SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT NAZAROV, V.I. - NAZIN, A.G.

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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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m USSR UDG 621.922.34:666.233 GINZBURG B. I., Candidate of Economics, INAMOV, V. I., engineer, Superhard stroydormash Haterials Institute, and 1,11KHAYLICH, 4" L C~M-Union Planning, Design and.TechnologicaL.Institute of'Road Machine Building) "Utilization of Synthetic Diamonds by the Branch. Ent-erprises" Nos cow, Stroitel'nyye i Dorozhnyye Mashiny, No 3, March 1971, pp 36-37 Abstract: The use of synthetic diamonds bythe enterprises of the Ministry of Constructioni Road and Utility Mach-Ine Building has been investigated by the- Superhard Materials Institute. The investigation showed that 89.1% of ynthetic diamonds were used in -the form of cutting tools,~ 2.6% in powder a- form, 8.3% in the form of paste. The usa.of.synthetic diamonds resulted In an,increase of the cutting tool wear resistance by 1.1 to,3.0 times, improve- meht of-finish of machined surface, increase.'of productivity by' 7 to 30%. The total consumption of 147,000 carat of synthetic- diamond res.ulted in savings of 352,400 rubles. 1/2 USSR uD c: 621-370'. 4:621.391.82 NAZAROV, V. I. -.~"Error Probability in 5ynchronous Detection Of Phase-Keyecl Signal5l' Hoscow, Radiote!&ffdka -i Elektron-ika, Vol. 16, No 6, Jun 71, PP 1CI77-1080 Abstract: A method is proposed for determining the probabiLity of errors at the output of a synchronous detector when a.sinusoidal signal of frequenc~y RQ) arrives at one input (the reference voltage) and a2 additive mixture of Gaussian noise Twith zero average standard deviation (r together with a phase- -yed signal of the form Ar M f.4, is sent to the other in-out, where i and N are the serial -number ard total number, of segments of the sine curve (elementary s~nal pa.ckets) of duration Rw and uci(t) are the instantaneous va ue of the voltage of the U 0 1/2 USSR NAZMV, V. I., Radiotekhnika i Elektronikai Vol. 16, No 6, jun 71, PP 1077- 1080 signal and of the i-th packet, R is the multiplication factor for carrier fre- quenqj (i , ti ~ to + U - l)-co, and t is the initial phase of an elementary packet. This signal in turn is the-result of, multiplication of,the carrier frequency (and all components of thefrequeficy spectrum) o~ a signal with deterministic (rotating) phase of the form r120(t)- VUsintco(8-1j)+ by the coefficient R,,jnc_[n,m3, where ~.o and tp?-T are resPectively the in- formational and deterministic components of the pnase. The probability of errors at the output of the phase detector is determined for various Rmin. It is assumed that n positions of the keyed phase code are used for transmitting, information, and m positions are used for designating the boundaries of ele- mentary packets, code coidbinations or groups.. -Special cases of four-phase (m = Rmax 4, n = 2, Rmin = m1n = 2), six phase (m =. IRMaX 6, n = 2, R"'in and eigbt-phase (m 89 n 2o R-min 4) initial signals ara Wnsidored. 