SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PASHKOVSKIY, M.V. - PASTERNAK, I.I.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002202330007-2
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RIF
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S
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100
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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212- 025 WNCLASSI FlE0 PROCESSING DATE-MOV70
L'IRC ACCESSICIN NO-AP0130654
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP--O- ABSTRACT. T14F T EMP. D':PENDENCE WAS
114VEST IGATED OF ELEC. CONO. OF CSI SINGLE CRYSTALS, C014TG. COMBINED
CATIONIC AND ANTONIC IPPURIT11:51 AS WELL AS THE EFFECT OF HIGH TEMIP.
ANNEALING IN VACUUM ANO IN 0 ON ]HE CrIND.! OF CSI IfIfil CATIGNIC
IMPURITIES, AND TFIEWIAL CYCLE ON SPECfMENS WITH ANIONIC, IMPURITIES. THE
RESULTS CAN BE WELL EXPLADIED INI TERMS OF AN ANIM11C, PILCHANISM OF COND.
IN C~l. FACILITY: LIVOV.,GOS. UNIV-114. FruNK0. LVOV, USSR.
UNC L A SS I F~ IF 0
-112 005 UNCLASStFIED PROCESSINS DATE--18SEP70
-.TITLE--ABSORPTION SPECTRA OF NI PRIME2:POSITIVE ANO CO PRIME2 POSITIVE IN
CADMIUM TUNGSTATE -U-
AUTHOR-.(03)-NOSENKO, A.YE.i PASHKOVSKIY* mov., FuioRSKIY* D-La
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
URCE-OPT. SPEKTROSK. 1970t 28(2)v 29T-301
D ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
~
_S
UBJECT AREAS--NONE
-'-:-t.OPTC TAGS--ABSORPTION SPECTRUM, NICKEL, COBALTY CADMIUM COMPOUND,
TUNGSTEN COMPOUND# SINGLE CRYSTAL:
~.::CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
-DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
:~-P_ROXY REEL/FRAME--L980/1319 STEP NO--UR/0051/70/0281002/0297/0301
CIRC ACCESSION ND--AP0049481
UN C L A S S I F I
2/2 005 UNCLASSIFT ED PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70
'~C IRC ACCESSION 40--AP0049481
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. ~THE ABSORPTION SPECTRA OF CDWO
SUB4 SINGLE CRYSTALS ACTIVATED BY NI PRIME2 POSITEVE 4N0 CO PRIME2
POSITIVE IONS ARE INVESTIGATED IN THE ENERGY REGION 40GO-25,OOOCM PRIME
NEGATIVE1 AT 300 AND 90DEGREESK. THE OBTAINED EXPTL. RESULTS CORRELATED
WITH THE SCHEME OF ENERGY TRANSITIONS CALCD- BY THE METHOD Of CRYSTAL
FIELD THEORY FOR A HAMILTONIAN OF ORTHORHOMIC SYMMETRY.o
UNCLASSIFIED
11 H W.
ON
f Cod6l
Aec. N s. dting-Servi*~e:
Y~48423_ INTEMT.,,qROSPACE ABSTe~~
A7&23925 AL problem.for the Tricoml equation
(Odna S SITS nais gow*s dlia,.uriviierifia Trikomij.: jV, j6
Pashk2,4 InAkadmlia . Nauk - SSSR, fnPitut Maternatild,
_%yosibir
USSR . Differwrtia lny~ privnen vat. 6 J~n. 1970,
p. 200-203. 9 refs. In 06 $~si4n.
Oisws3ion of a problem of the Tricomi equation whirh differs
from the regular Tricomi 'problem in that not the valu+ of the
solution is given an the.characterriWc.of The problem but IN sum of
the solution and its derivative with rospdct to zhe LinknOY4 x. The
existence and uniqueness of 4 smooth solution to thk mixd& blem
Prr,
are proved with the aid of a priori estim$es,. V.Z
USSR UDC: 62.1.634.6311
ANDREYEV, V. G., PASHKOVSKIY, V. V
"A Cylindrical Cavity Resonator"
Moscow, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, PronVshlennyye Obraztsy, Tovarnyye Znaki,
No 32, 1970, Soviet Patent No 284197, Clas's 21, filed 23 Jun 69, pp 62-61
Abstract: This Author's Certificate introduces a cylindrical cavity reso-
nator which contains conducting discs with drift tubes. 'As a distinguishing
feature of the patent, the design provides for excitatioa of an electrical
field alone, the resonator axis in the r/2 standing wave mode e;nd for in-
creased coupling between individual cells of the,resonator by ;Installing
conducting diaphragm in the middle of the spaces between -the conducting
discs, the diameter of the openings In the diaphraZw being leas than the
diameter cf the discs.
U.
VITKAWV, B. G., TRUNOV, L. I., PAR T
"A Fluidic Discrete Amplifier"
is Certificate No 309354, filed
USSR Author :19 Ma~
(from RZh-Avtomatika, Telemekhanika iVycbislite:
Jul 72, Abstract No 7A62 P)
um 681.325.65:525
'shed 13 Aug 71
70, publ--
'nkya_5-nkhnika, No 7,
Translation: A fluidic discrete amplifier is proposed which contains
supply and control channels, - output channels with a splitter between
them, and also channels vhich are open to the atmosphere. To increase
the amplificaticn factor the walls. of all charnels of the amplif ier, ex-
cept for the controlling channels,are sloping.and Tiarroved toi4ard the
1over part of the element, while the controlling cbannel,n nv? made
shallower and are located in the.1wer patt of the elel-I'Mt. One i-1-
lustration.
d
U 3 0-1 UDC 619:616.988.?-3:616.833..8-07:636.4
Doctor of Vett. v Sciences, NASTENK
PRIMLL~, F. I., 1-1.rofessor, PASHOViza. )rinar. 0
V. D., Candidate of VeLarinaFY`Zences, ard MRANW, A. Ya. # Candidate of 13io-
logical Sciences, All Union in-ititute of Exper;Lmantal Vaterinary Medicine, and
Poltava Zone-5c;entific.Research Veter. r~r: S
ina t(Ltion
IlRespiratory Form of Aujeszky's Di
sease in Hogs."
Koscow, Veterinariya, No 8. Aug ?0. pp, 55-56
tkbstraczu. Respiratory diseases are co=on among hogs; on some farms, they repre-
sent 50-9Q,; of all wwine diseases. To identify' the pathogen of enzootic pneumcnia,
cultures inoculated with lung tissues f rom. disoased hogs i were cultured and a very
active cytopathogenic virus was isolated. Rabbits, guinoa piZs, and white mice
infocted with this virus, which was free of bacterial contanization, died within
a slaort, Period. Ho.,s infected with the virus developed a chronic type of pneLi-
nonlz wh-lch waz defined as the respiratory form of Aujozz~-,rls diseare. The virus
was neutralized in vit-0 with spectfio sox-=. PAssive lwaunizAt:Lon with the :se"um
nad no affi~-_t ix rabbita, but protocted gtd.nua pigs from Aujasz4l 5
disoase aftel- iffection wi-th t4e cultured virus, It is racommoraied that the res-
piratory forn of AujjaszIWIa disease be taken into considfj~riition In the differen-
tial dia,-nosis of onzootic viral pnoumoniao.
XV-6. STOW OF TNE SUVrAGE; STRUMAL OF EPITAXIAL. SILIM.' US114,r Tht -rmac.~-
VIURZ Of SLAW LLECTKW,;6IFFKACILv:t-
1ATTiCIC by U. !'?-JLLMt. V-_I-..P0VhVUdcAko, 1._M. Dzhams.1atdInqv. V-V. &,.a'-
rhvnko. H-MJArsk, ill 1,,jm..jYM pq - !~~ ~. !,
~,,rfs Cal In. 1 P17%~.W,;
k,
Ov imatnr- ths.slaw *I~ctrvn dUrfactian pro;edure on tho (111) sur(ar-
Ir oottextai milLcan grPon In the chlarl4o process. the supurptrutturm, of 5
(111~4 at 5 was 4oitartod. It u44 deawmotrat*4 that It& acc-irrunue %riacs
from the oret.nce of chlorloo. It. in chorattcriszlc that the 5 x 5 supar:truz-
turt Is not uh4etvmd on. the silicon suitoco xrown from a wit. Including on,
plot atchod witis hydrogen, chlowl4a.
7110 4141orl"a, cun~vn-(n th. 44licamis doteraLoad to. a sipnitic""t dc
$Pee by the-grawlth condWonor and It corrtlatex wLth the time at existcnca of
the 54 ~ o"rstriActur*. Otis -stem w*i&,jLsdv at the offoict of covt&in crys-
tstlftstlmn narmantort an the by the-evitaxtal laysirs it *Ili-
'Can duvtop the vrourtte
Process-
.5o,. Upp 5
( 4 -J 7
GTIMIrM OF KPITMIAL SILICOV FILMS WITH THE APPLI"TV~S L'? :fYVR(W7EK Or
PURITY AND THE STUDY TV 711E'llt PROPERTIEr,
Zova
-."Jan. raft
S,
prz;,~Vrctivc and controllabj,: n-c~thzd, o% grtoing
of allf,con-Iti the reduction of' Us tetr4chlorid- 4- r1- replan of rh~
surface of the mnocrystalli- goll-itrato of silicon In a li~droron -:urrant.
AlthouFft this pciiccas is the subject of many rapeto, [1-31. tha a(ftrt. of agot.n
on the electrnphyfiftal propertica; ane, the grooth kiretics of apitA*1^1 siltcon
III" luive been studied inadequately 151.
We have performed compArativir axperl:tants to abr4in the epitp--f.", film-
of lkii;h-purlt7 Ctot-nil Admixturl; content p&rc"t br valumd) a
contrall4bLe micreartcunt of water vapor In the hydragen. , In Figure 221 .~ ha,-a
the ochomat:lc at tile. exiserimenra. ten-posAtlers devIlte to);*ther with. t~- A,,,rttv,
for batchol il,ttixtuction of, vAtor vapor. Iace the hydre;ern.
The apitaxial films were o"ained on sulscratirs; of vartutiv types ulitch
w"ro placed art the sillron basohmated 1,j high frequericy turttint-j. Th* it-viccal;
Was realized in a vertical quartz reactor# s.:d ths,~qumntity of hydrarem-ntl
'71la optimal F,1&4th tt-Peratur
chItrida wan torulated withtn the rloniied Wilts~ - . t
was 1200-1250%. Tito silicon chloride had a tot4l impurity contelic of r,, ~rq
t1l.0,10-6 percent.
In order to invitstigato, rise effvct ef Chi, 4*y--cn on the growth rr~cqt'.',
it special Mystclit was up~l (ejrure 23).
Tito hydrogen saturated with vatur vapor came Into the reactLon area after
the temperature of the oubotrAto reached L250'C. the substrates tiers sO,jecto.
to tile effect of Clio wet hydrogen in practica together with the beginnitir, or
deposition. Thist permitted the pickling effect of the water vapor on thg- 'AubstvArt
the water vapor
to be avoi4od (3) and unique dots tabo obtained on the effort of
And tho oxygen (at a rre-th Comparators of LZSO*C. diagociatLor. of the ~cor with
tile formation of free 02 takes place). Tito deposition was carried o4t with a
flow rate of approximately 4 ILter/alln with a mclet-.actlon of Sicl 4 in Chi 11 2
equal to O.M.
v-51,. EFFECI OF NITWOMADMInIM 04 THt GROWTH Of ~V17AX;A& 1AMMS 0' '51LIMM
IN THE CVdAYAI:)t rROCESS
(Articl. bv V. 0. Pashkadanko, V. V. Kharchanko, Tathkent, Novosibirsk
Simpozi pd- frdtaeouse- Ron to I Poluoroyodnikovikh Kristallov
Russian, 72, V 561
::.JL-X=4y the cooperative kinetics of the tritzmLa-srowth of
lit 'hydrogen vich m4crodamed CID-Z) tojection of
9111"n In port hydrogen and
hloth-Purlty nitroNan. The tempersture functions of the mrowth rate obtan*4
in PUT* hydrogen indeptendcatly of the alcrDmechm."Lam of the rrace*n, 'Oft. lina:r
in Lhe *mt$to temperaturn waalt,t, Thin nitrogen adutxture has a% *f(wet. on th
crystallization rate both in the kinttic vaNion and I% region* where the process
t4te In lialted to one degree or another by the wave ttsnvg~zt- The atronRast
affoct of nitrogen Is notod-for mall concentra,ttom of wilftsvk totrathlbrid*
the growth:race dett"Sca by, 1-1.3 tiam- Par-higher
chloride c4meofttrations, chat dlffeteoc~e in growth rates will,beems jmr# notice0l.,
In the high temperature gegion.on the &rrheni" curves cac jejeCtlee-of nitrogen.
nonlinear sections are absema&. Alch -or* deserlt-ad In tb&- Iltarmcuri. the
pto'balble tiai6imism of the effect of the nitroxam admAmat an the process to
discussed.
