. 263t6l&
-.R.EFER ElXC ~--G TM~ Y T IYA, I L'06RE T. PROM W3RALTSY, rOVARIINYL ZNAKI 1970,
"~,"-DATE FULIShEf,-IOFEt370
S UJ E C TA kil A S-PA T F it I A L c
~"--TGPIC TIA' PAIE14, CASIIIK CN LALC I II'l
S
14POUNC, CO(CANIO CONPUND
cut
CC.NTREL
UOCUME,4T
-IXY 'P NO
P
RL
C -,f A C C 1--. S1 - -','j L
.013 UNCLASSIFIED! PROC-1:5S IJAG 0,%TE--20NCjV70
~~-CIRC ACCESSICIN Nl)--AAC)132011~8
ABSTRACT/CXTRA%'.'T--(UJ GP-(j'- ABSTRACT. A LAST IRCM 114CCULANr CUPJAUIS A
FEKfR,UC-FRL,'-llUM !70PERU-'4T) 6ASE AND .30 -AUERCENT ~~ILLCOCALCIUM
t28PERCENT) TO ITE 'IN THE CAST MAT ER~* tAL FACILITY:
JNSTI TUT FRGBLEM LITIYA AN UKRA INSKOY S$A.
--- ------ -
-z
;PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
ItZ 013 UNCLASSIFIW*~
..:"'.TITLE__POLARIZA8ILITY OF OFNZE-NE IN GROUND-AND EXCITED STATES -U-
-",:AUTHOR-(O3)-LULANOVt A.V.9 MALYKHANOV9 YU.B.j MESTECHKINI M.M.
"Opp
~_,CGUNTRY OF INFO-USSR
'.".,SCURCE-OPT. SPEKTRC-SK. 1970p 28(4)v 83"
_l-';-DATE PUBLISHED----70
-SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY
fi~~.TOPICJAGS-BENZENEq GROUND STATE# EXCITED STATE,,. tiLECTRWE POLARIZATION
',Z~,CCNTRUL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
..PROXY -RF-EL/FRAME-2000/1121 STEP NO--UR/005L,/70/02t;/O(j4!0836lo838
CIRC ACCESSIGN NG--AP012477W
-55
.2/2 013 UNCLASSIHED PRrUCESSING DATE--300GY70
CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0124776
N
-ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTRACT. PERTUROATIO. THEORY AND THE
HARTREE FOCK MENTIONED WERE APPLIED FOR T14E CALC~"%'. cjF- 'rhE PULARHABILiTY
OF BENZENE IN~THE GROUND AND EXCITED STATES. TRE CALGI). VALUE FOR
CHANGE IN POLARIZABILITY ON EXCITATION AGREED WITH THE EXPrL. VALUEv
~CONFIRMING THE BASIC ASSUMPTION THAT SIGMA ELECTIRCINS DO NLIT CONTRV13UTE.
1-4- A-E -Av. to
USSR
K_ If, rnstttute of Biophysics,, Ministry -of
A M9 X X. and a
-Realth USSR
*Erythropoietic Activity of the Blacei Durj.~ag- Fractional Irradiation~
Moscow, Keditsinskaya Radiolo&iy;~-. Yo 24 199. Pp 52-55
Abstract; Wistar rats were exposed to 50 r (doze rate 12.5 r/min) daily until
total doses of 150, 250, 500, 1,000, 1,500, and 2.000 r were achieved. Tt-e
orythropoiatic activity of the blood was dotermilu.4 Ja expirimantal -and con-
trol animalz on a madel of polyaythemio rats. Erythropoictio activiL:l began
to increase from the very first day of exposure and a~t totill. doses of 1,000
to 2,000 r it exceeded the control values ?- to 174CU. Th-are was a clear-
cut relationship between the shifts. in., erythropoiesiti and NVelopaiesis. The
I=rease in plasm- erythrapoiatia act-ivity was accoManie-i by an increase in
the nwaber of norm-o'blasts in bone zarrow and an inteziWication of thi~ir
mitotic activity. It was Po5tulated that these phanomena P-re lar,gely due to
change in the nature of "moral regulatizi of erythrq'poiesis, after irradia-
tion. The intensification of erythropcdatic activity helps to maintain the
erythrocyte balance for a conaiderable period despite-the steady decrease in
-
a b o--,- c alls
f
7T '7
uDc 617-ool.23-o36.1i-ore .9-o85 -272.6:54-7.963.3-9
ROGACIMVA, S. A.0 L V., KIYZHUK, K. N.0 IMIRWA, G. G., SILLH(WA, F'. G.,
0 6.1
and LIBIN"ZON R. Ye., T-nstitute of BioplIy, sics., 14inistr-/ of ffealth USSR, MaBcov
&-Polyrar ffeterolou,~%;s DVA in DoZa with Acute
"The Therapeutic Effectiveness of Ki
Radiation Siclmess"
Mloscow, 14editsinskaya Radiologiya, Vol 15, 110 31 1970o pp 4443
Abstract: A study was rade of the effect of high-noly7urr,
thymus MA preparations on the course and outco m. of act~tc rvidiation sickness in
dogs. In the experip~entn, 52 dogs of both sexes, one tW four years old, I'migil 7
5-24 kilograms, were subjected to cesium-137 gwa-,a-ray irraciiation at a rate or 6 r
per ndnute in doses of 700 and 750 r. Die anirals vere divJilca into four 11111*011po:
group one received injections of DNA 30-60 ininutes aftex ir:radiation, 1,r~oup,3 two
ard three received injectiona 24 and 72 hours after irrwJiaticn, respectively,
and group four served au the control. aTILralm ve~-is distributod evenly --non-
the groups by sex, 'weight w1d initial peripheral blood inklex. ther4-cutic
effect was evaluated according to 60-day surtival, tJ1e'rtverrq.~,, life ot' nonnurrivors,
the clinical picture of acifte mdiation sielmess, and -U-ie reriats of peripheral
blood studies. Results of the irnrestigations revealed'12iat irtravenous adrainistra-
tion of calf thymus MA increased survival in all exper,',-,ental groups. Of the 18
1/2
USSR
ROGAMNA, S. A., et al., Meditsinskaya. Radiologiya, Vol 15~ NO Ir"TO, pp 44-48
doers in the control group, only two (11,%) survived, while :toi= of t1ae .12 dogs in
0
group one survived, eight of 11 dogs Biwvlyed in group two, ,m4 six ot' 11 doFs sur-
.4
vived in group three. These results indicate that tbr- optl.mm, tive of M~A a(bainis-
tration is 24 hours after irradiation, It was detexidned. that the t-110ra-p-a-utic
effect of DZIA, introduced intravenously, depended onthe period between irradia-
and injection of the preparation.:
.......- JT
--i is pTo
032 UNCLASSIFIED PflOCESSING DATE F
YTITLE--~-THE THERAPEUTIC EFFICACY OF HIGH POLYMER HETFROLOGOUS DNA IN DOG~
!~;fJWITH ACUTE RAnIATION SICKNESS --U-
TH. OR---;-ROGA7CHEVAv S.A., LUZANOVA, O.V.t KL YZ HUK KoN., R%60NOVA, G.G.,
-j.',,4'KrSHAROV A v E . G a
N_T;LY 6F INFO--USSR
ISCUPME--MEDITSINSKAYA RAnIOLOGIYA# 1970~ VOL 15, NR~3, PP 4-1-49
ATE PUBLISHEO - ----- 70
z0BJECT,AREAS--8IOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES~
RADIATION
_C~JAGS--DOG, RADIATION SICKNESSt DNAv CESIUM ISOTOPEt
THYMUS GLAND
UNTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
zi
~'#OCU~NENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
STEP N 0--UR /0 2 4.1170 0 1'5 00 30 0 (t 4 M 0'0
,,0,Ft'0XY_ REEL/FRAMIE--1985/1693
(,'JAC ACC~SS(('IN NO--AP(3101748
-:_-2/2, 032 UNCLAS.STFIED 12ROCESSIAIG DATE-11SEP70
IIC,-~ACCESSION NO--AP0101748
l_.ABSTR'ACT/FXTPACT---lp) GP-0- ABSTRACT* IN EXPERIMENrS ON 52 DOGS
IRRADIAITED FROM MCS PRIME137 SOURCE 16 R-MIN) 114 DOSES OF 700 AN-) 750 R
AUTHORS f)EMONSTRATE THE THERAPEUTIC EFFECTIVrNESS OF HIGH POLY14ER
HETERGLOGOUS DNA OF CALF THYMUS- DNA PR
EPARATIO)JS WERE OBTAINED AY THF
KAY ET AL. THE THERAPEUTIC EFFECT OF ()NAj INTRODUCE,D
INTRAVENOUSLX IN A DOSE OF 15 MG-KG OF BODY WEIGHT., nEPENDED UP0-,lj THE
...EP.M BETWEMIRRADIATION AND INJECTION OF THE PR~PARATtON. THE GREATEST
j
z__l.:-SURvTV4L F8 OUT OF 11 DOQSI-WAS.NOTED WHEN THE PAEPARA,rION WAS
Z4-HOURS, AFTER -IRPA0
0 IATION. - 4N DNA. INJE.CTION 3 DAYS O~~ 30-60
6TATION THE S(JRVTVAL WAS 6 CTUT:!CF 11 Al"In 4 otir (.)F
MINUTES~,AFTER IRRA 12
'ANIMALS RESPECTIVELY. IN THE CONTROL GROUP, 2 DUT OF 18 90', S~JRVIVED.
THE'~ -AUTHORS DISCUSS THE RELATIONSHIP RETW !;THERAPEUTIC EFFECT AND
EEN THE~'
.1 A 'r
lit,118 ~QF~' DNA INJECTION AFTER IRP.*AU
USSR uDc 669.G46-5
YAVOYSh-IY, V. I.,, A~ G., GR1G0R'Y2V, '41.
.4"D3, ~P
IC
'VI
XONOVALOV, I. M., TAT'Y;,!d KOV, A. 0. C.
and 10MAYEV, E. A.
"Metal Acidity in Intense Oxygen Bath Bicnting"
Moscow, V sb. "Savremennyye problenV kachestva stall" (MJSIS) (Collection of
Works. Modern Problems of Steel Quality) (Mosc(nr Institute~of Steel and Alloys).
Izd-vo "14etallurgiya," No 61, 1970, pp 84-90
Translation of Abstract: Results are rresented of an investigation on metal
heterogeneity in intense blowing. Comparable data on the average metal
acidity level in a tvo-bath furnaee and in.other steel-melting furnaces are
:given. The effect of various technological factors 6a metal acidity in the
'two-bath furnace is considered. 5-figurea.: 3 reference-z.
nil
Analys ir
USSR UDC 669..j046-5-4:66.012. 1
YAVOYSKIY, V. I., LUZGIN, V. F., and VI5MCMV-,. A., E.,
"The State of Oxidation of Steel and Hethaft: of Test1ag. It"'
Okislennost' Stali i Hetody Yeye Kcatrolya [Engllsh- Vitrsion- Abovel,
Metallurgiya Press, 1970, 288 pages
Tranblation of Annotation: This work studies problems: of ttie use of the
express method for determination of the,activity.(coucentration) of oxygen,
based.on the use of the concentration galvanic. elemant~~ Problems from the
theory of concentration galvanic elements.are, briefly.presented.
A diagram is presented and the operating principle is, 40-scribed, of a device
created at the Moscow Institute of Steels aq& ALlays, an activometer, which
is a device for express measurement of the activ-1ty (concentration) of oxygen
directly in steel making units and during pouring.. Based- on- a large volume
of research work performed under plant conditions using- the, activometer, the
problems of the behavior of oxygen in. open hearth and eLectrit: furnaces, in
oxygen converters, during pouring and evacuation are sWdled.. A.comparison
of the state of oxidation of met-al upon completion of the cycle in converters
1/3
Fs-7'
USSR
YAVOYSKIY, V. I., et al., Okislennost' Stali, i Netody Yeye Roat-rolya,
Metallurgiya Press, 1970, 288 pages
of various capacities -writh the oxidation of open- hear-t1i. metal is performed.