2/2 USSR UDC 621.391.17:5211.376.11 ~'AZAP ZOV, V. I. IlGroup Synchronization of Systers for Discrete Inf onziation..Transmission by the Rotating Phase Mlethod" 1-loscow, Radiotekhnika, Vol 25, No 8, August 1970, pp 1-9 Abstract: Intensive research has been going on in tT,-Ie Soviet Union and 'foreign countries to find new methods for tfie~ Zroup synchronilzati -n ot comr.,.unication, telemetry, remote control, and data tra-ism�saiuzv systens. lie need for this research is occasioned by the slotniess of information transmisz5ioii unider present modes of synchronization and the complexity of the equip.,.,ert required for cor- relation techniques, electronic.memory, and logic. This paper represunts a further estimation of new methods for group syrchronization of discret:e com- -ase and frequency ranipulation, base' on tic rotating munication systems with ph phcse. principle. The author discusses the formation. of phase-mani-pulated on of the group syn- signals with redundant manipulation coding, the detect.- 'ronization signal at the reception end, and three -methods for the reception c h of rotating phase signals, and proposes a receiver, shown in block (Hao-ram form, for these signals. lie Hrds that the,rotating phase i:et1,-1cd is effective in single- and multichannel systeaLs as we'! as broad-band signal systems, and asserts tnat it can be realized by simple techniques specifically applicable USSR UDC, 621-373.826:772.99 BIMYAK, G. V. , ZAVITIVENICH, Yu. V.p MIROVITSM, D. I., ITAZAROV) V and SAI-ISONOV, G. A. T -ions of Ligh+, Dispersion With Models" "Some Holographic Investigat Moscow, V sb. X Vses. konf. -pq ras-,)rostr. radiovoln. Tezisy dokl. (Tenth All-Union Conrerence on'the Propagation of'Radio 1.1aves; Report Theses--collection of v=ks) "Nauka," 19'972, 323-327 (from M-Radiotelchnika, No 10, 1972, Abstract No lOD4177 Translation: A holographic imitator of optical and infrared elec- tronic systems, designed for studying~the peculiarities of func- tional connections and set units, radio lines, and processes and phenomena occurrine in radio systems, is described. The, imitator contains a laser, a set of holographic or spatiaLnodels, a Group of shaping and transforming optical elementsi holographic imitators of range nonuniformities, and a receiver block. The peculiarities of the range over which the radio waves are propal,:,nted care modeled through a set. of functional amplitude, phase; or compley. filters. Results are given of the detetmination of dia, Gr r, J. b persion dia as for various objects 'cr a signal path containing nonuniformities. A L method is described which meaQuxes the dimensions of the object, and the distance to it by forming a three-beam diagram of the radiation . - whi ch -- e dirr ection of -h;o boans are fixed whi.-- -he third -oer- n h U l 41f th-a. d_w,7c~otifated ob- , U 1PROCESSING~DATE--30OCT70 112 ;01 tfFUED W UNCtA� _l-,l-tLE-;----CONSTRUCT ION GRADE GYPSUM CRYOLITE PRODUCTION SULFATE wASTES u -!_'-_,AJ_J_tH0R ~NAZAROV, V.P. GUNTRY OF INFO--USSR .Ji-SOURCE-STROIT. MATER. 19701 (3)t 18-19 ,~--_DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS-14ATERIALS, MECH.r IND*, ClV:lL,ANL) PlARINE ENG.Rr EARTH SCIENCEES AND UCEANOGRAPHY -TO STANDAkD, GYPSUM, SULFATE, w CA ri -PIC. TAGS--TECHNICAL INDUSTRIAL ASTE LCIU MECHANICAL STRENGTH, CHEMICAL BINDERr METAL 0Xl0_--/(U)605T 12557 BINDER -STANDARD '~'.~.CCNTROL MARKING--NO RESIRICTIONS ~OOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO ~:~-PROXY REEL/FRAME--1992/1649 STEP NO--UR/02281701000/("03/00id/0019 CtRC ACCESSION NO--AP0112643 UNCLASS 1FIED PRO ESSING DATE--30OCT70 UNCLASSIFIED' i~CtkC ACCESS ION NO--AP0112643 A.BSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* THE CHEM COMPN. OF THE WASTES -':WAS: CAD 30.16; SO SUB3 47.73; SIO SUB2 1.21; FE SU62 0 SUB3 0.28; AL -SU62 0 SUB3 0.95; MGO 0.77; CRYSTN, WATER 18.6PERCENT. THE CONTENT OF ICASO SU84 ZH 5U82 0 WAS 86PERCENT, UEHYUKATION TOOK PLACE AT IN A BOILER OF 30 L. THE STRENGTH OF T14E SAMPLES MADE FROM WASTES,WAS.30-60PERCENT HIGHER THAN THAT OFGYPSUM CASTS. THE WASTE:S