56
Zk
7.3
1-4. XINXTICS OF rig INITIAL CAOM STACZ OF EPITAXIAIL LAYSM
[Article by 9 4. Ahdurakhmoa~. M. 1. Crtysukh. V. P. p4ahkWenka, V. V.
III SI 1:90ASAM Roots I si~tr.-
rot - fIItP~ a~kkpyj kh ~Lr J 4 t 41 F 1 k. Russian, 12-17
A atud7 wa* J==zZanty bF the siltios dapasitlo~
-jur'.=1 Prot "a. T6, ojxtCon_xzWAth Urtaticz -tin the Initial
at"x& Vh4r* this phonomooon to observed were sto4led in a broad ro.ps at
er7stallltstiao Conditions (the deposition temperature . the SLCt4 Concsatuntlan
wM tht flow rate). The sx.partmutal results. *how that the Itta-th rot* Is the
InMal stages to highor than uWor attedy-stato, conditions. Th4 ratto of the
silicon tryotalllsatLo" rotso %n the first and -tooth minutes at deposition da, It
cramp" with an increase in the SICI concantrotion., asW for C Is- Percent
4
It It. 5.2 *~W fair CSict 6.0,p*rcwoc It Is I.S. At a high deposition to" raturo_ 1~
the, astob:14hat"t of the a tat topary, growth, rate takes place more rapLdly.
The instrument analysis at the Sao phase dopo"Utaft wtCh rueptct to thermal
conductivity srA with,respect to Infravat! aboarptlos spectra romittm; witImAzion
of the pariodo of nonstationoritT of the vapor-gas Mixtute co"ONAttoo 12% the
reactor Is the case at &dslo*ion and shut-off of, ei2lcan t#tr4chlov"*~ On rue ii
basio.,of the dat4t,olittinod. calculated estimates more otado which demonstrated
that th% observed effectof Inconstancy of. the growth rate In the IsLaW at&$**
launat 490roinad by ~ Iho nonstatlosority, of the gas phase composition but is
C 04d by the affect N surface, properties of the substrate an the cz?vc"sacloo
Frocood.
V-5a. ACTIVATION ENERGY OF THE PROCESS OF REWUNa SILICOU ;ETRAC=XTDt BY
HYDROCEN
(xrticle by V. V. Vharcharka, V. P. Pashimideaka, Tashkasti Kovoo1birak, III
f SWi- Pal rav"ni h rtlttmllm~ I F9=kl
_wW Aug* 12 -1 j47-o-,T ii-;
May rassarcharm, havetried to eactimate the aa~olta4* of the 4eti.stion
suar4y of the procens of hydrollta reduction of SICL'. Mr I.to calculation they
used the expression (3 to. VJIT) P I that U. they iuvestigated the variation
11, 2
of rise process rat* with invariant concentration of tbo.coisponesta in the
spars. In this case *-on for sinplo reactiaza It As posatbla-tz aUtela, only the
a and
V&jUsM CL the "8PpaV4j-je.'.KZaV4tL*ft Sftxcgy.~ T44 Ot4cjtit ionctj* Z
app
Etru ~, Callow* from the guru of I the kinetic. "nation, the -sature of its co~atmuts..
anj the Inaction machaniam. to prsetice fi"dtaz~tbs equation of -the Investigated
ion encounters ski .4ifficultips.
react ilaus
A rtudy van made of the Srowth Mustics ot silicon in the region of
mall (0.04-0.1.3 percent) Sict, concentration* an substrate a alloyed.uLth
&GtimonY. In this case,. the -process rate is described by a first ar4or equation
V - k-C The tomMerature functions were obtained for the process rate
constants fAr . mim*ber of v&Iums of the vmpar,;~Saa sixture f. lux In ths form
k - k0*-AE/RT. The values of to And at for linear flow rates 4txceodtng 3 000v4
(kinetic conditions) coincide and are equal to 7.31102cm~hmolamssc atA 12
kcal/mole respectively. Ths, process U*Cb*Ai*U r" the raUtion between the
"true" and "Apparent" activation Margins Are dio'cossed.
Az
.4,46"
X-3a. EFFECr OF THE CRYSTALWATLON OUNDITIONS " TWE TPWISMIt OF nim"PAM
AND ANT1904Y I."XURITIES FPLOM 1I(E SUBSTRATES INM THE rP1T.*AtAL W~b Of
SILICON
[Article by !~.-SJjut"ich, Z. Kh.,.Kh. V. 11. TazhL~~v.*V. V.
Kltorthftnk., M. R. rtroy.ukh, Sh. Sh. qhmssidov, Taahk;~,'-
K,
With the application of a larmrRC! radioactive sm.Alwals, studlt* "m
nods of the dtatributim profiles of antl-ny and I" Vopttaxial
layers of stittem-na a function at the jttr~tlv condition.. rle opitsX.-sl I*Tera
vare obrmined by the vwthoJ of hydrogrij rednction of *411c~ tetrachloride.
The, grouth procnap temperature and the concentration of silic"i tatrothLuxido
were varied. The diatrib"tion profilan of tho..antimonjr and pho*~~hami can be
mactaftictorily dcarrLbcd,by dtffusj~n eqxiatione with effective diffusion c~
*fficiants differing forAifferont grmth conditions, Ths, vitlatimo between
the Wfuoion coefficient In &Ingle crystals and imuld-An. *or rxPors-titnts de-
Pend essentially an the -temperature the xr6twi rate- and Strovth time.
with an Increase In the growth rate the diffoolon coefficients of both
Impuricloo Increase for all crystallization temperatures (fov the 4"asition
tamp"aturs of L.2601C, the -variation tak-c, place in tb* Tart4o of to
A-LO-'DcsZ1smc for phopphcratL *Ad 3-16-12 to 10"10cm2leec: for anti"mr).
The valuss, found foir.the diffusion coefficients PA a functIon of the
growth, conditions of the layers can exceed the value* imowa for *trtSl* crvo-
calm. They can be *qQ4kL and have amllor viaums.
132
X-3b. STUDY Of THE OtSTIRRUTION Or AL=XRf; kWMXMRM IN EPI'rAXIAL Uytn or
stucom wi% Tuk AppucATim or
(ACttcle by A. S. Llutavich. V. P Pashkudanko, V. V. Kharchenko, E.,Kh. Khod
Mi. Sh. ihfissidr,v, Ta"hkent, Rove,ilblvak" ,fitj!~to;24= to pwtzor,vi-
ILI at allov I rlsrink~ R%jaMiji=1_.
7
1he Idea of this axpotiment clansistod to usi Itilt alloying 0416ist.rog of
v4rious Chemical ceture and varying the crystallizatlon conditions to estimate
the contribution of the itrnwtis effects and the 41flosion process"
to the f:-na2 dI#trfWuttcn of the admixtures. . The epltaxial lovers of silicon
to cbtaiaed,by the method of hydrogen reduction of SIC14 in 11 broad Conte"
"
,:.tln ranX4 of sict, And allov.1z;t qmpenentm. The allaring a-4mix,turaft Vare
iatrx~4.t-l late the system In #hajora of chlorides from
In order 'to' *deternIno the distribution profiles of the &dmixtu7v coftcontra-e
t"A, the procerdura of layered r4ut"M-activa"d Analy"Is- van- umad. -It
dozonstfated tinar th1rddajxt~ji_p_i6(Ile in the investigated specimens is
characterized bythe presence of two sectionss I -- the section with uniforg
concentration distribution (the, plateau), 2 - the section vherqi the jamixtere
con4tot.ration to nonijalform. fievandIng on the srowth conditions, the ratio of
the extent of th*9o mettioa* vorlet. by ustna the. concczt~4 t tariff of -the. ad-
otxturtaAn the r1atesy Tq gtah. un: deft"rf the eirect at the cryotainint$."
temperature, the concentration of th* SjCf, the PCX I end SbCt3 in the gas
Phase an the Allaying. level of 026 Wtfixial layer. In the Case of low can-
contration of silicon tetrachloride In the gas phase Irk some samples the
platsaii,la In practice abs"t. Tri a nurber of apoiteeni. a sharp UcTexiq in
Admixture concentration to noted In the thin surface layer. onito $a observed
es0ktiolir fr*1jicntlT in specimens &110Y,id with *nti"any. 1016 admixture pro-
file in vepttoij 2 to 0"cribed satisfactorily by the diffusion equations with
*t1factive coefficients the values of which under various crystalli%ation cor-
itlons are a%selstjoily diffetant. lie-aver, the purely diffusion mechanism
!f the larmatiin of the profiles will bp doubtful In connection vith the fact
that the settellurRic:10thIrknows of the epItaxlel layers defined experimentally
by the Pack rig date t does not coincide with the thickness corresponding to
0 todcontratlaft OLM which Wes assumed in the calculations. 7%m contribution
f the diffoo too Next* clan phonemus to the distribution profile of the
0 =Sturb in region I is Mcussa-
3?0 '05 5w)(A
OF CILYSTALL17,hTlOH CWU%TIMS (M TUC MVWLx:~,j Ur IP11AXIA_,
wi.R% or SIM CON
1hrticlo V. P. I'aahkudenko, V. V. kliarchcn;~o. Tnshkent! Nove"j-
blr~k. III SjmpozIu.rg._fr .-a~~ta a A~L
_~,tz I !;IjItegs pnitinr
-j if, - - 'I-
i. WA i4W;Y;. . I no, I p I q!,
no Vnit"'La.1 Iyersof gllkmi -rr nhtal,.*-d b, tn~ -thod of rtd~,oe,
SICS. 111 4" atm"oh.tk' of pore hyJeogon In a tIr..j F~'?-tft range I
M nhn-low. C) .4 Sim. roncentration (A-ge in the $;&% (0.04-14 per-
cent by volume). The "sCt morphollicnI. ch.ract-riotitz or th. srisce of
thc= 1.9'.Ts nrc -as follous*. Ot rerionp vi tcta-.drJ jtVPwth -- hol#* end re,
xitna; of 3ccelernted,grmth -- pyramids and tripyrzmids, of certain
typost of a crodofecca, their density, their macnItWe awl crystallrFraplitc...
facing, sAlIcntiAlly 4er-ids on the cryatalli"tion c=d*TtO0,- ~. IwCtv"ing the
Asx:14. can contrat jion',~it Ch reapact to effect an the adrynolopw of the lavers is
equivalent ~ta Increasing the crystallization tt-rt~rrxturc ai,4 1r.ds to a do-
creas.4 in the defoci density of sit oopes. On 11jr _bssls.~( t*w Arr*t aw-unt
of statistical 4ots, the conditions of the predw--inant occurrence of defects
of dIfferont types are defined. Uiese Jata arr presvncvd Is the diallrao. The
occurrence of Is crodefects Is connected with the xrcfian1*n of crystallization
of OrLtaxial layers.
IND
DIsgran. Region of occurrence of bolas, pyrwat,fs
(11) and cripyra.1do (111)
N
Kayi 1. temperature. *C
2. concentration of SICIL., Z by volw"
200
qP
USSR VDC 542-91:547-11118
RIEZNIK, V. S., SIWETSOV, YU S., and PASHTWRO-V ,H. G., Institute
,of Organic and Physical Chemistry ~..~Ai~~U-Zov-, Academy of
Sciences
USSR
."Synthesis and Properties of Pyrimidinylalkylphosphonic Acids.
Communication 5. The Synthesis. of -(Oxopyrimictinyl-N)-Ethyl-
phosphonic Acids"
Moscow) Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR$ Seriya Khimicheskaya, No 2,
1-973, pp 402-406.
Abstract: Several methods were investigated fov the syntlic-sis of
,B-.(oxopyrimidinyl-N)-ethylpliosplionic acids. The reaction of 3-
(,6-chloroetliyl)-6-iiietliyluracil with triethyl phosphite (1) at
150-1550, resulted in the formation~of 2.3,4,5-tetrahydro-S-oxo-7-
methylaxazolo[3,2-a]-pyritnidine and, diethylphosphoric acid. 1,3-
bis-L/3-(dietliylpliospliono)-etliyll-61-inat,liyltiraciI was synthesized
by the reaction of I with 1,3-bis-(,g-chloroetliyl)-b-rletliylv-,raci.1
at 160=165'. 13- (3 2 6- din, ethyl-2, 4-dioxo-1, 2 o 3 ~ 4-te trahydro pyri-
midinyl-N-l)-ethyl p-toluenesulfonaic (II) was!prepared by the
addition of 5 - 5 9 of p-toluenesulf onyl. chloride, to 5 9 of 3, 6-
dimethyl-l-(/9-hydrooxyeth 1)uracil in 12 g of triethylamine, with
y
113
USSR
REZNIK' V. S... et al., Izvestiya Akademli Nauk SSR, Seriya Rhinal-
Cheskaya, No 2, 19731 PP 402-406
the temperature not exceeding 400. 2.2 g of 11 were obtained,
with a m.p. of 153.5-1S5.50 (from benzene). The dibutyl ester of
IB-(3,6-diniethyl-2,4-dioxo-1,2,3,4-tetr~iliydropyrimidiii3,1-1-,,~)-
ethylpho S phonic acid (III) was obtained in a 361.,yield by the
addition of 11 to Na dissolved indibutyl phosphite, and boiling.