The relationship between the state of oxidation of the: metal and technologi-
~ca_l factors is described. Prospects are discussed for: further expansion of
the range of application of the method under lab.orator~- andi plant. conditions.
The book is designed for engineering and technical wQxkers: of 'metallurgical
and machine building plants and scientific-!resea-rch. inst-ttutes. 98 figures;
40 tables; 177 biblio. refs.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. Oxygen in Steel 9
Chapter II. Activity of Components in Melts: Based' oj3-jron-.:azzd_
erminari OVL
Methods of Its Det 44
Chapter III. Theoretical Principles of Daterminaticai qf-- A=tvity
63
of Oxygen by Haf Method
Chapter IV. Study of Activity of Oxygen in Iron-Carbon Melts 83
2/3
USSR
YAVOYSKIY, V. I., Et al., OkIslennost' Stali i Metody,Yeye Kontrolya,
Metallurgiya Press, 1970, 288 pages.
Chapter V. Study of Reducing Activity,of'Elements 102
Chapter VI. Design and Operation of the Activometer 133
Chapter VII. Oxidation State of Metal and Slag in Open Hearth
Furnaces Operating Without Oxygen 153
Chapter V111. Oxidation State of Metal ;md Slag Nben 0,xygen is
Blown Through Open Hearth~Dath. 175
Chapter IX. Oxidation State of ~tetal and Slag in the Oxygen
Converter Process 209
Chapter X. Oxidation State of Rimming:Steel During:kouring and
Its Relationship to Ingot quality 246
Chapter XI. Measurement of Oxidation Potential of Sla g and
Partial Pressure of Oxygen in Cas Phase~b V Emg
Method 257
Bibliography 278
3/3
USSR 17DC 536.244:532-517.4
LUZHANSKIY, B. Ye., SOLNTSEV, V. P., Moscow,
'!An Experimental Study of Heat Exchange, in Detached Zones Upstream From
Cylindrical Projections"
Moscow, Zhurnal Prikladnoy Mekhaniki i Tekhnicheskoy Fiziki, No 6, Nov/Dec
72, xj 83-89
Abstract: The paper gives the results of an experimeutal study of heek,
exchange in the zones of detachment of the.turbulent boundary layer up-
stream from cylindrical projections in a subsonic airflow. ffle research
was done with a variation in the ratio of the projection diatrieter to the
height from 0.25 to 4, the ratio of the thickness ot the boundary layer
at.the detachment po-,nt to the height of the projection of 0.09 to 0.7,
the Reynolds number calculated from the parameters of the oncoming flow
to the height of the projection from 104 to )1,105, anti u Ma.-ch numiber
reaching 0.85. The temperature factor was 0.7. It it: t3hovn. that the di!~-
tributioa of the heat- transfer coefficients in t.110 detROW4 Yone depends
an the Reynolds and -r-aler numbers and an the ratio ofi the Lhickriess of'
displacement of the bowidary laytr to the diameter (atir height) of the
1/2
USSR
LUZHANSKIY, B. Ye., SOLTITSEV, V. P., Zburnal Prikladnoy _J Tekhnicheskoy
Fiziki, No 6, Nov/Dec 72, pp 811-89
projection, as well as on the ratio of the diameter to the height. Inte-
gral relations are found which generalize data on heak exchanC;e at chexac-
teristic points of detached zones, and also the dinervAonless distribution's
of heat transfer coefficients for determining heat fluxes on a PIE-.+.e in
-the plane of sy=elry of the detached zone upstreein from projections.
USSR UDC 533.6. 0 13
LU~MSKIY, B. Ye., SOLNTSEV, V. P., Mos cow
"Experimental Study of Flow in 71hree-Dimensional Open Zones Before Projec-
tions"
Zhurnal Prikladnoy Mekhaniki i Tekhnicheskoy Fiziki, No 1, 1972, pp 50-54.
Abstract: Some results are presented from an experimental stud), of sub-
sonic flow in the zones of separation of a three-dimensional turbulent
boundary layer, formed before cylindrical projection.,;, rttctangular
parallelepipeds and plates. Ilia ratio of the width of the projections
to their height varied between 0.25 and 24, the ratio of, the tbickno5s of
the boundary layer at the point of separation to the height of the projec-
tion -- from 0.2 to 2. Flow plans are produced, the influence of the geo-
metric shape of the projection, ratio of width to height of projection,
parameters of boundary layer, Euler and Reynolds on the flow picture and
coordinates of characteristic points in the separation zone is demonstrated.
Data are produced for determination of the dimensions of the three-dimen-
sional separation zones before.the projections.
Wow"
1IMP1101011 WI
USSR
LUZffk4SKrY, B. YE., SOTIFrSEV, V.P. (moscovi
Jv~~~--~~estigation of Heat Exchange in Zonep of :5ejaration of the
Turbulent Boundary layer Before a Recess"
Moscow, Zhurnal P-vi-kladnoy ~Ielthalniki i TekLmicheskoy Fix-1-34-A, No 1, 1971,
126-131
Abstract: In this article are presented the results of an experimen-1-al in--
vestigation of heat exchange Ili zones'of :separfftiOll of a two-dimensional
turbulent boundary layer before a rectungUar receiis at a subsonic gas stream
Velocity- 5 figures, I table, 3 biblibgr~phic entrie-s.
PROCESSING DArE--230CT70
021 UNCLASSIF14ED
112
T, I T L E-- A G t NG AND CORROSIVE ACTION OF TURBINE 0 1 L SIN THE PRESENCE OF WATER
AUTHOR-(04)-IVANOVr Kal.t LUlHU,',SK,",v A,A-t ALEKSAPIOROV-t AaN, v SEREGINAt
L 0 S Ha
`.COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
,~S,OURCE--TEPLOENERGETIKA 1970t 17(21, 64-7.
AT EPUBLISHED ------- 70
5UBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS
TOPIC TAGS--CHEMICAL STABILITYi
CORROSION RATE
~,CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME--3001/2073
*C-Cr-SSIO--'~l---NL9=-APO'27-446-
TURBIWOILP, CHEMICAL C044POSITrONP
STEP NO--UR/0096/70/OIT/002/0062/00&T
22 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESS.LNG 0ArE--230CTT0
.~CJRC ACCESSION NO--AP0127446
-_A.BSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. C014. TUR(ITNE OILS tcar,irG. 0.1 OR
0.8PERCENT S) UNDERGO SUBSTANTIAL CHANGES AS A FESULT OF CONTACT .41TH H
._~SUB2 0 AT 900EGREESr E.G.r THE ACID NO- INCRF:ASES IF1101M 0.0 TO 0.2 OR
O~.8 MG KOH-G, FOR THE OILS CONTG. 0.8 OR 0.lPER(:CNT S, RESP.), THE OILS
aECOME CORRG-SEVE WITH RESPECT r0 MANY METALS, AND METALLIC SOAPS ARE
FORMIED (ANO DISSOLVE IN THE OIL) UPON CONTACT Wl I'H MEULS; SUCH
PHENOMENA AqE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE AGING~OF THE OILS IN ACTUAL SERVICE.
-:.T,HE CORROSION RATE OF STEEL IN SUCH AGEO.011.,Ss, WITH INITIAL S CONTENTS
OF 0.1'GR 0.8PERCENT, REACHES 42-87 6R L51.6L.G-A PRIME2 (THE TEST
DURATION WAS 70 HR IN THE LOW S AND 304 HR IN THE HIGH S OIL)v RESP.
THE HIGHER COqROSlON RATE IN THE AGED HIGH S OILP IN 'SPITE OF ITS LOWER
"ACID NO.,,IS ATTRIBUTED TO THE FORMATLON OF LARGER AMTS. OF WATER SOL.
p CORROSIVE ACIDS; THE SLOWER OXrON. OF THE HIGH 5101L IS ATTRIBUTED TO
THE PRESENCE OF ANTIOXIDANT ADDITIVES. THE CORROSIWRATES OF
N9NFERROUS METALS (BREINZEt BRASSt BABBITT) IN THr, AGED OILS 1.5 QUITE
LOWt E'.G.t BETWEEN 1.3 AND 8 G-M PRIMEZ,,FOR THESF TEST TIME-So TH E
:-A00N. OF AN OXION. INHIBITOR (ION0010 THE LOW 5 OIL 010 NOT REDUCE THE
~.,_.~__CDRROSIVENESS OF THE OIL AFTEP,:AGIVG,, IN SPITE OF A SUBSTANTIAL Dc'CREASE
THE. DEG. DF OXIDN. OF THE OLLe.. FACILITY: VYSES. TEPLOTEKH.
N
I
4w,
~_~JNST.r.40SCOWi LSSRw
41~L'4S
USSR UDC 621.318.57-529
"A Time Relay"
USSR Author's Certificate No 287199, Filed 20/03/69 Published 16/03/71,
(Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnall Avtomatika, Twlemekhanika i Vychis-
litel*naya Tekhnika, No ll,. .1971, Abstract No .11 ASTP).
Time relays are known which contain patze generators, a t.ricger
and a coincidence circuit. rhe accuracy and delay tiries of these circuits
depend on the stability of the oscillations of the master generator and the
delay times of the slave generators. High accuracy with relatively long
-time delays cannot be achieved, since the slave genorato-rs are connected i 1i
series and the delay times must be increased 1W increasing the number of
genera
tors, i.e., the time constants of the time-fixing circuits must be in
crease
d, decreasing the stability of :the deliy time: Fartherinore, known
time relays do not allow multiple delays to bo produced in several channels.
The purpose of the invention is to produce loi)g, single,and multiple time
delays with high accuracy, Ilvis is achieved by conAcethig the outf)llt of thc
master generator to one Input of the coincidence -1h(! output of
Which is connected to the starting inputs of the slave pulse pencrators, the
.1/2
USSR UDC 621.318.57-529
LUZWSKIY, V. G., USSR Author's Certificate No 287199, F-Ded 20/03/69,
Published 16/03/71.
outputs of which are connected to the inputs of the coincidt~nce circuits.
77,te output of one of these circuits is connected to the input oC the trigger,
t~x output of which is connected to the second input, of this coincidence
circuit. The circuit allows adjustment of time delales, which can be achieved
using a potentiometer which changes. the time constant of the time-fixing
circuit of one of the.slave. generators. To allow convenic~nce of adiustmant,
the variable factor in the dt:nomimtor should not exPeed the least value of
:the remalnizvgr factorn- in denominator ~ehich sho-Q14 hava ic o , ti-
~o Qmn n mul
plier. I firsure.
USSR UDG 621-5U-57 -1 (063-8)
(Mathematics Institute, Siberian Branch AcudeaW of Sciences,
-USSR)
"Transistorized IbItivibratorn
eb 70, IjUbl4ehod 19 J,1lY 71
USSR Author's Certificate No ~O W, ftled 15T
(from RZh: Radiotekhnika, No 21 Feb 72, Abstract No 2G201P)
Translations A trannistorized multivibrutor le propoeo6 with a direct collector-
b3se coupling and an emitter time-ansigning fvreanytszadn~ushchty] circuit vihich
contains a supplementary tritnaietor in a circuit for cozitrol oe the off'-duty
factor. Vith the object of control over a wide ranEe of the off-duty fuctor
of the pulsee being generated, without a decreeae-of" the durution of the oscil-
lations -:period, the base and emitter of trano-'stor I of:the multivibrator -qrL%
connected across a diode to the collector of the supplemantary trrinsistor, the
emitter.olf which is grounded, and the base iu:connactediucroao a c~ipscitor ard a
variable retistor to the emitter of transistor 2 of the multivibrator, c-ut-in
according to a circuit with a co=on collector.
-T
LSSR LIDO 669,2951538-221
.ansion unK n7
LU!ZH!hSKAYA, M. G., Institute of Ketal Physics, UNTs Z-exp -now
--*tNTE-M-y--5T-5-dIendes USSR
"Observation of the Domain Structure in, a. Ticonal Alloy'.