CAN.ALSO BE ADDED TO A BINDER MADE.OF GYPSUM STONE SINCE THE STRENGTH OF GYPSUM INCREASED IN THIS CASE BY 40PERCENT. UNDER INDUSTRIAL CONDITIONS THE WASTES-WERE PUT INTO SHAFT MILLS WH~,RE THEY WERE GROUND AND DRIED. JHE.MATERIAL HAD THEN A TEMP. OF 60-90EGREE-5 AND WA$ PASSED TO GYPSUM -40DEGREES. OF 15.14 PRIME3 WHERE THE PROCESSING TOOK PLACE AT 125 -,-THE BINDER THUS OBTAINED iiET THE REQUI.REME.NTS.OF GO-ST 125-57, ITS STRENGTH WAS EVEN HIGHER.. THE USE OF SULFArE WASTES.IN A MIXT. WITH --GYPSUM STONE WAS MOST CONVENIENT. INTOJHE.HOPPER 1 LOAD OF BOTH WAS _::~FED. :-THE METHOD MAKES IT POSSIBLE TO OBTAIN CONSTRUCTION GRADE GYPSUM :;-_-,;OF.:lST QUALITY FROM GYPSUM STONE OF.3111310VALITY CONTG. CASO SUB4 2H SUB2 0'. 0 F' 65PERCENTO L A S S IF 1 E-0- USSR UDC: 533.6.011.5:518.5 IVANOV, M. Ya., IMAYKO, A. N., NAZAROV, V. P., Moscow "Some Results of a Numerical Study,of Unconve Intional Plxnes of Ideal Gas Moscow, Izv. PIT SSSR-. Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No 4,.Jul/Aug 72, pp 102-109 Abstract: The authors give the results of an investigation of supersonic s of an ideal (inviscid and thermally nonconductive) 6as escaping into it space vith reduced pressure in caser, where the cross section of the Jet at the nozzle tip is noncircular. The study --a based on numerical inte- P it - gration of equations of three-dimen*ional supersonic flow using - con tinuous" dif f erence method of computation ~vhich enables f law calculation without isolating the shock waves which are typically fcrinaed Ln this type of problem. Principles governing the behavior.of nonstandard.exhaust plumo-s are- given for nozzles with.elliptical and nearly i-ectangular output. Calculations were done on t~e "BESM-6" coq!puter. -341 UEC 547 TJSSR NURTMOV, S. KEI., ISMAGILOVA, 11. M.,_NUAHM4_Y.._&_t._ZYKOVA, T. V., SAIAMMIN(Mr., R. A.J. SULTATTOVA, R. B., and TSIVUNIN, V. S.,. Kazan' Chemical- Technological Institute Imeni S. M. Kirov "Reaction of Aryl- and Diarylchlorophosphites With Cyclic Katonen" Leningrad,, Zhurnal Obshchey Ehimii, vol 43 (lo5), No 6., Jun 73, -PP 1251-125k Abstract: Phenyl- and diphenylchlorophosphites react ~with eqtiirx)lar quantities of cycloliaxanone and cyclopentarione upon heating to 130-15r;3 for 17-20 hrs in a cloced system, yielding flie respective astert; of cyclohexen-l-yl(cycio~ Ponten-l-yl)phonpl ionic acids. The (Uplionyl enter:of cycloliaven-1--y1phoiphonic acid (1) reacts 'with phosphorus pentamx1ride -convertiriG Lo blie thiophosphonle acid derivative. Bromine adds across the double bond of (1) pro.~acing a di- -mide which can be dehydrobrominated to diphenyl ester of 2,6-cyclohexadiene- ~bm 1-ylphosphonic acid. USSR UDC 669.14.018.44 _NAZAROV, Ye. G., Central Scientific Research Institute of Ferrous Metallurgy "Alloying and Heat Resistance of Alloystr Moscow, Metallovedeniye i Termicheskaya Obrabotka Metallov, No 1, Jan 73, 52-54 p p Abstract: The effect of chemical composition on the heat resistance of modern Ni-base alloys.used in the USA and,USSR was:examined. The criterion for evaluating heat resistance was the temperature corresponding to long- time strength for 100 hours of testing at a load of 20 ICgf/mjr,2. The following American and Soviet -alloys were evaluated: KhN77Ty-.iR, KhN70'OrxuT, EP199, EP202, KP99, EI826, EI 929, Udimet-500, EP57, KA-R-114-211, MAR-M-200,,B-1900, ZhS-6, TRW-1900,.Udimet-.700, ZhS-6K Rene-100 , Ni-100. (IS USSR wo 669.1-5-018.44 KAZAROV YE G "Precipitati -Resistant Alloy" on Hardening of KhN35Mu Heat; Sb. tr. TsMI chern. metalluraii (collection of Works of Central