III is a bright-yellow oily solution highly soluble in benzene and
CCl4 (nD20 1.4895; IF spectrum (;/, CM-1): 1,675, 1703 (C=O), 1270
(P---0)3 1000, 1025 (P-0-C)). The formation of Mindicates that the
presence of a taittomeric Off group in 3-(P-hydroxyethyl)- or 3-(P-
chloroethyl)-6-methyluracil on the 2 position of the pyrimidine
ring makes possible the closure of the 5-membered oxazole ring,
For the formation of 4-oxol3yritnidinyl-N-etli3,lpliorsp)ioj:kic acids,
studies were undertaken on the reaction of the tasvlate of 3-('0-
hydroxyethyl)-6-methyluracil (IV) and '~)-anii-no-3-(/3-ii3,droxyctli.yl)-
4-oxo-6-mettivl,3,4-diliydrooyr,iiiiiclitic (V/1 and witb triphenyl phos-
phitA-- (VI). The reaction of IV with V I procee(IS at 130-2400 with
a 51% yield of /1-(2-oxy-4-oxo-6-mettjyl-3,4-di-hydr-op3,rimidiiiyl-3)-
acid
athylphosphonic (amorphous powderj insol)[100 ill 411cohol,
highly noltible in water; TAI spectrum (1/ j cm- 930. 1" 50o
2/3
- 44f
USSR
a Khimi-
REZNIK, V. S.,, et al., Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSR, Seriy,
Cheskaya, No 2, 1973, PP 402-406
at 1215, 2250-3600 (diffuse, P-OH and N-11), 1660 and 1715 fc=o)).
The reaction of V and W commences at 1601) and attains 230' and
-results in a yield of 42% of/3-(2-.triino-4-oxo-6-inothyl-3,4-diliydl,o-
pyrimidinyl-3)ethylphosphonic acid (amorphous sybsi--.ance~ soluble
1n water but not alcohols; IF spectrum 0, , cril- ): 1080) 1175, 1230,
and dIffuse absorption at 2300-3500), and a 36'/D yiel&of 2,3,4,5-
tetrahydro-5-oxo-7-nietil)'I:Lmid-lzolo [3,2a.7pyr-imidine (Y11). The
formation of VII was attributed to an attack of the amino group of
the pyrimidine ring on thep-carbon atom, %,those electrophilic prop-
erties; were enhanced by the inductive effect of the oxyphospboryl
group. VII is a crystalline substances highly soluble in water and
moderately in hot n-butanol, and insoluble in aceono. IF studies
of V11 showed that Y 11-1i appeared at 3060-312.5 cW'I, and -;/C=O at
1670 cm The reaction of VI with l.,3-bis-(/3 _oxycthyl)-6-m0Aiy_1-
cil at 160-1650, following hydrolysis, gave a~33' yield of 1,3
Ura %U
bis-(j6-phosplionoethyl)-6-methyluraciI and a 211,,,~ yield of I.,3-13is-
(,8 -phenoxyethyl)-6-methyluracil.
313
JIM1511
USSR
UDC 547.261118 + 547.854.1
RRZNIK, V. S., and PASIMURDY.- N. G.. Kazan' Institute of Organic and Physical
-Y--. Arbuzov, MS,R Academy
Chemistry imeni A. e of Sciences
"Interaction of the Chloralk-yl Esters of the Phosphorus Acids With Salts
of Oxypyrimidines"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 41, No 11, Nov 1971, pp 2,441-2,446
Abstract: As the authors demonstrated In 1967, the reactions between N(;3-
hydroxyalkyl)pyrimidines, which have bastc~ properties, a4d the phosphorus
acid chlorides, are unsatisfactory in that many of them, will not yield the
corresponding phosphorus acid esters. This prompted a search for a new means
of synthesizing these esters, some of which had never been obtained before.
Sodium 2-hydroxy- 4, 6- dime thy 1py rimidine reacted with tris-0-chloroethyl)
phosphate and 1,2-dichloroethane, thus producing l,2-bis(2*-oxo-4',6'-di-
methyldihydropyrimidinyl-N)etliane and 1, 2-bis (2'-ox c,- 4' , 6' -dime- thy Idihyd ro-
pyrimidinyl-N) ethane. Sodium 2-amino-4-hydroxy--~6-metliylpi,-rimidine reacted
with hexyl (a-chloropropyleneglycol) phosphite, producing 2-amino-3-(a,y-
dihydrox-ypropyl)-6-methyl-3,4-dihydropyrimidone-4. Sodium 6-methyluracil
reacted with w-chlorohoxyl ester of me.thylp!iospbonic acidic producing W-
(2, 4-dioxo-6-me thy 1-1, 2, 3, 4- tetrah~ dropyrimiditty 1- 3) hexy I. ester of bis-
chloromethylphosphinic acid. Physico-chemical constants and procedural
details are given.
USSR UDC 542.9lt661.718.1
RWNIK, V. S., and PASgXUJRXI P.Institute-of Organid and Physical
Chemistry imeni A. re. ArbUZOVO Acadeay~of,Sclences USBR~
"S
ome Pbosphorus-Containing Esters of H-HydroxyalkylpyxImidones"
Moscow# Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Beriya Xhimicheskaya, No 9, Sep 71,
PP 2010-2012
Abstracts The article describes the synthesis of pyrimidone derivatives con-
taining a C-O-P bond in the N-alkyl side chain. The reaction of 11-hydroxy-
alkyl_6-methyluxacUs with alkyl(aryl)phosphoric and phospbinic acid chlorides
proceeds in different ways, depending on the reaction corditions and the
number of chlorine atoms in the.acid chloride, Beat reault"s axe obtained in
the reaction of 3-1y-( 9-liydroxyethyl)-6-mothyluxacile witli phosphorus acid.
once of an
chlorides in an inert'solvent (dtoxane Is best) in the prep
equizolar quantity of pyridine, at 30-1600. it was not possible to find a
convenient method for the synthesis of esters of.phosphorus acids and 2-amino-
3-(hydroxyalkyl)-6-.metbyl-3,4-dih;ftlrd-4-pyri4dones.
53.-
MSR UDC .533.9
V.!?., VCYT"--,1iKO, D. t. VOLKOV, YE. D.,M A.. G, , ZAL,
MIY XIND
V. M., KONOTON, P. I., moisr-'YEV, S. S., PAVLICHEZ,-,KO, 0. S.,
sup;&'6sw , 4%
'M t V. A . , TOILK p V. T. *T-Etr--3M:.R2%-XO, F. F.1 TC&xQATM, V. H., and
TAFMIEIm-C, Y. P., P1-,ysico-Tec1-.-dca1 Institute of AcadeiV of Sciences Ukrainiaz
SSRt Kharkov
"Raera Losses of Plasma in a 'Uragan' Stellarator With large $hear"
Kiev, Ukrair--Ady Fizicheskiy -.bu-.nal, vol .16, 1, Aug 71P PP 13ZO-1323
Abstrar-ts Investim-tions of the rate of enex&V lossos in LIaz.-ma have shwun
that the lholdin- ~ .--e of mrUcles eignificantly exceeds the enerEy life
0 W-1
tits when the plasna is oi collision type. This artiole discusces the results
of investiratiozm on the r,--t-- of ener,~Zr losses of plasma for
the "UraEwO stellar-ator. The authors study the dependelice of onergy life
tiza of the plasta on the azourit of Omar and the angle of Cohyersion. They
wke extensive use of gTapphs to Inuztrate their findings arzd fInd that the
experimental points lie on a atraight linei Tha authors concltde that the
rosulfz nay be explained on +-J-- basis the, a terzmeral=e-r~elft. insta1UIi-tv
develops In the plasm. The ax-ticle coatains .15-ftgi-,zes w-A 8 'bibliographic
entries.
TECHNICAL TRANSLATION
P'CTC-HT-23- 1~83-71
F-4CLI&;4 TITLE- 5"0 Mectrieml . and T44rmal ,Elocitrimal Prop*rti,ris
of GaAA - CdS solid solutions
FDREICg TIM Kieitotox"allactrtolseskiya I Tarmo*l;;L-tr1i:h*rkijYw
lifiroystya 7*erdykh Paztvrror We C"
Vo7tookhavality, A.. V.
P*zhmn, A. D.
Sam=
Xz'rstiti7ft Vyazbikb Vcheb:%Ah Uvedonly - Mika
No. 5 (96), 1970, pp 153-155
Translated tor rSTC by Imis
NOTR
The content% of this publication have been trAmlated a3 prmiucd in 014! oril';tnal tcxt. No
attempt has 1,crn made to verify the accufaci of uny m4tenicne Wrt-111WO hercirt. T)"I
tianslation is published with it minimum of copy editing anil -repm~tiiam in L~rdcr
to expedite tl-~e diwinination of infurmatuin. Rcqwits for addlitiond copics of (hit
documenc sliould be addruswd to Department A. Natioual Technical InfortuAtion Sctvi~c.
'Sliting(lield. Virginia 22tS1. Approved for pu6ik release,. disitibutioll unlimited.
1/2 017 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING I)ATE--160CT70
TITLE--INTERACTION OF GALLIUM ARSENIOEIWITH CCMPOU,%'TDS OF THE AIIBVf TYPE
_U_
AiJTHOR-(03)-VOYISEKHOVSKlYt A.V., -PASHUNP AP,*.v MITIYUREVt V.K.
','COUNTRY OF INFO-USSR
'15"OURCE-AKADEMIIA NAUK SSSR, IZVESTIIA, NEORGANICHESKIE MATERIALYt VOL. 6,
-_;'FE8. 1970, P.379, 380.
OVATE PUBLISHED - ----- 70
-MATERIALS
_" g.66JECT AREAS
J ,OPIC tAGS--;GALLIUM ARSENIDE, CADMIUM SULFIDE SELENI10 ETELLURIDE# ZINC
",'4,.'COMPOUND* SULID SOLUTIONt INTERMETALLIC COMPOUND
,..,CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
OCIUMENT CLASS--UNCLASStFIED
,PROXY-REW.FRAME-199610952 STEP NU--.UR/6363/701006/000/0379/03dO
-.:C-:1,RC ACCESSION NO--AP0118118
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--160CT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0118118
~.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. STUDY OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
PRODUCING SOLIO SOLUTIONS OF GAAS WITH INTERMETALLIC COMPOUNDS COMPOSED
OF ELEMENTS OF THE SECOND 8 AND SIXTH A GROUPS OF,THE PERIODIC SYSTEM.
L
-THE GAAS ALLGY~S CONTAINING UP TO 20, MOL PERCENT CUS, CDSE, COTEr ZNSI
AND ZNTE Wf-RE SUBJECTED TO INVESTIGATIONS USIt4G METALLOGRAPHIC AND X RAY
ANALYSES. THE RESULTS OBTAINED ARE T-ABULATED* FACILITY:
.~:,:KIEVSKII GOSUDARSTVENNY1 PEDAGOGICHESKII INSTITUT9 KIEV, UKRAINIAN SSR.
UNCLASSIFrED
USSR UDC 5591-1-15
HASONOVA, H. V.
"Effect of Glutamic Acid on Exchange of Camma-Axiinobutyric Acid at 40 Roentgens"
Vestn. Belorus. un-ta (Hearld of Belorussian University), 1973, Series 2,
No 1, PP 37-40 (from RZh-Biologicheskaya khimiya, No Ili Jun '13, Abstxact He
11 F1417)
Translations The effect of L-glutanic acid (1) on the activity of glutamate
decarboxylase and gamma-azinobutyrate transaminase (11j III) In the brain
tissue of white rats was investigated at 4 dosage of 40 roentgens as a func-
tion of the initial state of the adrenal cortex. Increa4md activity of
forments.was noted after the o4ministration.of I before Ud afteir the removal
of the cortex, It is concluded thA the effect of I on 11 ana n1 depends
on the initial functional stato of the hypophysial adienal system.