201 ^05
Sverdlovsk, Fizika Retallov I Eetallovedeniye, Vol )6,, No 1, 197), PP
Abstracts A single crystal of ticonal containing (in )3 Coi 14-7 Nit
7.2 Al, 3.8 Cup 5.9 Tip balance -- Fe, with a coerciva forc~e of He = 13eO
oersted and residual irAuction Br a 11,000 gauss, and a sample of ticonal con-
taining, (in %)t 35 Cop 15, Ni, 8 Als 3.5 Cup 5.5 Ti, balance -- Fe, He
1350 cersted, 3-- - 12,000 irauss ifere investigatod. Obi5eryatlona Ghowed that the
domain a-tructure forns In ioth the single-(-,i7stal and rpolyerystal samples if
the dimction of the nagnutizing fieldo. Is at angloA fmm 0 to 60-EOO to the
zaEmetic f ~1-1_z . At angles close to 90 , the darain. zt:rctmre is the same as
in alnico and is not for-nei in parallel or perpondittilar -plares to the r-a--netic
field. Observations were also made for the domain atruct-.ire after denaFriatiza-
tio-a of samules bir a variable fleld of Increasel amplit,-d"... In the didmaj,'noti-zed
state the domain structura occurred on surfaces SmQ~lel and perFerdicular to
1/2
USSR
LIMINSKAYA, M. G., Fizika F-etallov j X-etallovedeniye, Vol 35, No t, 197,10
pp 201-205
the magnetic field if the angle between the direction of the demagnetizing
0
field and magnetic field was not close.~to 90 Four,rl'surns, five
bibliographic references.
LA PkICESSING DAT --l_)NGV70
-41 C S~' -QU I T El 1. OR I ~A- ~Y ~ TE'-t -LI-
ul',.;..130tjSKl'(, S -A LLI~~ 41NAY A,
SGU-,~f, E--Z H NElji; C, KA I 1~37J 15 1 1 17 05 6
ISHED --- - - - - -7 0
SUaJa-CT A;Z E A S - - C H EM r S TY
GPIC TAGS--P,4jNS' JIAGRAM', `11CRGHAAD' ESS, ARSENJ C C('fhP0U;11Dv Si~LENJDE,
TELL)Ub~ IDE
:~CCCNTRUL TlAkK I NG--N0 tRFSTF, ICT I Z,','4S
0 C C W-4 1EN'T C L ~i S S - -J,% C L A S S I ~ 1 E Cr
'PROXY REIEUFRAME-300~311404 S VE P
CIRC rCcSSI,-~,,~-
J C LAS S 1
PkIXESSING
UNCLA SS I F I DATE--L314OV70
ACCESSION V4C--APJ135ol8
-A.BSNACT/:_-XT.RACT--(U) GP-o- ABSTRACT PHASE DIAGRAM AND MICkUHARDNESS
4 ' 3
0IAGRAIt TO TrIF AS SU3 2 SE SU33 -As su- ~ rE SUb SYS T E MARE CL),iSTRUCTED.
:TmE SYSTEM FLJR,*iS EUTECTICt M. 2,10OLGAUES AND Coi,4rG. 53' MULE PERCE.,IiT AS
SijaZ r;-: SU33 AND 2 SOLID Si",LNS. THE STULIY GOES w r CONFIRM f:ORMATIUN OF
-AS SU5Z SF SU33 AS STJ62 TE SU331,
1. A S!~ I C, 0
P~TO008633
SC
Y- ABST. SER. A
ava Orist. Gencral :2
17017 Growth rrom metal solutions N P Ltizhn.
Wip" r- MISRT -
of Scicn es MMIX W,
I notitanic Chem istr Academi,
-J.-Cryst. GrWilb (Netherta as), v -ol.34, Spc- .97-107 (1968).
n
ings of (he second internatinnal conferioce on ce v
Y'
UK. Is- 19 Jul MU
The vo-th of compoundi from incial sOutions k reviewird usinit the folllcm'l
classifications: (1) Crystallisadon or compounds from txccsi or the nicia,
n,, (11 all mcials foteip to the gro%i~s sebistijol
000
I
f
Vj'S method 30d its jp~icalio~ t~) the
t Oro 60
Jrcom~ti nds
'on njidc cr~5tls~64
b
d
lj- 113 7
lk
USSR uDe 62l.165:6-.-;,-3.iq3.l
~HKOLMK, G. T., _jEHNOV,_n-. SNSKIY, V. G.
_L..,_YEL(YV1KOV~ A. S., 8Md MLE
"Ways of Preventing the Erosiorl of Blade Apparatus a fPowei, Plant
Chelyabinsk, V sb. "OsvoyenL'yP blokov moshchnost-'YU 300 r,!Vt na
Ekibastuzsk. urle" (Collecti,on of Works-A!-SUO.Iatiun of 100,14w
Power Units Burninr the Eklbsstut RpPzi.on Coal), 1972, DP 14,35-115
(from Referativn~iy-Zhurnal-Te,-,loeiiergetikat 1,1o 6, June 72,.
Abstract iio 6C39)
Abstracti Stale aLnears to be the main source of a.br,-,sive -jarticies
which fortn on uhe innor surfAces mFAde of nerlitic steris, Oue to
I - i actual tPrireratirc! oondi.tionFT to hPat resis-
inadecuricy of their
tant charqcter-is tics of matertAls uv!d. The ndmiasible up-i-.iperature
of the superhqiter re wnll outside surl'Rce a7~'oe.!firs- to be 5750C
for the l2Kh1.1-,1F stp;~l and 5F50C for the IMZ'Ff~ nnd E1531 steols.
It is neces-oary to ensure :i-.q oy)-tiinal ft-e-sh te,.-,inerature co-n-
trol on units vil-tili dilrect flow boiiers with the nurnose of reduc-in,-
not only the exit temperature but also the ititer.,(!P-diates alonq7z t1ie
circuit. It is ne.cesiary to broaden the use of superheater 'p-:ic1:ets
made of scale proof steels in boi.lers, wherel tike~viall temperature
112
USSR
SMCOLINIK? G. T., et al.., Osvoyeniye blokov iwshchnost.T.I NO P7t na
Ekibastuzsk.ug1e", 1972, PP 105-115
is -lore than 575-5P50C- Until elimination of sc~:ile fornation, it
is advisable to carry OLIt periodically, (once in .2-3 ye,~ro) a ch-enica-1
removal of scale from perlitic section of q1e-m Lo-Jing
4-
of turbines of the 71roitskoy Hydroelectric F0,ae.- S~Mtion ---i-t the
start from a c*ld and non-cooled st-7ite, as w,!M '.,'.s o,_,eration at par-
-es with ffully
tial loads should be conducted -at sli-pping presiur
opened control valves. 5 fi,.gures, 5:reforences.
2/2
112 037 IUNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 0ATE--090CT70
TtTLE-DETERMLNATION OF THE PARAMETERS REPRESENTING THE EVAPORATION UF
METAL PARTICLES IN AN ARC PLASMA -U-
".'-AUTHOR-(02)-LlUZflNOVAv M.A.v RAYKHBAUMv YA.Do
RY OF INFO-USSR
SOURCE-INZH.-FIZ. ZHUR., JAN. 1970, ~18 11)o, 77-$l
:12
PUBLISHED--JAN70
_.,':`,~SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS, PHYSICS
',_TQPM TAGS-ELECTRIC ARC, EVAPORATIUNP.BIBLIOGRA,P.14Y, SPECTROSCOPY, SPHERIC
_MhTAL POWDERs BISMUTH ALLOY# LEAD ALLOYo TIN ALLOYt SILVER ALLOYP PLASMA
A
C
R
MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
:.,:.DIJCUM,ENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIE0
PRUXY RELL/FRAME--1995/0206 STEP NO--UR/017()/70/018/001/0077/0081
'~_CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0115910
U-INGLAS-S 11FIED
637 UINCLASSIOIED' PROCLSSING DATE-090CT70
C-1)(C ACCESSION NO-AP0115910
AdSTk_-'Cl/EXTKAC-T--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE EVAPORATION LiF SPHEP'ICAL mETAL
PARTICLES 181, PBv SNP AGv ETC. J 114 THE PLASMA~,~F A ~).C. ARC BURNING
SETWEEU C ELECTRODES WAS STUDIED SPECTRUSCOPICALLY ANO BY AN X RAY
ABSORPTION.METHUD. THE EVAPORATIUN PARAMETERS 01~TAUNED FGR Bis Ptiv SNI
AND AG AGREED CLOSELY WITH THOSE CALCULATED THEURETICALLY ON THE
ASSUMPTION THAT HEAT TRANSFER TO THE PARTICLES WAS MAINLY GOV[-RNED BY
THERMAL CONDUCTION PROCESStS. THE EXPERIMENTALLY 11AEASURED TOTAL
EVAPORATION TIME, HOWEVER, 14AS 35PERCENT GREATE14 THAN THE VALVE
CALCULATED-ON THE ASSUMPTION THAT THE EVAPORATION OF THE PARTICLES
OBEYED THE SREZNEVSKY LAW,. THIS DIFFERENCE WAS~ArTPQBUTEU TO THE
EFFECIS.DF THE TRANSITIONAL (TRANSIENT), STAGE UF EVAPORATION*
UNGLASSIFIC
USSR UDC 632-95
LUZFYOVA. M. E"INGON, L. M. , ana KUP1111YANOVA, A. 5.
"Wect of Meturin oa Frocesses of O)Wgen 14beration In PhOtosyntheals"
V eb. Khim. aredstva. eashchity rast, (0,notdcal. Agen-t.a for Flazt Protection --
collection of Worlm) , vYP 1, Moscout iMvpp 151-194.~(froia fGh-KhIrAyst, Do 11,
Jun ?2, Abstrac-A No 111;41~7)
Translation: In experlrents with chloroplaots isolatod from young cat
plants treated through the roots vith noturin (I)
saethylurea), th~ Hill rclaction was InhibitQd, In this ren:nact, coaipoijrA I
was no different from zonurane. In expetrimeuts vith di:,~ct intraducticn-
of the herbicide into a mixture containing photolyticailly active chloreplasts
from the leaves of peau, coupowid I wid-four othur V.Othy-
lureas, in coatxnazt to pheaurone and. monurone, ouuried p;caet~cally no inhibition
of the Hill pro-Cass. It in possible t~uit I in planta Aa coliverted to com-
pounds which inhibit photolytio aotivity-of.chloruplaz.ta.
,A
Co
Pharmacology and' ~oA logy
USSR UDC 57 -158-8
.7
RWASHIMA., L. V., VOZNAYA, N. M., GROSSE, R., jMXHLM,0V,._P1. 14., and-LU.Z.I-KOV, V.
N. Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry, Ybscow~Btate University imeni M.
i~anosov, Moscow
"Mechanism of the Inactivation of the RespiMtory Chain by Cobra Venom
Phospholipase"
~bscow, Biokhimiya, Vol 37, No 6, lfcyv/Dec 72, pp 1204-1209
Abstract: The effects of phospholdpase A isolated from the ver-en of the
Central Asian cobra on the respiratory chain of.the succinate clehydroGenase
system of submitochondrial particles and the NADH oxidase complex (I + III + IV)
reconstructed from the cytochrorre of c-oxidareductase (I+ III) and the cyto-
chrome of a-oxidase (IV) were studied. It wasLfound that electron transfer
.was disturbed mainly at the le"rel of. cytochrome c in a link of, the respiratory
chain common to the NADH and succinate oxidase systems.
w.
iio-
g
USSR TYDC 547-P14-339
TKO, T. N., and =I
LAPSHIN, N. M., PARKHOM~ A. S.
"Chemistry of Nitrogen Ylides. 111. Reaction of %latertiary kimoniun Salts of
tert-Butyl Hydro-neroxides With Esters"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Organicheskoy Khimii, Vol 8, Ito 8, A119 7'~:, PP 1599-1601
Abstract: Complex esters react energetically with quaternary w7imoniun, Salts of
tert-butyl hydroperoxides. Using the example of etkvl acetate and nf--thylmeta-
crylate, it has been sho,,m that a complex condenpation of the esters takes p2p-ce
tipon. Initiation by the base. However, it vas not possible to isobaite the con-
densation products. They break down to the.acetic aci and im-Ot-acryll-'e acid;
their quaternai-j ammonium salts lia-ving been, inoL%ted ft-om tbr~ reaction miyture-
During the reaction quaterrary arimonium. s%lts of acetic and =thacr,,irlie ttcids
were partially converted to respective substituted amidez. Me do,,~ble bond of
the methyl mithacrylate remineti untouched.