PROC:BSING DATE--30OCTIO
1/2 038 UNCLASSIFIED -U-
~tITLE--STUDY OF A SYSTEM OF RADIAT114G HEAT CONDUCTING ANNULAR RIBS
-AUTHOR-(02)-GRODZOVSKlYt G-L-#,PASICHN'lKt ~Z.-V-
WINTRY OF INFO--USSR
C
C
,..-SOURCE t
-TEKHNICHl
--AKADEMIIA NAUK UKRAINSIKOI RSR~'DOPOVII)li SERIIA A FIZKO
NAUKIr VOL. 321 FEB- 1:9.70*1 P. 14 7-t- L.5 2
1) ATE PUBLISHED----FE870
SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS
'TAGS--RADIATIVc
--HEAT TRANSFER% SPHERIC SHELL STkUCTUREj BLACK BODY
RAO I AT I ON
_.~_._CGNTRUL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS,
,,-.-,Di3cUt4ENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
kdXy REEL/FRAME--1992/0909 STEP,NO--UR/0441/70/0321000/0147/0152
C-IRC ACCESSION NO--AT0112073
UNCLASSI-FIED
2/2~ 038 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
C.IRC. ACCESSION NO--AT0112073
ABSTRACT/EXTkACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, THEORETICAL. STUDY OF THE COOLING
OF-A-SPHERICAL SPACE aOUNDED BY A SYSTEM OF 3.IDENTI-CAL SPHERICAL RuNGS
OF VARIABLE THICKNESSt INTERSECTING EACH OTHER AT RIGHT ANGLES IN THREE
MUTUALLY PERPENDICULAR PLANESs IT [S ASSUMED THAT THE HEAT CONDUCTION
COEFFICIENT OF THE MATERIAL OF THE RINGS IS.CONSTANT ANO THAT.THE
SURFACE OF THE RINGS IS A-GREY DIFFUSELY RAOIATING BODY WITH A CONSTANT
LEVEL OF BLACKNESS. IT IS ASSUMED FURTHER THAT THE THERMAL FLUXES ARE
PARALLEL TO THE SYMMETRY PLANES OF THE RINGS# THAT THE INTERSPACES
BETWEEN THE RINGS ARE SO SMALL THAT THEIR RADIATION OUTPUT IS ZER09 AND
THAT THE AMBIENT MEDIUM IS AN ABSOLUTELY BLACK BODY 6*IYH ZERO
TEMPERATURE. EQUATIONS DESCRIBING THE RADIATIVE41EATITRANSFER IN THIS
SYSTEM ARE DERIVEL) AND ANALYZED*:
FACILITY: KlIVS4KIl DERZHAVNII
LhMIVERSITET, KIEVr UKRAINIAN SSR*
UNCLASSIFIED
llmll ION WiIM3...!~l:;~.i,?~-.i,,:i~;il.:Ii~-,~i~-,~.,~'11,"ii([,Ililfij.144M,"~~~~ii ~0111-
USSR UDC 8.74
PASIKA, L. I., SANNIKOV, V. N., POSOKHOVA, N. A.,
"System of Standard Operators for Algorithmizing and Prograrnming Economic Frob-
lems"
V sb. Probl. sistemotekhniki. Typ. I (11roblems of Systinis Engineering. Vyp. 1--
collection of works), Sudostroyeniye, 1972,.pp 154-167;(from It2h-Kibernetika,
No 12, Dec 72, Abstract No 12V444)
translation: A procedure is described for selecting the system of standard
i
operators for algorithmizing and programm ng economic problems. The basis for
the procedure is the criterion of reducing the expendityares of time on pro-
gramming with restrictions on the computatio-a time and the ready-access memory
size of the computer. The standard opera tor system comprises the following:
1) the file input operators (the file in machiae code from the ready-access
memory, the formation of annotationsin the information file, the writing of the
annotation into the information library.catalog; 2) groups of decision operators
(information search, preparatioa of it for operatiDa in the nonstandard module,
Cutnut to the nonstandard module, conversion and allocacion of the resuIcs);
3) the groups of sorting operators (ordering the file-s in the ready-access mem-
ory and, in che exteraul mewry by a given word.); 4) the I~roup~ of control opera-
tors (the inemory allocation, the control of the solutioft of the problem flow);
1/2
I M.11M., IMP, W11111"Iffill 1111,411 "IM.
.~"'--1/2, 026 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE--160CT70
"T'ITLE--DEPENDENCE OF THE EQUILIBRIU14 LONG RANGE ORDER ON THERMODYNAMIC
,---PARAMETERS "U-
TH.UR-PASKAL, YU.I*
--USSR
X-n-UNTRY ;OF INFO
--FIZ. TVERD. TELA 1970v 12(2)v 526-33
-.P~T.E_: -P UB L I S HE 0 ------- 70
UBJECT AREAS-PHYSICS
.T,P?kC T,AGS--THERMODYNAMIC EQUILIBRIUM,.THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTY.* ORDERED
-.-"ALLOY
.-C'ONTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
~POCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
,,PROXY REEL/FRAME--1988/0062 STEP NO--UR/0181/70/012/002/0528/0533
i vv ~ 7'Z
- 1; ,, -, - - - 71 i ; I ; I - ! I ::I !:f.,m;W I
I
-A D --30OCT70
'1/2 024 UNCL.SSIFIF. Pk6CESSPIC; DATE
j'ITL E--ANALYS IS OF THE GORSKII BRAGG WILLIAMS MODEL* A. PRANSITION ORDER.
PHASE ABILITY BOUNDARIES -U-
t:.~AUTHOR-02)-PASKALP YU.I.t VALOVSKAYAv L*le
~'Y_CCUNTRY OF INFO -USSR
z._'.S0URCE--IZV. VYSSH. UCHEB. ZAVED.t FIZ. 1,970p 1341) .101-7
3ATE PUBL ISHED-----70
SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS
:-TOPIC TAGS--PHASE TRANSITION, PHASE EQUILIBRIUM, CRYSTAL STRUCTURE,
STOICHIOMETRY.
--.~CQNTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
-_~OOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLA5SfFIf0
-PROXY REEL/FRA;4E--1992/0915
STEP NO--Uk/01 39/ 70,4""! 131,30 1/010 1/0 107
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0112079
UN PROCESSIliG DATE--30OCT70
7212 024 CLASSIFIED
CIRC ACCESS10N NO--AT0112079
~ABSTR ACT/EX TRACT--( U) GP-0- ABSTPACT. AN EXPRESS[01~ PER IVED FOR THE
EQUIL. OF ORDERED PHASES OF VARIOUS TYPES OF SUPERSMUCIURE. THE TITLE
MODEL WAS ANALYZED BY USING THIS EXPRESSION AND BY CUNSWERING ORDER
TRANSITIO:NS. THE BOUNDARIES OFI~ ORDERED AND DISORDERED STATES
WERE DETD* FOR SUPERSTRUCTURES OF EQUIAT. STOICHIC10-rRY. THEY COINCIDE
~-*ITH A, 2ND ORDER TRANSITION CURVEo FACILITY; SIB. FIL.-TEKH.
j, -INST. I M., KUZNETSOVAt TOMSKI USSR.
Uta, L Af 1 E,
7 1 : LL 7 7
e I ii i 10 10 (1 V-- CZ IS S Td I -j
S-~ I C /~-;10/1 Oli/ I WOL/ d?iS 6EEI/6961--A-WVdJ/-13Jd AXObd,
S tl I I D I '4d I Stj 0 NI >' 8ji
-1300W 0IlVV13HIVW 'ADbIN3 93)Ij 'AdObIN133
:If-' IV~~H 'SISAIVIqV ',kD-)IV A~JVKIJO ',kC)I-IV O:Ilb3ObO--SDVJ Dlddl.:
SOISAHd--SV3dV in Pon's
CL ------- G:-.; I S I -I On dAIVO':~:l'-I
S-C*/l '(1191 4OL61 (4.03 *SSnb) *HZ *7i:j bNn--3
'V,).VASAO-IVAVA3tiov9nd *I*nA 'IV.XSVd-tiGHI(VV-'--'
4,1M
-I)- 1;00w SWV11-1114 09VH A`AS'dQ9 ~Ml Ac
~kISS3-JE,'dd o3 i:i i ssv i:i,,,n 9zo Z
2/2 026 U"ICLASSIFIED Pqr]CESSINIS 0ATc---!lSP-;D7n
CIRC ACCESS ION NO--AP0107812
ABSTRACT/c-:XTRACT--(.U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A G E'4 E RA LF01PESSI~iN FOR T,V:7
ENERGY AND ENTROW OF MIXING [N A BINAPY ORDERED SUN. t~FTH TWI-1 TY~i.;:S -;F
NfIDES, ;4[THIN THE FRAME OP THE GORSKY RPAGG- WILLIA-MS M01);H1, IS 't T
'A FOi~MAL EXTENSION OF 0D, ON Tll~'- -BASIS -'F T,4,.
THIS 1',iDDEL IS PROPOSED o'
THERMODYIN4HIC, THEORY OF ORDERINIG, A POS'SIBLE TYPE a F Fq. E !E: E ;~ C. Y
IF THE FqR7~ALLY
DEPENDENCE ON THE ORDER. DE-GqFE, 15 DET'll. AN ANAL.
ENLARGED MODEL PREDICTIONS, REGARDINiG THE,KIND OF: THE 011DER )fS0q0FR
:TRANSITION IS MADE.
USSR UDC 539.3
-PASKALENKO A. A. and POPOV, G. Ya. (Odessa)~
"The Problem of an Elastic Semi-Infinite Cover Plate Coupled to a Linearly
Deformable Base"
Moscow, Mekhanika Tverdogo Tela, No 3, May-Jun 73, pp 79~-86
Abstract: An exact solution of the contact problem concerning an elastic
semi-infinite cover plate coupled to an elastic half-plaxie has been obtained
by various means. An exact solution of this problem is 8iven for a linearly
deformable base of the general type and, in particular, for a base in the
form of a half-plane with a modulus of elasticity that varies,in accordance
with a power law. A numerical realization of the obtained exact solution is
given. I table. 11 references.
--M
USSR vDa 539.384
PASXUZNK0' A* At (Odessa)
"Tuo-Dimensional Problem on Flexure of Semi- W init* Beam on a Linearly
Deformble Support"
Moscow, Prikladnaya MatenatUa i Mekbanikaj Vol, 369 No It 1971, pp 94405
Abstracts An exact solution of a problcm on flexure of at semi- infinite beam
supported by an elastick inhomogensous semi-spacel, with variable in depth
zodulus of elasticity E a S ov (04~~7v z:~:I) has been olkained. A numerical
0 oaded at its end itith
solution of this problem apaied to the case -of a team I
a force or a momont is presented and the resulU a=. givan in tabular form.
An unexpected Increaset with respect to absolute value, of the jitaxinum reduced
bending moment with the support stiffness parameter v, Im revealed. The
results show that the raximun positive (extended louer fiber); reduced moment
decreases with increasing v, while the zwduums, with respect to absolute
value'negative moment# increases. J
1A
-16.988.73-02Z.39:598
USSR UDQ 0 .4
0 K., NUMI/W, 71. V., N E DIE L C,~ E V A S. B., ',~'A T E V7:`TOYIEV.,~,._Ye~. V. ,
NOV,~Ye.
W
NIMELC "N' -,q 11 St !., and M-ILI.KOV, 1. G. ,
'HEVA, H. P.,
Chair of Epidemiology, institute for Sp-cialization ard Advancod Traini-r-Y of
Fhhyv icians, Republic Antiepidemic Station, and Zoological Institute and ~Iuseum
a." Scienc s,, S
of ~.the- Bulgarian Acadev L 0. ofia, Bulgaria
RAquatic and Swamp Birds -- Carriers of Agents of Infootious Diseases. Com-
blunication 1: Ornithosis"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologil, No 4, jul/Au.- 111, pp 437-441.
Abstractt Since Bulgaria lies along one jnportant flight routs of migrant
aquatic ani -uaV fo,;I, a zerological invostigation was performcd on )50 wild
birds caught alang arLlals 131ack Sea shore and Danube RiVer, 3pecific anti-
bodie v. foLL)id in specirens baIojj-:n- to t~je or--lers
s agaLnnt ornithoz;i:; wer
Ardlifornes, Lariformes, RaLliformus, ani C,vLradriifor%,naE;.
me are.~ at e- d ducks,. antibodics~ ~"ai -L ornithosis
In so. is densely popul. -.1 by vj.?U An
virus i-cre fo,.:-,Id Lr~ 21.. i~..7 of ducks, in 44.7,L of dor-.estic duclks on neigh.-
f, an4 n 54. ir-oplo. The,-;e :'~ndin,7- suppr,,rt thD previously
borin i~ of' re
that ,J,;ra'in,, aqua-tic and siranp bird~3 plzy an important
rolo J11 tho Qrniti~-jriz -in natural foci and in the
of this disease to doin; tic u,, i to hun-
-2/2 009 UNCLASSIFIEO'~ PROCESSENG DATE-30OCT70
~~C. IRC ACCESSION NG--AP0124114
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT. !N THE CENTRAL REGIONS OF THE
TITLE MOUNTAINS (SIBERlAJr LARGE QUARTZ.CRYSTALS (91ROCK GRYSTALS"? ARE
FOUNDt IMPORTANT IN ELECTRaNIC APPLICATIONS, QWING.T0 THIIIR PIEZOELEC.