Vi
USSR
LUZIN, V. B.
"Probabilistic Characteristics of Reliability of Data and Methods of Their
Determination"
Kibernet. i Vychisl. Tek's1n. Resp. Mezlived. Sb. [Cyborhotic.,; and Computer
Tecbnology. Republic Interdepartmental Collection],4971, No 12, pp 101-102
(Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernotika, No 4, 1973, Abstract No
4V328, by the author).
Translation: A method is suggested for describing a class of errors arising
in preparation of initial data. In order to make a decislon conecriiing the
reliability of data, the properties of the source of;' errors in relationship to
the fixed class of errors are used. The Hamming distance is used as a reli-
ability criteriou.
1h
USSR
LUZIN, V. B.
"Some Methods of Provision of Reliability for Data"
Kibernet. i VycHsI. Tekhn. Resp. Nlezhved. Sb. [Cybernetics and Computer
Technology, Republic Interdepartinental:Collectiorij, 1971, No 12, pp 103-109
(Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika, NG 4, 1973, AbstracL No
4V329, by the author).
Translation: A method is suggested for restoration of unreliable clemcnts of
initial data with fixed accvTvicy~ when certain limitations are placed on the
set of -reliable data.
/171 C
~/C/~ - 3
Ij ~Z4=i=
Tho !ic=*v po"r
Me - de2and=6 - or porcu= victtmro"v
UP(= an 120" COMIPOnict concamtratl= in a blua= aax
atud.Lt& tbacretiaz2lj md 4vxperJ==tajj7.
To d..6b. tk* probl. t!.=-.tLi,.l17 =odol
;Ucmz- t&rough a &8A saa
co=*Almatlozz =aQrdiz;g to tba chamber vol=e bolzg ca=%idared
coast=-.. owing to thia we -"7 considar the alac-=~ -z* *pareta
unito=2j QV" its whole watans, i.e. we zia7 consIdar a
ons-dftenaiQaal ;xablam
ftQcv4d;W6 �rOM W-112-t--Meer SqUatIn" IU &L j,=--QU3
0140trodef, 'taking Stafan's :U*w into acco=t, C=ZV.
One 0= obtain tbe follwxisas equation s
421m C2
k-1,
dxz
mixwxe pressure
C2 UL"=* ingst 4=PQAGut cu=Gu=& IOU
PraportiaaaIU7 Xactor,
I - currials acn"t7 per unit at, tha valcaft
tWR
BALCSHIN$ 0. N., BIAGORODOV, A. 11. j BOWMall, B. V.t It 1_1 ~P_)9L_Z,_Y -
GORINg YU. P., GRIGOR'YEV, V. K., GRISIED1, A. P., YEIROFEYEV,-I. A., KOROL'KCVI
I* YA. 6 Lumc. V. - N. , I. -a LTZR' V. V., IUKOLAYEVSKIY, YE.i S., PETRUKMN, V. 11.,
PLIGIN, YU. S., PONO."AMV, L. A., SIROTHIN, S. III., SOKO.LOVSXIY, V. V., TAWOV,
YE. K., TIKHO::EROVl G. D.t TROSTINA, K. A., TURCWOYICliv L. K., and SHUREINKO,
YU. P. g Institute of Theoretical arA Experimental Physlils GKI a (State
Co=ittee for the Use of Atomic Energy)
-The Z*P__'b-kon 0=-ge Exchange Reaction at a Pulse of 30 Gov/see"
Moscow# Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 181, No 39 Sep 73l pp 542-544
Abstraett The authors present the measurement results from studying tYe
0
:.charge-oxchange reaction of K -mesons on:protons WP n) at a pulse of
39 Gev/sec. The study was carried -out vs,ing the XTEF t"111waq;n*t1c track
spectrometer. The morking volume of the magnetic field of the spectrometer was
0
1.0 x: 1.5 x: 6 a . Twelve optical spark chambers were located. inside the
aWet# Hith each chamber having elebt spark gaps (10 mm each), The chamber
electrodes consisted of two layers of aluminum foil 14 microns thick. The
photographs were taken through a s~vcial slit in the matz;net yoke. A nArror
system made it possible to obtain throe stereoprojectiona of all of tile chanbers
77
5 S R
BALCSH-TNI 0. N., et al.t Yadernaya Fizikal Vol 18, No 30 SOP 73, pp 542-544
with one camera. The reaction was atudled on the negative particle beam of
the IFVE accelerator. The k--mesons, were~ distinguishedi by- a. differential
Cerefikov counter. The beam was focused on.a liquid hyAtoFen:target 40 cm long
which was set approximately three meters from. the first chamber of the spectrome-
tore ApproximatelY 5*lo7K -rRsons were passed through the equipment and. 1020
photographs taken. Pairs of uniformly charged tracks were measured on the
~photographs. The measurement results were then processed on the Razdail-3 cam-
puter. Cnly 270 intersecting trackn were found. A graph is given for the
differential cross section of the reaction. The results show that the cross
section value of 7.4+1.2 microbarns obtained by the authors in comparison
to data obtained fo3~'lower energies elsewhere shows the logarithmic
dependence of the charge exchange cross section on the pulse? equal to -I-5E�0,05.
~The authors thank K. G. Boreskov# A. 11. Zapidus# S. T, Sukborukov, and K. A.
Ter-Har-tirosyan for their presentation of the computational results as t~a
dependence of the differential cmas section,onpulse.t%W'Isfer (do/dt). This
dependence in compared with predictions of: the Regge poilo model.
82-
USSR
LUZINA, A. S., ME-SIMKIN, L. D.
"Processing of Large Files of Statistical Information on the BESM-3M Computer"
Preobrazovaiiiye i Obrabotka Inform. [Conversion and Processing of Information
Collection of Works], Moscow University Press, 1972, p 4-9 (Translated from
Referativny), Zhurnal Kibernetika, No 4, 1973, Abstract No 4V651, by V.
Mikheyev).
Translation: Some methods of processing of large files of statistical inforiaa-
tion on the BESM-3M cor-puter during s.olution of a nomber of problems, are
described. Among the problems involved are: 1) the problcmi of classification
of multidimensional objects w1th dimensionality of vectol...; oil title ol,der of
several dozens; 2) creation of a constantly groigiiip file ol medical C,-)L'V
histories (the number of possible coordinates may roich into the hundreds) for
subsequent statistical processing; 3) processing of multidimensional random
processes of great length, wheit the product of dimensionillity tinies length
reaclies the order of hundreds of thousands. The iliethods developed as applicable
to the BESM-31H digital computer, with its relatively :;mall inaill memory aild
comparatively slaa input, allow.the input time and requirc-d DIMO-ly Volume to be
112
N Luzina, A. S., NleshaRin, L. D., Proobrazovaniye i Obrabotka Inform. ,Moscow
University Press, 1972, p 4-9.
reduced. The methods described utilize the followAng programsi: 1) program of
primary inspection of material., (construction of hi!~togj-ajrjs, correlatioil
matrices, conjugation tables and covzlriation matriccs); 2) a leadifig program
for organization of proce~ssing of multidimetisional. random processes; 3)
a program for transfer of information from one systom to another.
UDC 616,988.75r056.22-078"1969"
USSR
SMORODINTSEV, A. A., LUZYANINAA T. Ya., IVANOVA, N. A., and GRINBAUM, Ye. B.,
All Union Scientific Trsla"M Tffff=utq of Influenza, Ministry of Health USSR
ItCharacteriatics of Influenza A2 Virus Strains Isolated During the 1969 Epi-
demic in Leningrad"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 5, Sep/Oct 70, pp 601-605
Abstract: The influenza epidemic in the winter of 1969 in Leningrad resulted
from the spread of a new antigenic variant of the Hong Kong A2 virus. The
distinctive feature of the Hong Kong A2~strains is their capacity to multiply
intensively In the allantoic and amniottc cavities of chick embryos. On the
basis of this characteristic, an.unusually high isalation rate of epidemic
strains from patients w4s obtained. The A.2-69 viruses differ in this respect
from the A2 viruses circulating previously, the isolation of which ha-i pre-
sented increasing difficulties since 1962. Another typical feature of the
newly isolated strains is their pronounced antig*nic d;fffertnce from the
earlier A2-1 and A2-2 varianta. This sharp devi*tioa in that antigenic struc-
ture of Hong Kong A2 influenza virus was.confirmed by,tbe abs"ce of anti-
bodies for the new variant in the Leningrad populatlonl~vnder 60 years of age.
1/2
UNCLASSfFIE0 PROCESSING i)ATE--2-30CT70
---SEPARATION OF A CONCENTRATE OF ORGANOSULFUR COMPOUNUS BY AN
L
E
'--ADSORPTION METHOD -U-
A UT14OR G.V., GAZEYEVA,
-(041-(1130LENTSEV, R.D.t LVAPINAr N.Kor GALEYEVAt
OUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
,,.''SOURCE--NEFTEKHIMIYA 1970p 10(l), 110-15
D ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJ ECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY, MATCRIALS
..~:.:TOPIC TAGS--DISTILLATIOPI, ORGANOSULFUR COMPOUNDo KERSOSFNEI CHE141CAL
-SEPARATION, POLYFTHYLENEt ORGANUSILICON COMPOW401 PETROLEUM FRACTION,
F
SULFIDE, THIOPHENEj HYDROCARBONt CHROMATOGRAPHIC -PARATION
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
._.nOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME--199710564 STEP
--AP0119432
---c"Li ~IF I C. P)
2/2 014 UNCLASSIFIED. PROCEStING DATE-Z30CT70
CARC ACCESSION NO--AP0119482
~.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A COMBINATION OF RECTIFICATIGIN AND
CHROMATOG. WAS USED FOR SEPIN. OF CONCS~ C014TGo ORG. S COAPDS.
THESE CONGS. WERE OBTAINED BY EXTN. OF THE KEROSENE FRACTION
(150-250DEGREES) OF ARLAN NAPHTHA WITH H SU132 SO SUB4, THE
RECTIFICATION WAS CARRIED OUT UNDER REDUCED PRESSORE IN STAINLESS STEEL
AND GLASS APP. A COLUMN OF 290 TIMES 8.6 CM SIZE WITH 34 THEORETICAL
PLATES AND 4 TIMES 5 MM LEVIN FILLING ~WAS USED. A 30 1. CONTAINER WAS
HEATED WIT H POLY(PHCNYLMETHYLSILOXANE1 LIQ. NO. 4 TO 200DEGREES. fHE
RECTIFICATION RATE WAS 200-50 ML-HR AW) TNE REFLUX RATIO 20-5:1.
FIFTEEN STRIPPINGS (10DEGREES FRACTIONS) WERE TAKfN AND FURTHER SEPD.
CHROMATOG, ON POLYETHYLENE COLUMNS PACKED WITH SILICA GEL 130-50 MESH:
HEATED 1ST FOR 6 HR TO 70-IOUDEGREES AND THEN FOR 30 HR TO
150-700EGREES). TWO COLUMNS WERE USED.* .(A) 12 M TIMES 35 MM PACKEO
WITH 12 1 ADSORBENT WITH 1.2-KG FRACTIONS AND 8 1. ME SU!32 C13 ADUED WITH
0.5 HR.*, AND tB) 12 H TIMES 18 MM PACKED WITH 3 1, AL)SORBENT 01TH 0.3-KG
FRACTIONS AND 3 L. ME SUB2 CO WERE USED THE 14E SU132 CO BEING EXPELLED
WITH H SUB2 0. FRACTIONS Ho LESS THAN ZOODEGREES:NFEED 1-2
CHROMATOGRAPHIC SEPNS.; HIGHER FRACTIONS REQUIRE SEVERAL REPETrTIONS OF
THE PROCESS. THF CONDO. SAMPLES WEREiSEPO. INTO SULFtOE, THIOPHENE9 ANO
HYOROCARBON FRACTIONS OF MOL. WT, 1407205. FACILITY: INST, ORG.
KHIM.t UFAv USSR.
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR UDC 609.29S.046.43
HYMAN, E. D., ILIICHEV, V. A., ZOTIKOVA, A. N., LIVIN, T. B.