PROPERTIES. THE CRYSTALS WERE FORMED DURING MILLIONS OF YEARSs STARTING
AT THE BOTTOM OF AN ANCIENT SEA IN THIS AREAr WHICH HAS RISEN TO BECOME
THE MOUNTAINS OF TODAY. QUARTZ VEINSo OFTEN CONTG4 RARE AND PRECIOUS
METALSe-00 NOT INCLUDE ROCK CRYSTALS, BECAUSE THE MNS WERE FORMED AT
_;4'."RELATIVELY HIGH TEMPS.t WHEREAS THE FORMATION OF ROCK CRYSTALS REQUIRES
-TEMPS. SMALLER THAN 100-200DEGREES*
...... P 17 um-m F,
USSSR UDC 621-372.o61
PASKALOV, A. I., TIMOFEYEV, Yu. A.
"Results rif Investigations of the Process of Self-Copha-sLng of a Fclloiw-up
Filter Circuit"
V sb. Meto& -2omekhoustoychivoEo 2riyema ChM i R4 (Methods of Interference-
collection of works), Moscow "Soy. radio", 1910,
-Free FM and PM Reception---
pp 97-101 (from RM-Radiotekhnika, No 12, Dec 70, Abstract No.12A149)
Translation: The authors describe the process of self-co-Ohas-ing of a follow-
-up filter in the case of locking on a vide-band F74 sipal. The method of
mathematical modeling is singled out as the principal meithod. which is appli-
cable to analysis of the dynamic properties of the proposed circuit, and the
conditions and idealizations under which thi$ method -Ua used are gi-len. Tile
follov-up filter circult lo described mia its charac:tertistica tire given as
A- V
-d b,
well as qtardarel ozcillogramq of sigrinla. demadulat~_ th(! cl.ro.Ltit. In a.13.
cazes where the pazsband of the equivalent frequency rell,10113e was 3-6 tines
an great aj- that cf th,~ follow-up filter =d, the level ot the 1.1.4 sigral at
the input of the circuit was, MF~,er -than the liLdt threirhold, the circuit war,
relidbly aclC-co,phaaed. Reaw.14.
_20-
USSR 1JDC 547-963.3-.577.391
FAME;VICH, I. F., Institute of Medical Radiology, Kharkov
."Yatrix Acti eini of Chromatin from Organs of
vity of Deoxyribonuelleoprot
'Irradiated Animals"
Moscow, Doklady Akadeaii Nauk SSITZ, No 5, 10/73, pp 12P3-1226
Abstract: Experiments were performed on rats to elucidate the mechanism of
postradiation repair of DNA and DNP in relation to the dose and time after
2.,, a isolated from rat liver and spleen
exposure. DNP03 D11PO.6, DNF nd DNA
were used as matrices for n1A synthesis. The ts-atrix activity of WIP and
C
.6 increased significantly In the liver 21j. and 48 hovxs after irradiation
DNPO
at 800 r while the level of RNA synthesis with DNF and DI'M used as natrices
2.0
was the same as the control. However, 120 hours after irradiation TH,
synthesis markedly decreased. In the spleen, WIA Unthemis decreaced ill the
W-.1P and D114A mtriices at all the observation times, Mlatrix activity of D'N'P
fractions.from the liver increased 24 and 48 hours.after,irradiation regard-
-e but the magnitude of the: changes were c1
lese of the dor, carly dose-related.
1/2
igilign rmit iu 1 r1 13~1
USSR
PAaEVICH, I. F., Doklady Akademii-Nauk SSR, No 5, 1973, pp 1223-1226
'A synthesis decreased after 3.20 hours; natrix activity
The level of RN
decreased sharply cop-pared to the control after irradiation at 800 r but vas
close to the control when nonlethal or suhlethal doses were used. :U4A
the control after doses o.
synthesis was also restored in 4, f 400 and 600 r, but
a lethal dose caused a.progressive decline~in 'matrix activity of DINP. In
ithe
both:spleen and liver, restoration of the level, of MIA sl~'t -s.Ls was most
pronounced after irradiation at 400 r.
2/2
- flu
U S I FIIED 'PROCESSF110 DATE--30OCT70
-1/2 029 NCLAS
'.'.TITLE--RNA SYNTHESIS IN RAT LIVER ANDISPLEEN IN THE,EiR.RLY STAGES OF ACUTE
ADIATION XNJURY -U-
,R
,.4U.TH0R-(04)-PASKEVlCHj -I.F.t VASILYEVAP YE*S-r TODOROVi IPN-t SHANTYRf
~jc_ bui N T RY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE- R AD 106 1 OLOG I Y A1970t 10(i)f 19-24
~~.-.DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
',r.SUi3jEC,T. AREAS--f3IOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
TOPIC TAGS--X RAY RADIATION BIOLOGIC EFFECT, RADIATION DOSAGE-, RAT, RNA,
PHOSPHORUS ISOTOPE, CHEMICAL ABELL ING
LI.VER_
?.SPLEEN,
NTROL .4ARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
C. C,
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
-,PROXY REELIFRAME--1998/0452 STEP P40--UR/0205/70/010/001/0019/0024
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0121126
_L -IF I ED
-UPIC- -ASS
T-7: wl,
0249
UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
_:ClRC ACCESSION NO-AP0121126
.,:-ASSTRACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-o- A6STRACT. RNA SYNTHESIS IN RAT LIVER AND
-:~,-.SPLEEN~WAS DETD. 2, 12, AND 24 HR AFTER WHGLE BODY X IRRADN. WITH A DOSE
'OF 300 R (197 KV, 10 MAt FILTER 0.5 MM CU PLUS I M Ai ALI FOCUS DISTANCE
40 CHI DOSE RATE 26.5 R-MIN). NA SUB2 H PRIME32 PC) SU84-WAS INJECTEI)
INTO-RATS 1 HR BEFORE KILLING THE ANIMALS. :RNA 14AS EXTO. FROm
HOMOGENIZED LIVER AND SPLEEN BY A THERMAL PHENOL t4ErHOD IN TEMP.
INTERVALS OF 0-100EGREESt 45-55DEGREES9 45-65DEGREESt AND 55-65DEGREES.
.-~THE RADIOACTIVITY OF RNA PREPNSW WAS MEASURED BY Lli~- SCINTILLATION
TECHNIQUES. AN ACITVATION OF RNkOlOSYNTHESIS IN THE LIV~R AND AN
INHIBI,rioN IN THE SPLEEN WERE OBSD. 1. ARLY STAGES OF ACUTE
N THE E
RADIATION INJURY, ESP. 2 HR AFTER IRRADN.; A TENDENCY TO NiORMALIZATION
THE LATER TIME INTERVALS. FACILITY: NAUCH.-ISSLED.
.1USTi NED. RADIOL., MOSCOWr USSR.*,
PROCESStNG DATE--30OCT-10
/Z 018 UNCLASSIFIED'
-FINISHII S OF FABRICS MADE' FROM POLYURETHANE
NG TECHNOLOGY AND TYPE
THREADS -U-
Got KAPLANASv Vol PASKEVIC.IUS,' V.
.--~CCUNTRY OF INFO---USSR
---,-,~SOURCE-Kfil. VOLGANA 1970v 123s 65-7
PUBLISHED--70
:--SUBJECT: AREAS-MATERIALS
TAGS-FABRIC* ELASYOMER, POLYURETHANE RESINg CELLULOSE RESIN*
ACETATE t NYLONt CLOTHING# DYE
,,_._.._t_0NTRf3L -MARK I NG-NO RESTRICTIONS
~.__DIOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIEO
PROXY REEL/FRAME-200010820 STEP NG--UR/0183/70,/000/002/0065/0067
CIRC ACCESSICN NO--AP0124487
U N G LAS 5 1 F- 1,E,D
1-~~212 016 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-30OCT70
~CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0124487
Ac3STRACT/EXTRACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE PRODUCTION AND PROPERTIES ARE
~-:'DESCRIBED OF ELASTIC CORDS CONSISTING OF A POLYURETHANE CORE AND 2
WINDINGS* THE INNER TYPICALLY OF CELLULOSE ACE-TATE AND THE OUTER OF
NYLON 6 THREADS. SUCH CORDS CAN BE DYED BY USING STD. EQUiPMENT ANO ARE
NDERrARMENTS AND
ESP. SUITABLE FOR THE MANUF. OF SWIM SUIlSt WOMEN'S;Uj
SPECIALITY SPORT CLOTHES. FACILITY: LITOV. NAUCH.-ISSLED. INST.
JEKST., PROM.v USSR.
Lasers Maser-S
UDC 621.373:530.145.6
'USSR
GUREVICH, c. L., PAS011N.
eady State Conditions of Mode Synchronization in a Laser with n Saturable
11st
Absorber"
Gor'kiy, Izvesti a vysshikh uchebnykh zavedeniy, Radiofizika, Vol XV, No 2,
~-1972, pp 221-226
Abstract: It has been demonstrated previously [G. L. Gurevich, Izv. vyssh. uch.
zav4, Radiofizika, Vol 13, No 7, 1019, 1970; G. L. Gurevich, et al., =, Vol
40, No 12, 1566, 19701 that instability in the intermode beat frequencies
usually occurs for smaller amounts of absorber than required for instability
of.slow modulations. Thus, the development of instability in the intermode
beat frequencies leads to the establishment of periodic conditions with a
characteristic modulation time less than or on the order of L/c (L is the
length of the resonator, c is the speed of light) which can be interpreted as
the mode synthronization conditions. The basic characteristics of these
periodic conditions are determined here. There is a simple correspondence be-
tween the form of the radiation in the steady state mode synchronization con-
ditiorm and the known solution of the single-mode problem. The dependence of
the amplitude and shape of the pulses on the amouat of absorber Is defined.
Correspondence of the forms of the single mode and multimode solutions is
1/2
-71
USSR
GUREVICH, G. L., et al.,Jzvestiya vysshikh uchebnykh zav(!deniy, Radiofizika,
Vol XV, No 2, 1972, pp 221-226
correct also for a saturable absorber- for which the inertia is significant.
Actually, the shape of the radiation pulses is determinedby the generating
solution which, in turn, depends on an arbitrary constant - the pulse ampli-
tude. The absorber characteristics only affect this amplitude, Therefore,
for identical amplitude, the pulses in a laser both with an inertia and an
inert4.aless absorber have identical duration. The inertia~of the saturable
absorber.is felt only in the 03~ount of the absorber require'd to obtain pulses
of the given -amplitude.
2
.........
USSR UDO 8 -74
PAMM,-)X,-U, and ZHOGOIEVJI YE. A.
"Concrete Representation of Internal SIMPR[Modular Programming System]
Ianguage on Bw--61'
-Bb. rabot Vychisl. tsentra Mosk. ja-ta (Collection of Works of Computer Center
of ".1scow Univers-Ity), 1971, vYP. 17, PP 149-153 (from lah-Matcrmtika No 5,
~Iay 72, Abstract 140 5V521)
Translation: Vne article describes the concrete representation of the Internal
SDTR Language for the BESM-6 computer. The authors give the representation of
the basic Internal Language symbols used in the determimation of rows of
clescription tables and pseudo instructions. A ro*.r of tho description table
takes one machine word in the computer, while' apseudo instruction occupies
two machine words.
USSR uDc - 8. 74
PASKHINA Ye. ZHOGOLEV, Ye. A.
ci
"Spe ific Representation of the SINPR Internal Language on, the BEsm-611
Sb. rabot Vvchisl. tsentra Mosk. un-ta (Collected Works of the Computing
Center at Moscow University), 1971, w,- 17, PP 149-153' Urom Hh-Kiber-
netika, No 5, May 72, Abstract No 5V521)
Translation: The paper describes the spe cifi c representation of the internal
language for a system of modular programming (SIMPR) for the BESm~6 com-
puter. A representation is given of, the principal symbolm. of the internal
2anguage which are used in defining the lines ~of tables or descriptions and
pseudoco-ands. A line of the table:of descriptions in the computer takes
UP a single machine word, and a. peudocommand takeF, up two machine words.
:!ill, Wit I J-1111;
...........
~_T7i-
_T;7.