"Mathematical Model of the Process of Chlorination of Titanium-wntaining
Materials in a Fluidized Bed"
Tr. Vses. N-i. i Proyektn. In-ta. Alyumin., Nlagn. i Elektrodn. Prom-sti [Works
of All-Union Scientific Research and Planning Institute of the Aluminum, Magne-
siujn and Electrode Industry], 1970, No. 72 pp. 196-200,~ (Translated from Refer-
ativnyy Zhurnal Metallurgiya, No. 5, 1971, Abstract No. 5 G212 by the authors).
Translation: Problems of mathematical modeling of processes of chlorination in
a fluidized bed are presented. A mathematical model of the process is suggested
for two basic technological modes, The adequacy of this:model for processes
occurring in actual apparatus in the mode of complete as.4imilation of Cl i5
demonstrated. The model developed allows automatic cont;-ol systems to be develop-
ed for the process of chlorination of materials containing Ti in a fluidized bed.
2 figs.
USSR UDC 539.3
BEREZHNITSKIY, L. T., VANASYUK, V. V., TRUSH, 1. 1,,
"Stress Intensity Factors Near Hard Acute-Angle lnclusi~
Kiev, Problemy Prochnosti, No 7, Jul 73, pp 3-7.
Abstract: A method is presented for determinatiohof the stress intensity
factors near hard inclusionswith corner points. In the case when the func-
tion mapping the exterior of the inclusion on the exterior of a unit circle
is fixed in the form of a series, the problem is reduced to solution of a
system of 2,'Valgebraic equations. Ilia effectiveness of the alliorithm for
calculation of stress intensity factors suggested is illustrated with a
number of examples, most of which are studied in this article for the first
time,
USSR UDC'. 539.3
RELEKH, B. L., NMCMUR, 1. L., Llvov
143ne Contact Problem for a Transversely Isotropic Cylindrical Shell of Finite
Length"
kiev, Prikladnaya Mekhanika, Vol 9, No 6, Jun 73, pp 41-46.
Abstract: The contact problem of interaction of a rigid ring of rectangular
Cross section seated with a certain interference on a cylindrical, trans-
versely isotropic shell of finite length is studied. G4,,neral equations re
produced for the cases when the ends of the shell are free and rigidly
clamped. 7he distribution of contact pressures is studied as a function of
the relative length of the ring, relative thickness and shear compliance of
the shell.
123
USSR UDO 547.~41+547~244
ZAKUMN, L. I., and L-VOV A I Institute of Heteroorganic Conpoundal
Academy of Sciences min
f "Replacertent of CO Group by (C6H5 in Complexes"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 41, No 8,j Aug 71p p 1880
Abstractt The authors for the first time coalucted a ligand replacement
reaction in polyhedral metallo=rboranes using the exahple of replacement
of a 00 grou-p by (C6H5),P In manganesetricarboranyl. coa exes as a result of
Pi
1r:ndiatior, of a benzene or THF solution with UV light in the presence of a.
&light excess of triphenylphosphine.
48 -
114 015 UNCLASS IF I ED P!WCESSING DATE--230CT70
-RIVATIVES -U-
,'..:T.lTLE--SVNTHESIS OF SGME NITROGEN CONTAINING CARBORAINE UE
.,,'.~..AUTH0R-(03)-ZAKH4RKINt L.Idt GREBENNIKOVt A.V.# LVOYo A.I*
-COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--IZV. AKAD. NAUK SSSRr SER. KHIMO: 1970, (1), 106-1?
~7.
PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJECT AREAS--CHEIMISTRY
,----TOPIC TArs--cHEmiCAL SYNTHESIS, ORGANOBORON COMPOUND, CAM309ANE COMPOUND,
AMINE# UREA
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT*CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY RE---L/FRAME--1984/1593 STEP NO--VR/006.2170/000/001/0106/0112
CIRC ACrFSSIOA4 NLI-00100206
UNCLASSIFIED
2/4 015 U~XLASSIFIED PROCESSING UATE-23OCT70
CIPC ACCESSION NO--AP0100208
A.4STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, HEATING CAR00RANYL,%CET'A:4ll)E t;ITH P
SUBZ 0 SU85 AT 200DEGREES 2 HR GAVE 90PERCENT (:Ai~l~()PA,4YLACLTO'%41TRit.E, M.
109-100EGREES; SIMILARLY 14AS PREPU. MFTfiYLCAR60RANYLACETot4lTRIL,,-~, M.
146-70EGREES. THIS WITH LIALH SUB4 IN ET, SU82 0 13AVE 62PERCENT
METHYLCARBORANYLETHYLAMINE; PICRATE, M. 223DEGREE~S; HCL SALT M.
325DEGREES. SIMILARLY WAS PREPD* 50PFRCENT CARBURANYLETHYLAMINE-HCL, m.
IN ET SU32 0 IN
,96-70EGIREES. CICN AND HC8 SUB10 H SURIO CCH SUB2 *-I(;$R
2 HR AT ROOM TEPIP, GAVE 16PERCENT CAKDORANYLACE101141TRUE AP4U 34PERCENT
-CHLOROME-THYLCARBORANE. METHYLCARB
ORANYLACETYL CHLOROJE AND ME SU32 NH
1E 01METHYLAMIDE, M. 97-8DEGREElS,:WHICH WITH LIALH SUB4 IN THF
GAVE T4
GAVE 62PERCENT NoN,DIMETHYLIMETHYLCARBORANYLET~iYL)AMIIIP-; PICRATE M.
255-7DEGREES. SIMILARLY THE ACYL CHLORIDE AND NAN SU113 GAVE THE CRUDE
AZIDE WHT'CH HEATED IN MEPH 2 HR GAVEt AFTER FINAk I HK 1.4 THE PRESENCE
RANYLAMINE-K.L, M. IS GREAYER THAN
OF CONCO. HCL, 20PERCENT METHY'CAR0
320DEGREES. REACTION OF ET CARBORANYLMETHYLACETOACET,t%rE 41TH HN SU33 IN
C SU86 H SU86 GAVE N AND ET ALPHA,CA!iBORANYLMETiiVLACE'rAmiDoACF-TATE, M.
101-2DEGREES, -WHICH HEATED WITH ACDH-41CL~ 5 HR GAYE. HER SUB10 H SU11(3 CCii
'10 M. 200CGREES.
SU82 CH(NH SU82,HCL)CO SUB2 Hp H* 296-71)EGREES;~FREE ~A(,
UNCLASSIFIE0
I
PROCESSING [)ArE--230CT70
3/4 015 UNCLASSIFIED
CIRC- ACCESSION NO-AP0100208
A -9 S TR AC T/ E X TR AC T -- M E T HY L CARB OR ANY LL I T H I UM fFROM M ETHY L C A It FJOR A NE AND BULI
-IN C SU36 H SUB6) WAS TREATF9 WITH EPICHLOROHYDRIN AT MINUS 65DEGREES TO
Y I ELD 79PERC ENT I t METHYLCARBORA NYL, 39 CHLORO t 2, PROP ANOL t M. 5 1-8DEGR EES
WHICH WAS OXIDIZED WITH K SU,-32 CR SUI32 0 SU137-ii $UB2 SO SU34 TO MECB
SUB10 H SUB10 CCH SU62 CUCH SUB2 CLP B SUBI,5 162DEGREESP M. 30DEGREES,
~WHICH WITH K. PHTHALIMIDE IN Mal SU82 NCHO IN THE (OLD 1 Hk GAVE
NgMEHTYLCARBORANYLACETYLPlitlIAL[~ilDE, M. 194-5UEGRE.ES, WHICH HEATED 2
DAYS WITH HCL-ACOH GAVE lt,'IETHYLCARBORANIYLt3,AM~[Nr)t2il)lkOPANONE; HCL SALT
M, 185-6DEGREES. SIMILARLY WAS PREPO, CARBORANYLACETONE, 1-1.
75-6DEGREES; 2j4,U1NITROPHENYLHYDRAZON1Ev M. 185-0)")EGREE-S. THE KETONE
AND 9R IN ACOH AT 50DEGREES GAVE LtCARBORA*4YL,3o~'i~kOM[I-,2,PROPANONEi M.
30DEGREES, WHICH WITH THIOACETAMIDE GAVE 4v (CAROt)RA.NYLIIETHYL)T~fLAZOLEi
HOR SALT M. 220DEGREES; FREE BASE M. 92-30EGREESo SLMILAR kFACTION WITH
ACNH SU32 AT 1400EGREES 1.5 HR 6AVE 4 1 (CAR OORANYLME THYL. ) OX A LOLE, M.
.49-50DEGREES. ET GAMMA, I ME THYLCARRUANYL) ACETOAO' TATE AND PHNHNH SUIA2
IN AC01i 1 HR GAVE 1,PHI-NYL,3r, (14ETHYLCARLIORANYL)o4E:TliYLt5iPYRAZOLONEF M.
187DEGREES. VERA TR YLETHYLAM I NE ANU ET SU83 N TRtATE0 IN ET SU02 () WITH
CARBORANYLACETYL CHLORIDE GAVE THE CORRESPONDIN-G AtitoE, 105-61)EGREESP
WHICH HEATED WITH POCL SUB3 IN MEPH Z.HR GAVE
1#(CARBORANYL~'-IETHYL)3,/i,f)[HYDRDt6t7tDlMETHOXYISO,'.)I)l~IOL[NE (1), M.
141-2DEGREES; PICRAIE UECOMP. 2300EGREES; HCL SAFT oECI:)VP. 2250EGREES;
'S.
OKALATE OECOMP. 164DEGREE METflYLCAROURAi%4YLACE'rALOCH'VL)E AND
VEA.ATRYLETHYLAMINE IN ET0I-I-HCL 6 HR GAVE
.1tit4ETHYLCARBOtZANYLMET:iYL)L,2,3,4tTETRAHYDRO,6,'7t()114E
THOMSOQUINOLINE-HUt DECO.'1P. 252DEGREES.
4/4 015 UNCLASSIFIED OROCESSING DATE--23OCT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0100208'
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-1 HEATED IN ETOH 2 HR GAVE INNER SALT (II) OF THE
-REES. T11F N,W50 SUB3 AODUCT
DICARBAUNDECARORANE, DECOMP. 240DEG
OF(METHYL CARBORANYL)ACETALOEHYDE AND A KCN-fNH;$UB4) SU52 CO SU63
SUSPENSION 114 ET SUB2 0 GAVE IN 6 HR WIT14 50PERCENT AQ. ETOq AT
.60DEGPEES AIND I HR AT 70-80DEGqEES 30PERCENT
4,(METHYLCARBIJRANYLMETIiYL)HYDANTOINg~M. 212DEGREES. DI-ET
A
(CARBORANYLMETHYL)MALONATE HEATED WITH UKEA IN El',ONA-FTOH 15 HR G"VE
5f (CAD, BORANYLIMETHYL)BARBITURIC ACID, M. 332-3DEG~EES; MONO-NA SALr 14. IS
GREATER THAN 350DEGREES. THIS AND PCt SU65-POCL SUB3 IN 4 HR AT
150DEGREES GAVE 5,(CARBORANYLMETIIYL)t~2,4t6pTli,cfiL(]RoP,(l~IMIOINEr M.
1.46-70EGREES.
------- ---
i r!
11f. t_AS_xi~
I v E
Waveguides
USSR UDC: 621-372.855(088-8)
k~~A.Ye_,, SOKOLOV, V. K.
"A Coaxial Load"
is Certificate No 2637o4, filed 12 Dec 68, published 15 Jun TO
USSR Author
(from RZh-Radiotekhnika, No 11, Nov 70, Abstract No llBl?5 P)
Translation: The proposed variable-phase coaxial load cohtaint. a shorting
device and an absorbing ring device. The rings are. made1rom various grades
of ferrite. To obtain a given SWR, an additional ferrite.' ring has a sectoral
Two illustrations
cut. Resum6.
A ;diced, 1~ Ref. Code:
cc. Abstracting Se-
S
48033-6 INTEPWAT. AERO PACYABST.3:v U R 0 045
A70-24259 Determination of the retative values of
oscillator stranglths from atom absorption measi~itementsl in a flame
(Opredelenie atn*sltel.'nykh Zroollenii vil osisI.Iliatorov ik tlznnykh
Otomno-absodmWrinvkh lZmere"it v plamenil B V, L'vciy. Opriks i
Spektroskopiia, vol. 28, Jani 19710, 1). 1845.