USS R U DC 617-001.4-085,462
,NE3TEROVAs X, V-) _Pi~SKINA L--- F., and FhhLEPELKIIN, Vq P., 11
TLVtIftute of Medical P rj I Ylin e-Irs, AI-,GEcX.V
Union Scientific Risearc
urns (-urvey
itFolymer Coatinj.- s 'or the Treatuient. of ',)uunds and B
of the Literature)"
Moscowq Kiiimi-ko-Farniatsev,~ich~-sl-,iy Zhurri-al, Vol No 11, Nov 70,
pp 5-11
Abstract: The article describe:5 the star, a .-of -th,--a rt In th,,~, de-
velopment oIC poly:,zler co~,tings for the trcatmcn.r. of wounds and
burns in the USS? an6 abra.,Zd. survey of Lhe litarature- indi-
wJ, - two bbsic t, r en d, s
cate,,~ the follo ;Ai"
pv,-'(,,rmed _,s film or
1. n i ed c o a t inj
foam. and --_-spe~c2' a]. '.y
mer coatin.,is nave si)-ail"icant; wvar ardin-iry
mainly because of kjile lack W. ad-ho-,ir'n .~Q i! I -
f i as
ished polyrn~!r co,!atin,-~-z .1.1!3o inxlude* bioloical uc - C-
fibrin films sugg;~,',Lod by A. I". FILitTUV. The u 3,2 ol' all. f illisned
7i
USSR
NESTEROVA~ "I. V., et, al., hizii,,o-Farmat,~3t-.vticiteski.y Zhurnal, Val
4p- No .11, Nov 70, pp 5-11
fi ing dressini"s, which lim i t,
coatings necessitates secondary x
-ential applications.
their poT,
2. Film-formiing cumposites. Fo,reign on
the probnlem of crea~inc- liquid dressin-,L; includ'c- It ~t; ~,o
Bofors (J'weden) and volhaso-i and lo'~mson (IJ-6. -.,cz-k
has been done in 4L-Ine last few years in hu-n-ary, 'C"z-3clioslovaki
'11est Germany and ut;ner counuries. Of --)1z' group 0.1' prepLrat-~;ns,
collodion and cleol are laidely kno-im in t~ e i1cl'-jever, CLaL-
ings obtained with the use of these preparati~..,t- pozsess low skin
adhesion and are insufficiently elait c. In I~j59 th-:1 ~Iharm~co-
A
peic Colmittee of tne '.,",ini-stry of Haal-7,n approved prepar-sitIon
Furaplast based c-i-. calorinated poiyvii-lyl cnilorz.,W'~'2 reBin
plasticiz~r c.--'
ites based on 6,11orLn--ted polywLnyl cf,'Doride ri"!r-in di---r~o.Lvcc
1) and polyv-..riyl dI33
butyl aco-Late (scdu;ion- Io. olved in
ohol 2) lh'ave been .'c
etlhyl alc I ilyl C I" e
USSR
NESTEROW-1 N. V., et al., Khimiko-Farmatsevticheskiy Zhurnal, Vol
4, No 11, Nov 70t PP 5-11
chloride has been added to accelerate drying and novocaine and
anesthesin have been used as anesthetics. However, co ,in -,s
I a U Ig
ase so ins
d on these preparations are: al~ 7 tj ff J. c i eri:(; 1. ye1a; ic,
b
crack and come off the skin in two days. The Al'-Union -Jen-
tific Research Institute of Medical ?Glymers has developed film-
forming compositions -- 3BV-I' ,4. (product !of lacquer polymerization
of butyi riethacrylate) a.-A BMK-5 (solution of butyl riebEacrylare-
methacrylic acid copolymn-r in a mixture of ckilorDforz ace.-
tone and tne addition of & plasticizer). Coatinj:-s based C.-
14 and E%IK-5 are strong, elastic, transparent, posses:; good skin
adhesion, do not J_rnpeds- the neal ing of covered wouad.3 an,:, stay On
the skin for ever eighr. days. Clinical tests sc-ow tnar, pZ-Ote-c-
tive films based on these pre0araticns can be succesafully used
of tr4e skin, ;,-;i well as Ior
A
for the pre-operatl
closing post opera ti ve surures, 0,.a nkin &rourid f a ~,u &.,,id mi-
nor skin injuries. However, Lhe compositions be applied
to wound or burn stir-'aces because of the presenr~e of' or6c;iAc
s in thenn.,. v;- ca cause ciDnsider--f le pain on aa opcn
USSR
NESTEROVA, N. V., et al., KI~iimi-ko-Fax-,Tatsevtic,*,neskiy Zhurnal, Vol
11, Nov 70, PP 5-11
wound (burn), and suc!.- coa,[.-~n-7s pos.-*.esa ne;'?ligri-ble no.:,sture
Meability. T"hese si-lortcomiz,~,--s 3 sucri
T
lacquer comoositions 'or the closing, of wouad5 ~,Iivd ourns.
foreign literature contains reports to the sar,.B,i effect.
'lie searei, for drass`.n.Ts f
CI
t o!' applica-
erties and skin
tion nas led to aqu,,~, us TL-3 A-I
Scientific -husearch of Medical ~Ioly.:zerr. nas cio-c r-:-
searcA on film-Aforming compositions oased on dispersions or-
polymers and aqueoui soluLioarls of po.14-yI-ers. Yk n.imal (rabbit) exl-
periments nave ttln~ir, 1--itex BK is fast-settin:r on a dr4ed
ound surface and revains good ,:3dhv;3iu:i durin:--
a , e -x J :3 ~-i :jliad o a burn s~ U rf A C c,-lhdcr i-
ever, "Inc-n L- L.
t- ar w '110i -C
exudation, it, nas dcen found n , Lhe 10 -Stt!j~ 'i
of the latex film orevent-i condi~iollls for rn-c rullolja T the
exudate. The liquid being released LvIe fil,:;,
USSR
A, -iy Zhurnal, Vol
KESIEROV V., et al., Khirniko-Farmatsevtichesl
4, 11o 11, Nov 70, pp 5-11
which rules cut tne possibility of using latex f J, 1 ,,. f:-, as liquid
surgical dre3sial..r's. Little information cxist3 on aqueous solu-
tions of film-forming pclymor C-I'mPo."'itions. Th~l 'CiA.11 formation
in such polyr-aeIrs is based Qn the self -elimination oic' water (evap-
Oration) by analogy with film fc~rmaricn based on lacouer soiu-
tio~as of Pol-miers. This siretches out t A s s o ~ t n e f o r,,;, a- -
.7 , ne Proce
tion of a protective filmn. The 11-Union Sciun~dfic IILesearch
Iristitute of i-'Rdical Polvmers has develODed a CCP-jj-_,OS.LL_IOrI OaS~-,d
or, alginic zacid salts. uninial experimev.Ls havo [jfI-,O',%FjI 16;
ate c ompo.sitv ions do not cause pain and form ona ,..roumd surface a
coat-in,-- -o"l-licIl co_!-leoces in 24 hours with live tissue, End remcains
-e e on to
iipl,34 pithelization and gives good protecri,
unt il c o. ULG
pattern und,~r an
wound and young epidermis. 'he general healing
:,inate films have t~e Zame effect
algiaate film indicai;es zhat aIL :;
as.biological plates, while possessing disrinct advaatagDs over
the, 1,~tter.
UNCLASSIM01 ;
020 PR0CtSSfNG OATE--160CT70
T-lTtE--K_INETICS OF THE INHIBITION.OF TRYPSIN ACTIVITY B;Y A HEAT AND ACID
"'A"MBLE INHIBITOR FRCM RABBIT SERUM -U-
AUTHOR"(02)-NARTIKOVAp V.Fov PASKHINA,: T.S.,
R-Y, OF INFO--USSR
OURCE -BIOKH[MIYA 1970, 35(11i 187-95
ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJECT ARE AS--BIOLOGIC-AL AND MCD-ICAL SC 1ENCE S:
PIC TAGS--TRYPSINt INHIBITIONt RABBITt BLOOD SEkUM, ESTER, HYDROLYSIS
~CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
"POCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PRGXY`.REEL/Fr-%AME--1996/0648 STEP NO--UR/0218/70/035/001/0137/0195
[:CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0117874
uNcLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--160CT70
2 020
KC, ACCESSION NO--AP0117874
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT.-iU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. AHEAT AND ACID, STABLE TRYPSIN
INHIBITOR PUR
-IFIED 800 FOLD FROM PA881T SERUM HAD A MUL. VT. OF SImILAa
JO 239000. THE PREPN. RAPIDLY INHIBITED THE TRYPSIN CATALYZED
HYDROLYSIS OF NyBENZOYLvLtARGli%INE ET ESTER (8AEE) AtID
-.~NtBENZQYLoOLtARGItlINEwPit~4[TROANILIDE (BAPA), . THE UEGREE~ OF INH131T[ON
-DID NOT UNCREASE WITH !NCREASING LENGTH OF' PREINCUBATION HITH THE ENZYME
JN THE RANGE 0.5-15 MIN. CHANGES,IN THEIPH FROM 2.0 TO 9,4 DURING
~,~-::PREINCUBATION AND FROM 6.0 TO 9.2 DUkING iTHE REACTION DID. NOT
SIGNIFICANTLY AFFECT THE INTERACTION OF INHIBITOR WITH TRYPSIN.
INHIBITION WAS COMPETITIVE WITH 0-0005M OAEE AS SUBSTRATE AND
NONCOMPETITIVE WITH BAPA. IN THE LATTER CASE THE DE~;REE OF INHIBITION
61D NOT CHANGE WITH CHANGES IN BAPA CONCN. OVER THE RANGE 10 PRIIiE
NEGATIVE-3 MINUS 3 TIMES 10 PRIME NEGATIVE3 Me T14E K SUBM FOR BA~'A WAS
TIMES 10 PRIME, NEGATT
VE4 M WITH TkYPSIN. THE K SUBI WAS SIMILAR TO
TIMES 10 PRIME NEGATIVE8 Me THE K SUaL VARIED INVERSELY WITH TEMP.
'IN:-THE'RANGE 10-37DEGREES. AN INCREASE JN ENTROPY INOICATED CHANGES IN
CONFORMATION OF TRYPSIN WRING INTER,ACTJON WITH ;THE INHIBITOR.
F_~~_:,__FACILILY: INST. 810L. MED* CIIEII*,t MUSCOWf USSR.,
UNCLASSIFIED
IZ", 112, 02-4 UNCLASSIF IIED PRf)Cr:S S I NS DATE--- I I'z EP70
'-~-TJTLE -THE CONTENT AND KTIVITY OF 8 SYSTEM IN
ASIC CII14PONENTS OF, KININ
9 SERUM OF PATIENTS WITH RHEUMA.TISM ~-U-
n
o
YAROVAYA, G.A., LAUFERt A.L., GULIKOVA, I.M.,
,,.~__'.'.T.RAPEZNIKOV`Ar S*S.
~OU NTRY OF INFO--USSR
OURCE---VOPROSY MEDITSINSKOY KHTMIll 1970, VOL 16t NR~,2f PP 152-161
D:AT EPUBLISHFD ------- 70
13J E C TAREAS-"BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
-TO P ITAGS-RHFUMATIC DISEASEv BLOOD CHEMfSTRYv CHRC!4,ATOGf,.APHY, ENZY',IE
.:~,ACTIVITY
LoGAITRnL MARKING--NO REESTRICTIONS
CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
--1936/0766
PROXY REFL/FRAME STEP U--UP, /03 0117 '0 /0 16 0-0 25 2
CIRC ACCESSIO~,' Nt0--APl)1(32730
IJNCL ASS I F IE'D
s v D
`WSIAYWn3H'd IV W31SAS NINI)i --iU NOIIVA113V 3H1 01 A:J11'si-I
HiU- A.LlAll:)V 1vlD~)41'llVN NJ gSV9'd:)Nl GhV IN31IN',31 N306NININ, N1 11VA
ss7-,,Doi5d 31 lloin3H~i 31C. IN3IX3 3fll GNIV SINB,%Odl%03 W31SAS NIININ :to
1,11 S~SNVHO N3AMI90 NOUV13b~eOO ~OS 01 S31V 3 10 N, Is i in s:4b
-W SISAIVNV aFil *Cl~]SV3~14:)Nl AIIH911S N~A-3 IdO -1:3A-~-l IVWbON -3H-L IV SV-14
A-!IAIIDV JHl SIOVIS It ONV I HIIM SJ.N31IVd NI !AIND SS330bd ~[Hl --JO ~~OVIS
Ot III ::H1 ONI-jill"' 033V3b-390 SVti SiN31.iVd :10 WflOi9S 000-19 AG- AIIAMV
oIldAblllN7 '040W#'H:)Nf) SVMAN 9SVGlld3dAXUb'd'V)) ~SVNINJ)l :10 AtIAII:3V::.
3HI e.:3o NI[40JAOVb9 AD 5,M% 9*E GI ~-Ob3 03HSINJWJO.',-~-~
Skv'M (SS~1001:d '-111VViOaH)J :10 S30VIS III GNV I i) wsiivkn3Hb Hiim S.L&,31-LVd
NI N~DGWINO Wrfd3S 00018 H.LIP. SIN331lVe NJ 3Mi'd:)NI-
Ul SON-'il (N13~;'111VN ONY) jldki UlSdAdJ !0 S3SVNIOli-C),~d =10 AIIAMV~
3Hi '.'*,',,ll031:j:..f:j wwjis ciocll
Obviausly~ It is intxpediant to develop methods of forecasting the harvest uatm~z~
the,results of weather forecasts as the Initial data inasmuch 49 this can lead
to let&* errors (the forecast based on the forecast has lov reliability).
V'7
UNCL ASSIFIED,
F, L T I UN
(U) During this quarter ly reporting period, 13 new articles were
located from the Institute of Biophysics at Pu3bcIdno. On the bu~l~i of there
articlea, it vat; possible to associate 19 ncw pcrsons with the 1.1,%titute. a a
persions are 116tod belcm toge0wr %:1.th the.ouhiects and dates oi Lhe art-clas:
Wl- I 117)
0, -K. tndocrine syste= 1970
~i3)
1~~79
C. plant physiology i 169
Kiselmy. Ye. Yo. - muncle phyr;Lology IWO
zpcctxa I~:Otzz)
Itatimanov, A. A. radintica effects 19711 (Z3)
A. A. endocrine systc= 1970CIIJ,
_ __PRsoyan,11. G. Eva spectra 19,10
Porot ikov, V. 1. =uScle Physioln" 1170 (21)
Postnikova, G. U. chre-zatography 1q70(24)
phow0holipids
Revin, A. F. radia--,,q effecto
'0 (23)
Sukhoruclikina, L. V. chrmatography 1970
r,j~.
plant ;physiology 1469 (20)
radiatior-4j-E&&Lp 1970 (23)
Zaikka, A. N. hydragan peroxide 1970 (25)
DSA 1970 (19)
1970 (19)
ZUzin, A. M. DNA
7
2 013 UNCLASSI:F! ED PRO~FSSN',;G 0AT-'~---L3NGV70
'TITLE--THF- NA T UR E-0 FPAE%*A,' jqETIC AND THEIR' P+10T*J(,;-iE,,iH
TRAN S I T I ON S1 NMOIN,10CRYS TAL Q FHYDRaGPLORIDE L 77DEGREESK
TYR U&I NE
AUTHOR-(03)-PASiDYANt V.G.1 PULATOVA, ?A.K*~,. KAYUSHIN, t.P.
M11TRY OF I;NFQ--USSR
SOURCE--t3I()FlZIKA 151 1): 12-19. 1 LLUS . 1970
DATE PUBLISHiED ------- 70
SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY
TOPIC T A G S- - T YR IJ S I N E. G Ali MA RA 0 1 A T I ON ELLCTIZOINI PARAHAG'NFTlC RESONANCE
CONTROL 1ARKING-NO P~SlklCl IONS.
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLAS,~IFIEO
.PRGXY REEL/ FRAME--_300 3/0921
Cilkc ACCESSION NO--APQ129Pt86
I ItIlf: I A s 5 f F 141: D.
2/2 013 UNC LA S I F ID' 1"ROCESSING; DAFE-13NOV70
, C
CIRC, ACCESSION Nj--AP0129986
ABSTPIACT/EXT-L~ACT--W) G?-0- ~3 S f Ril C T THE WORK 0EALS 4AMi THE FPA STUDY
OF TH.E..,NIATURE OF CEI-JERS ARIS1,141-ci Ikki*~F-%IPTIGN AT
77 ~K liK.1 SINGLE CRYSIALS OF HYL)kljCHLCJR'IDE, L TYROS~ .tiE. l'ilL L-P-, SPL(-TRU.14
GF A 64,144A IRRADIATED SINGLE CRYSTAL OF HYDROCHLORIDE L. TYROSIm-NE IS
COMPOSED UF 4 COMIPONENTSi A BROAD ASYMMETRIC DOUALETj 4 S116LETy AIND A
MULTIPLET. THE PA!;.AMAGfiE:FlC CENTER RESPUNSIBLI, F::Ik 71iE: -ST =-Pk SIGNAL
IS Cl. AT 77 K THE Clr- THE, i-l'OLECULE VsKES PLA(~E, WHICH
RESULTS IN THE FL)K;-iAil0-N OF ANION RAD.LCALS (F-PR SIN3LETA OF TYROSINE
IvITH THE LOCAL' ZAI 10IN OF UNPA[REU ELECTRONS Or% JHE: BENZENE RING. TL11:
8AEAKAGE OF THE C.-Ij BOND IS A ~ECUNDA"RY QNEE DUE J0 fii~ T,iAPPl,`JG ~,F THE
ELECTRON BY THE CHARGED AMINO GROUP OF THE TYR.0.0,1:kE -,~~)LE,.ULE lP,
MULTIPLET). FACILITY: INST. ri I my s . 'A Ct, c I u S S
PUSHCHINiO-ON-OKA, USSR.
WIC 1. AS S I f- I E 0
"o, -12 014 UNCLASSI FIEID PRIOCES5
T:ITLE--DAILY DIURESIS Al' ING DATE-* 04DEC70
ID DYNAMICS OF LEPTOSPIRA EXCRETION BY ROO
L T VOLES
'MICROTUS DECON014US -U-
AUTH0R-(04)-KARASEVA# YE#V.j PASSOVAp 0. LITVIN, V-YU,, KOKOVIN, I.L.
,,,:.-.O.UNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--ZOOLOGICHESKIY ZHURNALI 1970, NR;31 p
P 435-
0 9
PUBLISHED--------70
,i. -SUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
'..'TOPIC TAGS--RODENT, LEPTOSPIRA, URINEr EXCRETION
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
--PROXY REEL/FRAME--3007/1384 STEP N(]--UR/0439/70/000./003/0435/0439
CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0136738
UNCLAS61 F IED
2/2 014 UNCLASSI FIEO: PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0136738
,.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* STUDY OF THE DAILY DIURESIS AND
EXCRETION OF LEPTOSPIRA IN THE URINE OF MICR,0TUS OECO'NIOMUS SHOWED THAT
THE DAILY URINE VOLUME VARIED FROM B&I-30*1 ML (AVERAC-E 18.3 ML) AND
INDIVIDUAL URINE SAMPLES AVERAGED 0.72 ML. URINE WAS PASSED 11-38
TIMES A DAY (25 AVERAGE). T14E NUMBER OF LEPTOSKRA EXCRETED IN THE
URINE IN 24 HOURS VARIED FROM 1 TO 10 OUT OF 70-80 MICROSCOPE FIELDS.
DURING THE DAY THERE WERE GAPS IN LEPTOSPIRA EXCRET1014 IN THE URINE,
WHILE. AT NIGH.T DIURESIS WAS INTENSIFLED (URINE WAS PASSED MORE TIMES),
AND CONSEQUENTLY THE NUMBER OF LEPTOSPIRA la THE URmr- INCREASED.
MICROTUS OECONOMUS WAS THE MAIN CARRIERjOF L. GRIPPOTYPHOSA IN NATURAL
LEPTOSPIROSIS FOCI. THE VOLES WERE ARTIFICIALLY INFECTED WITH L.
GRIPPOTYPHOSAt STRAIN MICROTUS OEC0NOMU,-S 4T5, AND URINE VOLUMES WERE
COLLECTED IN THE LABORATORY, IN INITI'AL STAGES OF LEPTOSPIROSISt FEW
LEPTOSPIRA WERE EXCRETE9v WITH LEVELS:INCREA.SING ON THE FOURTH AND NINTH
DAYS IN TWO.VOLES STUDIED. FACILITY: INSTITU'l' EPIEMIOLOGII I
141KROBIOLOGlIt AMN SSSR; INSTITUT MEOITSINSKOY PARAZITOLOGIf I
TROPICHESKOY MEDITSINY, MLNISTERSTVA ZHRAVOOKHRAN~. SSSR, Moscow.
UNCLAS SI FIED
USSR UDC 5111-121:547-581.91C
-41.057
RUDZ-L--P) G. P., USTAM and YANS011, f;. YU., Latvian "Order of the Red
Banner of Labor" State University.imeni P. Stuchka
"Tetraphenylphosphonium Salts of,~'X-Furandithiocarboxylic, Dithio-Piperonylic
and 2-Hydroxyd-ithiobenzoic Acids"
Riga, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk Latviyskoy SSR, Seriya h1imicheskaya, No 2,
1972, PP 163-166
Abstract: The spectro-photometric method was used to determine the ionization
constants of thiolthionic groups in fX-furandithiocarboNylic acid (pKCSSH
2.04) and dithiopiperomrlic acid (pYTSSq = 2.29). Using radioactive isotopes,
the authore Studied the tin-- dependence of the degree af extraction of zinc,
nickel and trivalent iron compounds, with tetraphonylphoa-phanium Salts of
0~-furandithiocazrborjlic acid, dithiopiperonylic acid and 2-h,,/droxydithiollen-
zoic acid serving as reactants. It was found in all cases that equilibriumn is
reached slowly due to the hydrophobic nature of the tetraphanylphosphonilm ion.
USSR UDC: 539.16.o8
YEROKHINA, K. I,, LEMERG, I. Kh.,~,PASTFMAK,,,A-_A,-. PhysicotPchnical In-
stitute imeni A. F. Ioffe, Soviet Academy of.Sciences
"Attenuation of the Doppler Shift of the Energy of Gamim Rays Emitted as a
Result of Coulomb Excitation"
Moscov, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR: Seriya Fizicheskaya, Vol 37, Vo 8.
Aug 73, pp 1595-16o8
KiDstract: Ge(Li) gamma-ray detectors with their inherent high regolution
give additional information on the lifetimes T of excited states based on
measurements of attenuation of the Doppler shift of gamma-ray energy. Com-
parison of data on the partial lifetimes T(E2) obtained ir. research on
Coulomb excitation by measuring the absolute yields of gamma rays with the
values Of T obtained in these same studies as a result of measurements of
Doppler shift attenuation gives the possibility of computing the reduced
probabilities B(Ml) of magnetic dipole transitions. In this paper the
theoretical shaDe of the Doppler-shifted gamma line is calculated by ap-
proximating the exact distribution function using a convenient expression
which is true for any di--rections of the recoil nuclei. A conT,!Lrison of
1/2
USSR
YEROKIINA, K. I. et al., Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR: Seriya Fizicheskaya,
Vol 37, No 8, Aug 73, pp 1595-1608
the experimental shape of the Doppler-shifted line vith the expression
given in this paper for the theoretical shape of 'the line showed satis-
factory agreement. More 'than fifty lifetimes of levels in thirty nuclei
with mass numbers from 52 to 133 were determined. The range of measlired
values Of T was from 0.05 to 3 ps. The average tirie for computer process-
ing of one gamma line was 15-20 minutes. The lifetimes were measured for
the first time for 25 of the excited states.
212
61
9r-
Hydrobiology
USSR UDr 59"093.32)
KOVALEVSKAYA, N. V., BEKKER, V. E., and PASTEILNAK, F. A., Institute of Oceanology,
Academy, of Sciences, USSR, 'Moscow
"Biological Studies During the First Voyage of the Scientiiic Research Ship
IDmitriy Mendeleyev' in the Western Tropical Atlantic"
Moscow, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, No 3, 1970, pp 478-479
the Institute of Oceanol
Translation: The new scientific research ship o 09y)
cademy of Sciences USSR, "D~mitriy Hendeleyev" lef t: an 21 February 1969 oft
A
first voyage from the port Kaliningrad. The trip basted 61 days, during which
70 stations were visited covering about 14,900 nautical miles, wish one stop at
Montserrat and two entries into the poiLs -- Port-of-Spain (Triniflad) and Gi-
braltar. The main goal of the voyage was to take instrument readings of the
eastward current from the ridge oftbe Lesser Antilles. Concurrently, biologi-
cal experiments ~,ere carried out, including collection of henthic fauna, fish,
and ichthyoplankton, as well as.several. at:te,-.qpts at artificial fertilization
Of 'L-ish roe and incubation in an aqi;arium. These studies were conducted by the
uthors of this paper at 60 stations. of the trip.
a L
Fish collaccion produced about 100 dif rcrc-nc Lipacle,i belongIng I:o 80 genera
1/8
USSR
KOVALEVSKAYA, V., et a!, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, No 3, 1970, p-,) 4178-479
and 46 families, and in addition a considerable quantity of ova and larvae
(determination of quantity was impossible during the voyage). The collection
yielded 28 shore types and 68 ocean ones (43 bathy- and mesopelagic and 25
epipelagic). The most diverse are the mesopelagle family M, e
yctophidae (8 gen ra
and 18 species) and those from epipelagic Exocoetidae (6 general. and 'L1 Species).
The remainina 44 families were represented by I or occasionally by 3 s e ies.
Quantitatively, the mosr numerous was the collection of flying fish (E1xocoztidae).
The collection of deep sea fish was quite diverse, but most types were repritsented
only by single examples. The only exception were several cypes ;)f 'Xyaophidae
which came to che surfare at night and could be relatively easily caught by Sur-
-xan he ship i as st ti -ned at 'ont errat
ace catching equipment. For c iple,~ when t" 7 a C~ !3
Island, about 200 examples of Diaphus dumerili and D. garmani were caught with
dip nets. It is also interesting that real mesopelagic types, ieqich reside
during the day at depths of 300-500 m, could belound in large quanticies a~
night at a depth of about 20 m. Finally, itzhould be noted that-, these types,
were caught at one station ori~,- in the immediate. proximity of tihie island. Id!
2/8
USSR
KOVALEVSKAYA, N. V., et al, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, No 3, 1970, pp 478-
479
'I)rCtODhidae found at night on the surface were discovered at considerable
other r
depths (1000 m and more). These include the, only example of Mlyctoph=i selanops,
a species kaown by only a few examples.