Dezription of a simole method of deternilning the relative
values of I numbirs from measurements of the. Onsitivity of various
lines in flame atom absorption 'analysis, The restlittl! of detelminatiors
by this method are Iound to be In good agreerplent with the most
reliable existing date. The advantages of the method are tlw wide
range of the investigated spectrum, the inclusion of most of the
elements of the periodic system, and the absenct Of systeffwtic ef rors
related to the calitwation of the device from the tipctitruin. A.B K
REEL/FRAME
19791721
USSR UDC 576.858,25.083.35.086.3
GUSHCHIN, B. V., TSILINSKLY, Ya. Ya., SIJUSHKOV, L. S., jjVON:L D. K., and
KLIME=O, S. M., Institute of Virology imeni.D. I. Ivahovskiy, Academy
of Medical Sciences USSR, Moscow
"Electron Microscopic Investigations of Vero Cells Infected With Genetically
Homogenous and Heterogenous Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Virus (VEE)"~
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 4, 1973, pp 436-438
Abstract: Vero cells grown in medium 199 with 10% normal bovine serum were
infected with clones 6 and 8 of VEE either separately, or with both clones
at the same time. Electron microscopy of thin sections shatred that 17 and
23 h after infection either with clone 6 or 8 alone mortonucleoid virioas were
formed, whereas infection with both clones simultaneously yielded mononu-
cleoid virions as well as giant virions containing several mucleoids
(polynucleid virions). After 29 and 41 h an additiona type of giant viral
particle was formed which contained material equal in density to that of
the nucleoids (termed giant viral particles in distinction to polynucleoid
virions) in cultures infected with both clones. Cells infected with only
one type of VEE clone did not form giant viral particles. The data support
the contention that formation of giant virions represents infection of the
cells with genetically heterogenous VEE virus.
USSR UDC 595-771-12.616.988-25-092-9
L-V0Vp 1. K.. KOSTMO, I. N., and GROMASHEVSKIYI V. L.) Institute of
Virology imeni D. I. Ivanovskiy, Academy of Medical Sciences WSR, Nioscow
"Experimental Infection of Aedes aearpti and Culex pipie" molestus
Mosquitoes With Tyuleniy Virus"
Moscow, 14editsinakaya Parazitologlya i Parazitarnyye Bolezni, No 2,, 1973,
PP 191-193
Abstract: Aedes aegypti and Culex pipiens molestus mosquitos were infected
with Tyuleniy virus, a B group arbovirus isolated in 1969 from the tick
Lxodes (Ceratixodes) putus collected on Tyuleniy Island in the Sea of Okhotsk
basin from guillemots (the virus was subsequently isolated from I. p-utus on
the Comander Islands, Pharmansk littoral, and Oregon lit Itoral). The viras
titers in the infective material ranged from 5-5 to 6.5 1g LD50/0.01 ra for
suckling mice inoculated intracerebrally. Virus was regularly detected in
the mosquitoes the first day after infection and again. fron the 4th to 31st
days thereafter in titers of 1-5 t0 3-5 U LD .01 ml.. The virus was trans-
SOP
mitted to auckling mice by bites of the monquitoes 7 -to, 19 days after infection
USSR
jog-j,j, No 5, 1971, pp 573-576
TSILINSKIY, Ya. Ya,., et al., Voprosy Viruso
X ntly the size Of
zed by small virus particles. Appa e
they were characteri apable of relicating at 40%
ich are inc P
the plaques in these mutantsi wh of
ot by tha 'rate
onpathogenic for white mice, is determined 11
and are n
diffusion of the virus particles in agar but by some other factors. 5-
e large-plaqUe and therMostable variant
cil treatment caused th
Fluoroura
of VEE virus to mutate toward smaller plaque size and,* I;abillty to with-
stand heating to 60*C.
2/2
- 12
USSR UDC 576.858.25
TSILINSKIY, Ya. Ya., cuslicH1~1
P B' V- IMIMENKO, S. M., aad
Institute of Virology imeni D. I. Ivanovskly, Academy of- Medical Sciences
USSR
"Relationship Between the Biological Proper quine Enceph-
ties of Venezuelan F
alomyelitis Virus and Virus ParLicle Size"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 5, 1971, pp 573-576
Abstract. Natural genotypes of Vranezuelan equine encephAlomyelitis virus
exhibited a correlation between the size of the virus particle's and the
size of the plaques, the size of the viruses evidently affectiiij; plaque
because particles of different sizes diffused throuth ag,
eize ar at dif-
ferent rates. Hence dones With aniall virus pinticles f4)rmed larger plaques
than did clones with large virus pazt1cles. 'the therindstAflity of the
virus, its pathogenicity for white mice, and capacity for rep. He-'atioll at
40*C were Independent of the size of the virus particles. Clone-s with rel-
atively small or medium-sized virus parti C-lics ecabined tha capacity for
autointerference in chick fibroblast cultures with sensittvity to inhibitica
by agar polysaccharides. These patterns did not apply to the temperature
mutants of VEE virus. They formed small or very small plaques, although
1/2
USSR UDC 576.858-25-095-38057 .895.42
G
R01-LkSHEVS. LY, V. L, SIDOROVA, G. A., TSMIN, Yu.
.
NSK1
aMV02 Y. V. I., GOSTIN3HCHIKOVA, G. V., and AA131OTA, V. A., Lnstitulte
of Virology imeni D. 1. Ivanovskiy, USSR Academy of Nod-ical Sciences. Hoscow
*Isolation of a New Arbovirus "BaW of the,Kemerovo Group From Argasid Ticks
Ornithodoros Coniceps in Azerbaydzhan"
Moscow, Voprosy VirUSD10gii, No 4, Jul/Aug 71, pp 434-437
Abstract: Seventeen strains of arboviruses were isolated fron Ornitho-loros
coniceps ticks collected (1,710 specimens) in the spring and sttmmer of 1970 in
nests of herring gulls (Larus argentatus,) on the islanais of the Baku Archipelago
in the Caspian Sea. So far, four.strairis -- prototypes LEIV-28A, -35.,',, -3oA,
and -46k -- were analyzed and found to be identiaal.i 'they clo not agglutinate
goose erythrocytes. Serological ident:Lficatinn tests perfomed on the
LEIV-46A prototype revealed that this strain belongs to the anti-genic complex
of Chenuda virus of the Kemerovo group.. According to the rosults of complement
fixation and neutralization reaction tests. the virus differs from Cnenuda,
Punta Salinos, Mono Lake, Xemerovo, Tribee, Lipovnik, and Wad hedani v:iruses.
The now virus has been named "Baku virus~.11.
35
USSR
VASHOVA, V. V., LOGINOVA, N. V., and L'VOV, D. In4titute of Virology
16nces, U
imeni D. 1. Ivanovskiy, Academy or. Xed'ldhlbu.
"A Comparative Study of the Effects of Two Varieties ot Japanese Encephalitis
Calls"
Virus on Chromosomes and Mitotic Activity-of
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 4, Jul/Aug 71. pp 494
Translation; The effects of two varieties of Japanese encephalitis virus
(Nekayama strain and clone No 33). differeing from eacli other in nouropatho-
genicity with regard to white mice and in certain other genetic properties, on
the chromosome apparatus in calls and an the mitotic activity of tissue cultures
were studied. The Nakayama strain had no effect on the mitotic activity of
tissue cultures. Clone No 33 suppressed mitotic activ-ity, beginning with the
14th hour after inoculation. Forty-thrQe hours after Aftoculation, cultures
infected with the Nakayarfia strain had 17.4;chromsoifte. rearrangements and those
'infected with clone No 33 had II.?A- of eeairangexenti;,~
USSR UDC 616.'. 988'" ~r;-022 *'395 42
SZONOVY B. F., and L1,Yq -X,,, Institute of Poliomyelitis and *Virus En-
cepWitide, USSR of Nedical Sciences, Imtitute:of Virology imeni
D. I. ly=ovakiy, LISSR Academyof Medical Sciences
"Distribution and Role of Tick-Borne ArbovirusesJn.HumanInfactious, Pathology
Jbmpt Group F1
Moscow# Fleditsinskaya Parazitologlya J PaMzjtaxnyye- Bolelmit - Vol:40# Ho 3
Hay/Jun. 71, pp 259-267
Abstracti Tick-borne arboviruses sthich axe not associated'vitb the usual
antigens represonUtive for Group B viruses itere the object of tbis survey.
These viruses are widely dista-ibuted over nost cli=tic- and geographic zones
of the earth and new species belonging to this category have Imen discovered
recently. Also, =ny of these arboviruse5 are highly pathogenic to man and
animals alike. More than 40 such tickborne virusea were isolated and iden-
tified in early 1970. Their antigeAe classification 9M their classification
with respect to Ixodid ticks or Axgasid.mites is presented together with
their distribution over various zones of the earth, titpratiu-,e data indIcate
that tickbogme aeboviruses axe transmitted,over gmat dittancee by infected
ticks, animals, and migratory birdal, as wall as domestic::animals. As far
an their physocochemical characteristics are concerned; tbesa.arboviruseis do
1/2
USSR
SEHOW, B. F., and L-VOV, D. r,.t Haditainskaya.Parazitologiy4~-i*ParazitaxrWye
BoleznI, Vol 40, No 3, 1:4y/j-um 71,, pp~ 259-267
not differ from the other arbovirusest they. contain RKA-, they- am sensitive
to ether and desoxycholatat they vary in size from 70-80,to 140-150 m.~~ , They
could be divided into seven serological groups,, Sixteen stimulants are as
yet unclassified as far as their serological properties are concerned. The
pathogenicity for man was established for nine of the.11sted'arboviruses;
six of these caused occasional.diseasesp whereas the mmalnirq; three caused
numerous severe cases with frequently lethal outcote.,+Conveiftional laboratory
methods are used for the diagnosis of Infections caused by these viruses,
Iately# the fluorescent antibody zathod.has-lound videspread usep as have
iagai%-agar Mcipitation and the neutzaII=ti0A`-=actioIft:J*In &-tissuo
Culture.
2/2
USSR WC 616.988.25:31).l)(14?1.55)
GORIN, 0. Z.,,WS i,.K. VASENIN, A. A., BOLISHEV, L-11., KRUOPIS, Yu. I.,
and KORYAKOVTSEVA. K. M.. lirkut3k Institute of spidomiololpr and. microbiology,
Ministry of Health R5FSR, Institute of Virology ixerAi, D. 1. 1v4novaxiy, Academy
of Medical Sciences USSR, Moscow, Mathamatics.1notituts imeni Y. A. Steklov,
Academy of Sciences USSR Moscow, and Republic Sanitary. Eptidemiological Station,
Buryatskaya ASSR, Ulan-Ude
"Calculating the Intensity of Infection With Tickborne Encephalitis of the Popu-
lation of Zabaykal"
Moscow, Maditsinskaya Parazitologiya i Parazitarnyye Bolozni, Vol 39, No 3,
May/Jun 70. pp 259-2-63 i
Abstract: The intensity of infection of the population 1rith trickborne encephal-
W3 in the Ubaykall was calculattxl, and also the rato of izd'at~tation of ticks
with the virus (9-1,1~). The Analysis waabasod on date i3f sorologicai ozavdna-
tion of 6,420 persons by the hemogglutination testol and on daJA from quostiorling
of Z6,781 subjects about their exposure to tick and atta4ks 1~ji ticks during the
epidemic season. Specimens were. coUectod in 1966-11~~ An Chitinskaya Otr last and
the Baryatskaya ASSR. According to the intensity of 11464tiez, it was possible
to combine the territories situated in.differsat. physioml geograpb-toal and I&nd-
JL/2
USSR
GORIN, 0. Z., qt,,g~, Meditsinskaya Parazitologiya L Parazitarnyye Bolezni, Vol 390
No 3, May/Jun 7'6"~ P 259-263
I P
scape conditions into two main landsoape-spidemiological areas. One of these
areas. distinguished by an extrems4 -low intensity of ilifection 0.4-o.9A), in-
eludes the Central Asian and Fri3elenginskaya steppes 114d tho North Zabaykal
mountain talga. The other area, with highor Intensity Of infection (2-24)$).
includes the territories within the Daursk" muntain taiga owd subtaiga, an
well as the Pribaykal and South Zabaykal toiLga and.', sub4i9a.
2/2
SENWIMMIR1111111BOW1111 ROMIUMMITIPME RIEWWWA
MS R UDC 576-858-25-095-38:5T6.895.421
LIVOV D. K. T]YOFEYEVA, A. A., GROMEWSKIY., V. L., and CIMRVOt,13M, V. I.,
Mit - -P
i -Vi_- __ i Y2dfcal Sciences USSR
u e o V roloey imeni D. I. Ivanovskiy, Academy of
,and Sakhalinskays, Oblast Sanitary Epidemiological Station, Yk~zhno,C-ak_halinsk
"Isolation of Arboviruses from Ixodes (Cemtixodes) putus Pick.-Caftr Ticks Col-
lected in a Bird Colony on Tyuleniy Island in the, Sea of 0kh0tsk"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii,, No 4, Jul/Aug 70, PP 440-444
Abstract: Forty-one strains of at least tvo different arbovlxuses were isolated
from Ticodes (Ceratixodes) putus Pick.-Cambr ticks collected trom the common glaille-
mot, tern. penguin, and other aquatic birds nesting on Tyulftly Island in the Sea
of Okhotsk. The virus was isolated from females before oviposition from females
that moulted in the laboratory engorged nymphB. ~ fj= meles (Vhich do not feed on
-blood), and from nymphs. Suckling mice inoculpted-with a su"ension of infected
.-ticks developed paralysis of tle extremities aod clonic coamlsims after a latent
Oriod of 5 to 14 days
S F Fo:'
UNCLAS OkOCESSING DATE-30OCTTO
TITLE-CALCULATION CF THE INTENSItY Of INFEtTION WITH TICK BORNE
~t_.'.~_-':ENCEPHALITIS IN THE POPULATION OF ZABAIKALIE -4j-
t~.~'AUTHOR-(05)-GQRINv G.Z.p LVOVr D-K.9 VASENINIP AWA., DOLSHEV, L.N.*
KRUCNICV' YU.J.
;;.,COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
-.,:SOURCE-.MEDITSINSKAYA PARAZITOLOGIYA I PAAAZItARNYYE~,BOL6ZNIv 1970o VOL
39v, W,,39 PP 259-263
ATE_ PUBLISHED-70
AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
OPIC TAGS-ENCEPHALIrIS, TICK, SEROLOGIC TESTr:HEMA!3GLUTINATION
-:'INH'18[TICN TEST
,,,CCNTROL MARKING-NO RESTRIMONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
~iORGXY REEL/FRAME-2000/0222 STEP NO--UR/0358/10/039/003/0259/0263
,-CIRC ACCESSIGN NO--AP0123986
UINCLASSIFIED
i_7
-30OCT70
016 UNCLASSIFIED F EIESSING DATE
:,CIRC ACCESSION NC-AP0123986
GP-0- ABSTRACT. ON THE BASIS OF PREVIOUSLY
METHODS BY THE AUTHORS CALCULATION OF THE INTENSITY OF
INFECTIGN RATE OF THE POPULATION-WITH TICKIBORNE ERCEPHALITIS IN THE
ZABAIKALIE WAS MADEr AS WELL AS CALCULATION OF THElINFECTION RATE OF
TICKS WITH THE VIRUS (9-13PERCENTI. THE ANALYSIS WAS BASED ON THE DATA
OF SEROLOGICAL EXAMINATION OF 6420 PERSONS,BY THE HI TESTt AS WELL AS ON
THE DATA OF QUESTIONING OF 26r781 SUBJECTS WITH RE&ARD TO TICK EXPOSURE
AND ATTACK DURING THE EPIDEMIC SEASON. SPECIMENS WERE COLLECTED IN
1.966-L968 IN THE CHITA REGION AND THE BURYAT ASSP-,~ ACCORDING TO
INTENSITY OF INFECTIONt IT WAS FOUND POSSIBLE rO CbMBINE TERRITORIES
'AND LANDSCAPE CONDITIONS INTO
SITUATED IN DIFFERENT PHYSICO GEOGRAPHICAL.
2 MAIN LANDSCAPE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL AREAS* ONE OF THE8,15 DISTINGUISHED BY
AN EXTREMELY LOW INTENSITY OF INFECTION 10,4-099PERCENT) AND INCLUDES
CENTRAL ASIAN AND THE PRISELENGINSKAYA STEPPE AND 14ORTH LABALKAL
HUUNTAIN TAIGA. THE OTHER AREA HAS HIGHER MENSITY OF INFECTION
(2-2.IPERCENT) AND INCLUDES TERRITORIES~WITHIN THE'DAURSKAYA MOUNTAIN
TAIGA AND SUBTAIGA AS WELL AS THE PRIBAIKAL AND SOUTH IABAIKAL TAIGA AND
..SUBTAIGA* FACILITY: IRKUTSKIY INSTITUT EPIDEMIC)LOGLI I
KIKROB10LOGII, MZ RSFSR. FACILITY: :INSTITUT VLAUSOLOGII IM D, 1.
ILVANOVSKUGOt AMN SSSRo FACILITY':. MOSKVA HATEMAtICHESKIY INSTITUT
lft. V. Ao STEKLOVAs AN SSSAo FAiClLl:TY:. HO~KVA REPUBLIKANSKAYA
--,SANEPIUSTANTSIYAt BURYATskoY ASSR,, ULiN-U E.
UNCLASSIFIEO
NA-
~A
025 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
~.-.4-ITLE-CN EVOLUTIGN OF ARBOVIRUSES -U-
THOR-(02)-LVOVy D.K., LE3E06V, A.0,
ONTRY OF INFO-USSR
.4~SOURCE-VOPROSY VIRUSOLOGII# 1970# NR 3t PP 37Z-376
;~~.,aAT_F_ PUBLISHED--70
S.Q,3,JECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
'JUPIC TAGS--ARf3aVIRUS, EVOLUTION, ECOLOGY1
3,CONTRCL MARKIhG-NO RESTRICTIONS
,.DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLA5SIFIED
,PROXY REEL/FRAME--2000/1611 STEP NO--UR/0402/701000/003/0372/0376
CIRC ACCESSION NU--AP0125233
UNCLASSIFIED
2/2 025 UNCLASSIFIED, PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
ACCESSIGN NO-AP0125233
BSTRACT/EXTRACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A HYPOTHESIS GF EVOLUTION OF
THE BASIS OF THE ANALYSIS OF ECOLOGICAL
ARBOVIRUSES IS SUGGESTEU ON
CHARACTERISTICS OF ARBOVIRUSESs DATA OF THEIR CURRENT UOGRAPHICAL
.~DISTRIBUTIGN AND CONSIDERATIONS OF GENERAL BIOLOGICAL R~-GULARITIES OF
PARASITISM DEVELOPMENT. PRIMARILY THET ORIGINATED IN AN EGUATORIAL
SUBEQUATORIAL CLIMATIC ZONE AND SUBSEQUENTLY ADAPTED TO C01401TIONS OF
TROPICS, SUBTROPICS AND A TEMPERATE ZONE. THE MAJORITY OF ARBOVIRUSES
DERIVE.FROM VIRUSES SYM13IONTS OF MOSQUITO INTESTINAL TRACT. THE MAIN
SCHEMES OF CIRCULATICN OF ARBOVIRUSES IN DIFFERENT CLIMATIC ZONES ARE
'ANALYSED. AS WELL AS SOME GENETIC MARKERS OF ARBOVIRUSES APPEARING IN
~.-THE PROCESS OF EVOLUTION. SOME MODES PRACT:ICAL APPLICAI'LON OF THE
_.z,SUGGESTTzU HYPOTHESIS ARE OUTLINED. ~FACILITYI; LPISTITUT
V.IRUSOLOGII IMENI 0. 1. IVANUVSKOGO AMN SSSRv VSESUYUZNVY INSTITUT
,_-_.i_,.-,~_NAUCHNOY I TEKHNICHESKOY INFORMATS1 I AN ~SSSRP AOSKVA-
M
771
RAYKOVA, A. P., K'L11,2.NKO, S. M., KCGTYRKO, 1. II.P'ClImAsn'Islay, V. L.1
nd L'i"I.D. K. , Institute of ViroloGy ineni D. I. IvanoVskiy, AcadeLly of
PlediM Saiences'WSR, Xoscov,
"An Investigation of the Ability of Sumah Virus* From the UWcuni;..n1 Group
'to Proliferate in Aedes AeQ5,pti Posquitoes"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologit, No 6, Nov,/Dec 71 Pp 731-735
Abstracti A. aeCypti nosquitoes exrrimentally infected vith Su.-::ah virus
(added to nutrient susrez-ision) vore investigated by olaction nicxr):~copy
and titnations on nice for 2 nonths. The results revealcd~ a ra~ral-r re-
production of the vinrw in the noSqUitOeS. The VirUS iS TO?:~ent in the
cytopla*n, the intercellular spaces in the eplth,-:--lial Ussues, a.-,:L Salivezy
.,)a ", a 11,W) day after inf c OlAon, bit t-,e_ns-
gland duct3 of the no_,quitces fj,, w1
mission by bite occurs only whon tho viruz concontration Iii at 2.5
Ig LD p,~,r 0.01 ml of mosquito Us5ue. VIrus paxticle~; have an cwl :~hafz)j
J
uith long axis 90.0-1000 A azd tho short AxiM 700-Lr.')U A lon-g wA they
havo a tuo-layer membrano which 1r; 90-100 A thick.
~L_ USSR
MARINOV, B. S., Aurny V U SUROMMOV, B. 1.0 KAYUSHIN, L. P.,
J-1~LZ-2
G. B.J1 It 11t.
POS=OVA, Institute of blophyaicso Acadeaw of Sciences USSR,
Pushchino (Moscow Oblast)
"Onthe Possibility of Using Iminoxyl Radicals to Detect U-0paired Electrons
in Biological Systems"
Moscow, Biofizika, Vol 16, No 1, 1971t pp, 337-340
Abstract: The interaction of iminoxyl radicals,vith amino acids and proteins
In the excited state and with mitochondria (in which active transport of
electrons occurs.j is studied. It is noted that stable iminoxyl radicals are
widely used as spin labels to analyze conformation cbanges in macromolecules,
and that it is also considered possible to use them to study electron trans-
fer in biological systems. The breakdown of the radicals was observed in sol-
utions of tryptophan, tyrosine, and cysteine. A typical kinetic curve for the
photochemical reaction of the radicals with protein shows that the rate of
breakdown of the radicals in water is considerably lower thaa the rate of
breakdown in the presence of protein; the reaction doos not proceed in the
dark. It is hypothesized that the radicals interact w1th a photoinduced
paramgnetic state of protein and that the breaWovu Of the radicals occurs
I bj
'-USSR
MARINOV, B. S., et al., Biofizika, Vol 16, No 1, 1971, YP 337-340
as a result of electron transfer to the radical from ~hotoexcited paramagnetic
centers of protein. It is shown that it is possible to use the radicals to
detect and analyze paramagnetic states of protein having a short lifetime, as
a result of which the concentration of unpaired proteins in a.sample is
slight (less than 1.10-10 spinl. Electron transfer va,s shovn with the aid of
the radical in an aqueous solution in a:dye-proteln system and the feasibllity
of using the radicals to studyoxidation-reduation processes In mitochondria
was demonstrated.