'Pro -ide at 8' north
m the zoogeographic point of ,riew, an interesting caticli -,~as m.
lattitude, and 53*16' west longitude one example of Electrona rissoi (Mycto-
phidae), which is well-known in the eastern.AtIzntic but not found in the past
west of 40' west longitude. Catches of several rare And poorly studied types
were also interesting (licterophotus ophistoma (AGtronesthtdae], Lepidophanes
upralateralis [KycLophidaej and soziie others).
Most numerous were catches of epipelagic f1sh, made at night wfth electrical
13 mination, using dip -nets and a Savilov pleustonic trawl net; Oxyporhamphidae
i
lu
and Exocoetidae comprised this group. Most numerous forms in t1luese groups were
Oxyporhamphus microptarus, Parezcocoetus brachypterus Exocoetus volicans. Prog-
nichthys gibbifrons, KirundiclhLavs affinis and H. speculiger. T'lese types,
except for P. brachypterus, were found at almost all statioms, the latter
was found up to the 300 mile limit from the shores.
3/8
6, 611, 11 iw 1.i. VA.
Roe and larvae of Oxyporhamphus micropterus and 0. meristacystis (the latter
only near the Tobago and Barbados Islands) were found in the ictithyoplankton
catch. Up to now it was believed that the first -- the oceanic type -- was
widely scattered in tropical areas of all three oceans, am,-' the second -- t1he
neustic
only in Pacific and Indian oceans The roe and larvae of 0. Microp-
terus were caL~ght both near the shore and far away trom them, but the largest
catch was made at a station northeast of the Guiana shoress. In the same region,
-ish, a
intensive spawning of one of the most numerous types of flying -L Exoc etus
vol~tans, took place (up to 880 larvae in one 20 min catch with the pleusLanic
trawl' net). In 'March, 1.969, northeat~t of the LeSser Antile!i, those two types
did not spawn, and the of fspring observed there were most probably carried over
by the Guiana and Antilles streams. Spawning of other flying fish was also
observed in this region. Northeast of DesiradJslandi developing roe of
Island,:running males and
Cheilopogon furcatus was found, and at MontserL
females of Ch. lutkeni were caught.
4/8
i:J. iLi:11 1, L
USSR
KOVALEVSKAYA, N. V., et al, Zoologicheskiy Zburnal, Vol 49., ".o .1, 1970, pp 478-
479
In recent years (mainly due to the efforts of Soviet expe(:itions) a systematic
quantitative study was carried out of the benthic,fauna of the Pacific, Indian
and Southern oceans. Charts of, quantitative distribution (quite detailed for
many regions) were prepared, and some- interesting pr4_nciples were deter-mined
for the distribution of benthic fauna in these areas. As paradoxical as it
seems, no such studies were carried out in the Atlantic ocearn. Currently only
isolated data exist on the quantitative distribution of bontlios around the shores
of Central and South Africa, along the meridianLcross section from the shores of
Greenland to the equatorial zone, and along.the cross section from, North America
to-Bermuda. Therefore, even these unpretentious results,6btainad during the
first voyage of the scientific research ship~"Dmitriy Ylendeleyev" are quite
interesting.
The poorest development of benthic fauna on t4he ;:ieridian cross section mentioned
above is found in the southern part of the tropical zone, 'Wtere ft is represented
J- Alos was also oLserved in the
by a single foraminifera. Extreme paucity of bent
northern zone. There the benthos biomass reached only 0.002-0.065 g/m2. It
the same latitude but somewhat closer to the.Antilles ridiie islands, at a depth
Mr
fi
li. 4
U9SR
KOVALEVSKAYA, N. V., et al, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, No 3, 1970, pp 478-
479
of 4600 m we found a considerable increase of the benthos' biomass, up to 0.03
2
9/m , mainly due to vitreous sponges and polychaeta, Aricidae anti: 'Moldanidae.
Evidentlv this is due to a slight upwelling in the region of that station.
Several quantitative samples of benthos were collected at the cross section
along the ridge of the Antilles islands. There, at a deptil of 1500-2000 m, its
biomass was 0.3-1.9 g/m2. These indicators, considering the depths and locations
of the stations along the north portion of the.tropical zone, are considered to
be quite high. Even more interesting and actually someuhat unexpected results
were obtained along the cross section of the upper and lover parts of the South
American continental incline and its foothill zone southrof the Orinoco delta.
Here a very diversified and rich benthic fauna ulas iound at four stations. At
400 m, the hio-mass of bivalve mollusks, polychaeta, nematoda ard crustaceans
reached 34.24 Z/m2. Lower down the incline, at a depth of 800 Tz., the benthic
fauna beco-zs :)oorer, but even here the pol-chaeta, crustace=5 and bivalve
moilusks gave a biomass of 25.52 g/r42, Even in the middle portion of the
incline, at a depth of 1200 m, a dense population of the brittle stars of the
6/8
USSR
KOVALEVSKAYA, N. V., et al, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, N
3, 1970, ppe 478-
479
Amphiura types were found, which together with the polychaeta, isopoda crabs
and bivalve mollusks gave a biomass of 18.24 g/m2. At the samo sration, sei.-
era! examples of pogonofora were found. These are notewort~C~y data. E-xpeditions
in past years determined the high productivity of the benLli..)S fauna of the. can-
tinental incline of the Pacific and Atlantic oceans at znodL
crate latitudes. Tile
fact that benthos values for the bathyal zone of the tropical belt obtained by
us are fully comparable with those of the contineatal incline oZ moderate lati-
tudes, is a very unique pbenomenon requiring intensive studies. In the region
studied, a distinct stratificatioa of waters is to be expected, as well as a
possible deep layer of oxygen minimum. This circumstance, toge--her wiLn the
strong shore run-off carrying considerable organic and mineral Tfiaterial, should
ravor accumulation and rapid preservation of unoxidized organic material. in the
bottom. Even at the deepest station (4650 m), remote from the shore, terri-enous
residues were found, inhabited by relatively rich fauna of Polychaeta, oenotera,
and sea lilies, with a total bWmass of 0.39 grams per sqLai-a :,,ie'ter.
The study of the benthos of deep ~,iea cliannaj,t; began comparativ~!Jy ri~cc,!ntly, 'but
at:6n wL 'o Mo t
a lot was already accomplish-id. Ultri abyanal, invertebr. ti L01-Irld in ;1*k S
7/8
USSR
KOVALEVSKAYA, V., et al, Zooloo-icheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 49, ',,Io 3, "'970, pp '7&-
all channels ol the Pacific Ocean. In this respect the Atlantic Ocean was
studied much less than the Pacific Ocean. Before our study in the Puerto
Rico cahnnel, cne trawling was carried out at a depth of 7000 T-,,, and two at a
have not been
depth of 6000 m, but to this date the results of these studies 11
published. Therefore, from the trawling test-runs of this voyage, the ~mosL
valuable is the trawling in the western part of the Puerto Rico channel., at a
depth of 6300 m~ The trawling yielded more than 25 types of various bentlios
invertebrates -- polychneta, bivalve mollusks, and holothur-ioidea (a total of
about 80 examples). The almost total absence of isopoda crabs vas noteworthy,
ultraabyssal. coru-nun'ities. Undoubted1v
even though it is a usual component ~f
the results of this trawling will turn into a special inteiisive study,
During our stay at Port-of-Spain, we visited the West Indies University and
Fishing Station, and learned about their activities. An exchange of collection
and demonstration materials took place.
8/8
7 j
112 032 UNCL ASS IF I ED PAOCESSING DATE--2714OV70
--CLINICAL PICTURE AND PArti0Mf)RfH,'jL
.TITLE OGY OF CERYKAL YEGETATIYE
GANGLIONITIS IN VIBRATION SICK'NESS -U--~
-AUTHOR-(04)-,*10DELi A.A.# RAPORPORTv IM . B..,: TIMOFEYEYA, N.;',r.v PASTERNAKr
G.A*
Cau"aW,
OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--KL IN ICHESKAYA MEDITSINAr 1970v NR 39 PP74_78
DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
TOPIC TAGS--BIOLOGIC VIBRATION EFFECTi GANGLIONP RAT, 140RPHOLOGYt SPINAL
:~CORDI SPINAL NERVE, CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
CONTROL MARKING--NC RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME--3007f'1742 STEP NO--UR/Olt97/70/000/003/007410078
rjRC ACCF-SSIT-l NO--APG136983
Z/Z 032 UNCLASSIFIED 111~,nCESSING OATE--27NOV70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0136983
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. AS A RESULT~OF OBSERVATION OF 29
PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM VIBIRATTIM4 SICKENS5? THE CLINICAL SYMPTOMS OF
AFFECTION OF THE CERVICAL SY~MPATHETIC GANGLION WERE Ah-ALYZEI). IN A
NUMBER OF CASES THE AFFECTION OF CERVICAL VEGETATI'VE FORMATIONS WERE
ACCOMPANIED BY DEGERNERATIVE AND DYSTROPHIC CHANGE'S OF THE SPINE. THE
AUTHORS CARRIED OUT HISTOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF CER111CAL VEGETATIVE
GANGLIA USING RATS SUBJECTED TO INTERMITTENT OVFRAiLt. VXGRATION FOR THREE
HOURS DAILY DURING A PERIOD OF fHREE M~ONTHS. MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES OF
PRE AND POST GANGLIONIC FIBERS WERE FOUNDp: AS WELt i~ AS CRANGES OF NERVE
CELLS OF SYMPATHETIC GANGLIA, Ir IS BELIEVED THAT IN THE OEVEL40PMENTAL
MECHANISM OF CERVICAL VEGATATIVE GANGLIONITIS OF VIBRANON ETIOLOGY, AN
IMPORTANT ROLE IS PLAYED BY PATHOLOGICAL IMPULSATION FROM THE PERIPHERY
AS WELL AS BY DISTUR84NCES OF THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM* IT IS ASSUMED
THAT THE CHANGES OF THE SPINE ARE OF SECONDARY NATURE CAUSED BY THE
AFFECTION OF THE CERVICAL SYMPAMETIC GANGLIONo FACO;OTU"
KlYFVSKlY NAt]CHNO-ISSLEDOVATELSKLY INSTI rUT GIGIYENY TRUDA I
PROFFESSIONAONYKH ZABOLEVANtY.,
L A 2
A661,6116646NI
USSR UDC. 616.839.19-002-02:611.644
77
NDDEL'y 'A.A., RAMPOP.-L, M.B., TEL4,01,7YEVA, N.T., and PPSTEIVITIVY G,A., laev
Scientific Research Institute of Labor Hygiene and Diseases
"The Clinical Picture and Pathomorphology of Cervical Autc)r,(--;mic Gani,l- oni ti s
in Vibration Sickness"
Moscow, Klinicheskaya Mleditsina, No 3, 1970, pp 74-718
Abstract: Clinical symptoms of cervical autonomic ganglioniti,~, in patients
posed to local and/or general iftiole body vibration cons-Isted oz
ex h
eye and ear disturbances, and disturbances of the central nervou-~, system, In
a number of cases disturbances of cervical autonomic otructuret4 were con-
current with degenerative and dy5trophic changes in the spine. Histological
studies were conducted in animals subjected to -whole-body vib2',Ltion, patho-
logical changes were found in Dre- and post-ganglionic fibers) and in tile cells
of the sympathetic Unj;lia. fie dominant factor in the etiology olf ganglionitis
may be pathological impuises frm, the peripheral ii-rvo* atid diaturbances of
the central nervous system. Changes.in the spine are of secondarj nature and
t6C
are apparently due to affection of the cervi cal sympathe 1 ganglia.
641T11
USSR WO 669.15,24'25-192t62i.78
GULYAYEV, A. P.j and Xoscow
"Martensitic Transformation In Kovar-Typ Alloys"
Moscow, Izvestiya Akademil Niuk USSR, Metally# No 4, Jul-Aug ?2, PP 159-163
Abstracti A study was made of the process of tartensitic trinsformation in
Fe-Ki-Co alloys of the Kovar type (20NIC), containing v -29% xi, 17-1&% co,
I ?
and the remainder iron. A characteristics of these alloys Is their proximity
to the boundary of the (,J-'-> K ) transformation on thiD stnictural diagraz.
This means thatt even when there axe insignificw~t deviations from the strictly
specified chemicall composition of KovarF, a martensitic transformation can occur
in these alloys by cooling them below room temperature, and this results in
an abrupt charge of their properties. The investigation reasults are discussed
by reference to diagrams of the rAignetic hysteresis of,the Ko-var alloy with
28.5% Ni and 17.5% Cc in continuous cooling (to -i560C), continuous heating
(to Curie temperature), and room temperature after temperinig (inital condition -
cooling to -190,()C). The m-gions of d-trect and inverse- (r -i. oir) transitions
in the alloys were establichad as a function of their Ni and (.1o contents.
It in shown that the e-phass formation goes with the electric resistance
drop and with the increase of hardness# marnetization of saturation, and
1/2