2/2
021 -SS tNG DATE--()40EC70
UNCLASSI FIED PROtLE
T-IT-LE--STUDY OF PARAMAGNETIC CENTERS PHOTOLNOUCED IN AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS OF
-U-
-~.AAOTEMS
.,-,AUTf40R-(02)-KAYUSHINj L.P., *M*l
~~UN TRY-OF INFO--USSR
CE-SIOFIZIKA 15(2): 235-238. ILLUS. 1970,
.QU P
~
,,~~'~;._OT E_ PUBLISHED ---- -70
~"-S'OBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCI.ENCES
--AQUEOUS SOLUTION# PROTEIN# EPR SPECTAUMP~UV LIGHTt VISIBLE
OPIC TAGS
_IGHT
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
.-DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
.:.PROXY FICHE NO ---- F070/605007/FO9 STEP NU--UR/07,17/70/OL5/002/OZ35.rOZ38
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0139933
UNCLASSIFIEO
-------------
2/2 021 UNCLASSI FIED, PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70
CIRC. ACCESSION NO--AP0139933
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE EPR SPECTRA AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS
PROTEINS SUBJECTED TO THE EFFECT OF:UV AND VISIBLE LIGHT AT
TEMPERATURES ABOVE 0 C WERE OBTAINED. 1UNPAIRED ELECTRONS ARE STA131LIZED
BY PROTEIN MOLECULES. THE LIFE SPAN OF SUCH STATES AT.TEMPERATURES
ABOVE 0.,C- REACHES SEVERAL DOZENSOF SECONDS., FACILITY: ~INST.
810L. PHYS.# ACAD. SCI* USSRv PUSHCHINb-:6N-OKAt Os'~R.
UNCLASSIF-IE-0-
4
USSR
FAY-Ir6E--NT P. amd LIVC-V, T stitute of Biophysics, Ac~tden~r of Sciencen
USSR ..........
Aoueo-iis Protein ~-)Uu~ions"
"Study oil Paramagnetic Centers Photoind7uced.
Mosco-w, Biofizika, Vol 15, No 2, ?4a-r/Apr 70, pp 235-238
Abstract: The electron paramaEnetic resonance (ERR) of (-.qvaou'~ zrctoin zolu-
tions exposed to ultraviolet and visible light W.5 Study of the
prqperties of photoinduced fi-ee radicals in aqueous proteLn solation'-
temperatures greater tLan OOC Nrill be valuable in el-acidat"w"ng C~~!-tain
"a
recently discovered properties of prozein molecules in ma- s-,able excitt~d
states. Studies 'were conducted with a radio spectromt e'UeT Upecially ~Az~pted
ption of samples contain ng a lari."La waxuit of
to measure the EPR albsor. I i U
(tissue, solutions, and suspensions). For each sample, the -EPR :ipectrum wris
recorded during illumination are, im---adiately t-liereafter. The =.agnitude of
the signal persisting in the dar?,Q,.esa represented the staldlity ol' unpaired
electrons. Samples of glycer=ated muscles and solutions, of peptBin and
ribo=aclea5e were inve.3-~i Gated. P-11 of them displayed HPR spe(.~tra w1aen
illuminated with ttltraviolez or visible Eight- Unpaired
:~tdbi-lized by protein molecules. This state persis-red fax a time in
darkneaLs. Paramagnetic ventero were folmed When liglat W41.1 WrA(vi 01-1 11111ch
faster than thcy disappo:!ared affer IiFnt va"I turned off, ptrl~IIAC-d in
..........
USSR
KAYUSH-IN, L.P., et al, Biofizika, Vol 15, No 2j~ Mar/kpr '?0, pp 2-35-238
the darlmeess for 30-40 seconds, with 30A of them remrainii)Z stable for sever-a-I
minutes. No EPR spectra were observed when an aqueous oulution of methylene
blue and eosin -was illuminated with either visible or ultraviole!t ligiit.
UDC S7~..,l
MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF AVOSPHERX '411ROC-IN FIXATIO.14
[Article by Memb r-Correspondent USSR Acz.!~ Sciences V L. K
of Lt. ~r ~, h
Doctor of Siol.azical Sciences Z. G. Ym%-i , "a -Candidate r, Of 1110102IL21
Sciences N P. Vvea, S S. -,!a scow, Vestnik A "-demii Nawk
ku r i A
The atnosDhore is a jour-~e of OztrOftm. found in the.toriposition 4)
all life. The. rcscr,.-cs Of n`itfa:.;V% If: the at=osphcrty are almost urjjmita~~:
above each hectare of soil ri5cs a cut=, af ;-ir containing about $0.ui)j1 t .
of nitrogen, i-e., 2PPrOx~mate)Y 10,DnO tiiws car,, thzn in one hoctare of
soil. Ncver-hcloss, neither the hurtan n~r the animal organism, nor mun of,~
the world's vcget3tlon is caPable of alsimilating notecular nitrogen fron H,;j
atmosphere. and animal alika aw,.uirg rzit:ogcn tron food in the form (,V
VcEctuhlc and nnimal pratc4.rs etablc5, however. t!
4 1 Ai vqj
runarkable rnpaci~y to srnthc3ize prno-e--ts fron carton air_&Wle gas, water
and inorganic sour,:cs of nitrrj;cn -- z=nza'la and the salts at' rdt ric acid
cscnting in Vic, final analysis a source of prntein on our
But even x~znonia nitric acid salts t%it:ates) . in turn, anz formcd iro~l
molecular atnosphrric nitrogen by vir:~,f ~f the vital activity of a 51-C.
group of nitrogen-fixing microorganl~sr.~. '.iving in the Sol I and In water
bodies.
1hus, life on our planet Jcperds cr, these microorganisms.
Natural nitrogen-fixing microarganii-As can be classified in two
ZrGL1p5: free-living and svmbJotic, which live in symbiosist (companionship)
4~un
with hiCher plants or - gi, sttpplying thm with various. nitrogen compounds
formed in the process of fixation of at;uasp-.cric molecular nitrogen,
The history- of analysis of nitr~_ger -fixing microorganisms goes back
to 1893, when S. N. Vinograds~ly first extracted from soil the anaerobic
nitro;on-~ixing bacterium clostriditc% (Clostridium pastcurLanum) . Later a
In 11.101, M. Ray.~rink discovered the. anaombic nitrogicn-fixing bacterium
azotoloaczer_ For no-arly.a. half c 'entury these two frcc4 I Iving bacteria war
conside-ed tha only nitrugun-fixing nictvibcs In the soil Development Of
neli, hi;hly senaitive :.cthods of detertaning nltrog~~n-fk;l.g activity by
~71
Acc. N rz Ref Code: UR 0216
PRIMARY SOURCE: lzvestiya Akademil, Nauk.SS15R, Seriya
-Biologicheskaya, 1970 j, Nr. .1, pp V-
LVOV 0 )L. V. KARAPE
N. P. IV. 1. LYUB "Af, TZAN
PECULIARITIES OF THE OXIDATION METABOLISM AND NITROGEN FIXATION
IN MYCOBACTERIUM AZOT~ABSORPTUM N. S P.
A. ,N1. BadrInstitute of. Biochemistry, AcadenzU of
Scivrices, USSR
The experiments carried out I'll suspensions of non dklding rells have shown that
the nitrogeri-fixing Mycobacterium atot-absorplum oxiditeii L*ie most importarit conj-
pounds of the tricarbon aelds cycle and possesses a cytooFromeli set characteristic of
fixation in this inkroorgsinism -ds more
2erobi-- microorganisms. However N2 I)roc"
energetically under anaerobic or microaeropbilit conditions.
REEL/FRAM
19781820
USSR
L'VOV 0. 1., PAVINSKIY, P. P.
"Optical Spectrum of the Acceptor Center in a BiI Crystal"
3
Leningrad, Vestnik Leningradskogo Universiteta: Fizika-l"imiya, October-
December 1973, pp 13-17
Abstract: The bright-line absorption and emission spectra observed in single
crystals of B113 having a stoichiometric, deficiency of iodi-ne are theoretically
interpreted. The form of the spectra is,hydrogen-like with reverEe convergence
of the lines on the long-wave sida of the.series. A vwdel of the acceptor cen-
ter is suggested, and the relative intensity of the absorption lines as well as
the asymmetry of the shape of the lines are calculated. A qualitative ex-
planation of the mutual inverse behavior,of the intensity in the absorption
and emission spectra is suggested. The.dependence of the photoelectric
activity on the spectra is naturally included in the suggested scheme.
The article includes six equatiovs,one figure, aild two tables. There
are 11 references.
USSR UDG 669.016.4:536,2:621.762.4
SAMSONOV, G. V., BOCOMOL, I. V. L'VOV S N. , and LESDIAYA, M, I., Institute
Illy
Acade~~:Io 9'ciences UkrSSR, Institute of
of. Problems of Material Science:
Physics of Metals, Academy of Sciences UkrSSR
"Thermal Conductivity of Cermets Containing Titanium Carbide"
Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya, No 11 (119), Noy 72, p1) 62-65
Abstract: A study was made of the thermal conductivity of cermets of the
systems TiC-Nb, TiC-Ta, TiC-Mo, and TiC-W, containing 25, 50, and 75 at% metal,
within the 20-11000C temperature range. ' The theLmal conductivity was meastired
on hot-pressed specimens according to a previously described method (Porosh
Novaya Metallurgiya, No 9, 89, 1966]. Temperature and concentration depen-
dences of thermal conductivity of the cermets are shown. A considerable drop
was established for the thermal conductivity coefficient of the cermets in
comparison with introduced metals. A relative increase of the thermal con-
ductivity coefficient is shown to.take- place at a conatant temperature in a
number of the investigated compositions. Two figures, one table, seven
bibliographic references.
USSR UDC 669.ol8.4:537.311-621-762.4
SAMSONOV, G. V., BOG0140L, I. V., To XnV 9 0 J6,and LJMJ~AYA, M. I., Institute of
Problems of Material Science, Academy of Sciences: Ukr~ $SR an;1 the Khereon
Pedagogical Institute
"Electrophysical Properties of TiC-Nb, TiC-Ta$ TiC-140, and TIC-W Cermets"
Kiev, Poroshkovaya M4tallurgiya, No 10, Oct 72, pp 62-67
Abstract:*The temperature function of specific electrical renistance e and
coefficient of thermal emf CXof TiC-Nbj, TiC-Ta, TLC-I,bfi and TiC-W cenrats,,
with a varying content of cementizing iretalj was Inve:stigated at" 20-11000C.
The Hall coefficient R was also measured at room. tenpexv~Lture. Carmet :!~Zlflq)les
20W-25003C a, a pressure Of 300
vere.made by sintering, pluG hot extrision at
kg1cn? for 10-15 minutes. Extremes were observed in thin c=-entration rela-
tionships at 50 at.% Nb(Ta) and 25 at-% 114M. The limar nature of the
temperature function ~(t),C~ =Q((t) was shown for the investigated cermets,
which testifies to the metallic character of their cond~.!ctivlty- The specific
electrical resistance of TiC-14b and TiC-Ta exceeds the resistance of the
initial metals (Nib--16 and Ta--14-7 micro-ohm-cm) by 7-14 tinnars and is 2-4 times
greater than in TiC (53 micro-ohm-cm). In the TiC-Mo and TiC-W cermets the
her than ~u the initia
specific electrical re5istance is an order hig 1 materials
1/2
'pe es
I
V
USSR UDC 546-27t72041-12,03
ROSTMKIY, I. I., and L'VQV Kherson Pedagogical Institute imeni K. K.
Krupskaya
"Some Physical Properties of Cobalt and Niclkel Borldes"
Svexdlovskp Mika Metallov i Metallovedeniyet Vol 330 No 4., Apr 72, PP 773-
7?9
Abstraett The temperature dependences of the specific electric resistance(?
and of the components of thensal conductivity A and.the ttiernoelectromotive
force -og'of cobalt and nickel borides were experinenta.11y investigated by
methods described by S. H. L'vov et al. (Poroshkovaym hetallurgiya, 1966, No
89 A Prav4
9 -la. Tekhaicheskoy Eks-pluatatsii, 1961, No ;!, 2.59). The retults.
are discussed by reference to tabulated data and. diagrams of the physical
properties of cobalt and nickel borides at 2900K and t-he temperature
dependences of 9 and ~ for GoB and farromaghi~tic Wildeis of cobalt
and nickel borldes. The supposed relative position of the 3j;f -, 4,e-, arA
4p-zones and of Ferni levels for nickel boxides an shown. For the latter
the magnetic susceptibility X and the Hall coefficient at room temperature
were daterained. The concenfr4tion of charge ca=1erge effocts of various
nechanisms, their degradation, and the disposition ofthe Formi level relative
1/2