Scientific pp42-29 (from RZh- Research Institute of Ferrous Metallurgy :1970s vYP- 77P Yletallurglya# E7o 3j Ear 71j Abztract No ~1626 by author) 5VTYu Translationi The author studied the precipitation hardening oj" the Kh1,3 alloy in relation to heating and cooling conditions, plasttic deformition, and:other factors. The properties of the alloy are shown after multistage heat-treatment regimes and after one-time aging. The use of multistage types of heat treatment tor alloys of the Khh35VTYu,typo,iz inadvisable. Six Illustrations. Seven tables, Bibliography with sevon titles. A JPRS 58159 6 February 1973 MC 669.14.010.44'6 III; AS All ALLOVING FLr4E4T IN HFAT-RZSUTA1rr Al.=YS [Art. i41- 3,~, Y~, $1, Not,r-, B. -T~'TiCh ".FT (Centra I Scientiftc Research Instsi&9WIP .y a. 1. P. Bnrdirz); Moscow Metallovedenlym L.Tnmichn5kayA rbrabotka Merallov. Russian, No 3, 1972~ Nitkjcl--bzzz alloya, harJOtM41 With i4;4MQtaj1k4O th4SVS Of the typ" .4 13 Ti, NISAI, KyAl, Tj), 1.1 314) are used extersivtly a, Moreover. nickel forms lrit.m.tl L1d&.ctmpcun4s_ mint 1-r to the -Y.-Phase, wi -th silicon. tin, beryllium, etc. 3 been established that the stress-rupture strenKc.h of tt he steels and alloys tin be increased with additives a theseelements 11-31., A nitacnk..ty~i *lloy*'.'. ContaWng 0-5.5% TI and 1.101 Sri, has been developed. flowever.* lilfomation about the affect armicrdadditives of notfeirous metals an the properties of refractory alloys is extremely sparse and the ri ciple of their beneficiLTL action or. the properties of A'il;;s has not geen' establishtd, Thu Qff"t of tin on the properties and structure, cf nickel -chrome altoy of the type Xh478T (ET435) Is discussed In this article. Test alloys were melted in a vacuan izt=tion furnace from pure charge materials (Table 1).. The alloys contained 0.02-0.27% 51. 0.002-0.005% S and up to 0.01% B. The test specimens were z"a by extrusion2 at 1.000-1.020%. 7~ USSR UDC 669.14.018.441-6 YE. G. and MASLENOV, S. B., Central Scientific Research Institute of Ferrous Metallurgy imeni 1. P.:Bardin (TsKIChERMET) Tin as an Alloy Component in High-Temperature Alloys Moscow, Metallovedeniye i termicheskaya obrabotka metallov, No 3, 1972, PP 33-36 Abstract: Widely used high-temperature materials include nickel-base alloys strengthened with Ni Ti- Ni Al; Ni (Al, Ti);.Nillb-type intermetallide 3 7 phases. Nickel also is saia to form intermetallide y'-phase-liRe compounds with silicon, tin, berylliumand others. Thiq,.s;tudy concerns the affect of tin on the properties and structure of the nickel-chrome alloy lUiN78T (E1435) alloy. The experimental heats contained 0.02-0.17% Si, 0,002-0.005% S,and up to 0.01% B. It is shown that alloying Ni-Cr alloys with up to Sn increases their resistance to plastic:defoimation, the strength proper- ties at room and higher temperatures,as well as.the rupture strength at 700'C; in this case the scale resistance of WNW remains unaffected at 1000*C. Alloying Ni-Cr alloys with tin has a,.S'Lrengthenln~ effect as a 112 iid 0_A.TE`_ PUBLtSHED --TO ,~~:SUSJECT AREAS--MATERIALS TOPIC TAGS-STEEL FEAT TREATMENT# AUSTENITIC STEELp HEAT qr:sisrANT STEEL, ~-"-'~'~,'ALLGY PHASE~COMPDSITION, DISPERSION~HARDE-NINGI.BIBLICJGRA?tiY ~'-'CONTR0LJ%AkKING--NO RESTRICTIONS '..~VXUIMIENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED STEP NO---UR/0129170'QOO/003/0012/0019 ~'PROXY REEL/FRAME--19891'1938 -C,IRIC- ACCESSICN N0--AP01O8267~''-!,: ---- -- UNC iUA-!~S-f-F-1 17 !';1-: - - USSR uDc 66q.V,.ol8 8,~: on. i8 S ntj4~Zb Re3GajG'- NA J-11ASLEITYCOV, S. B, C,antral cir, n titute,.of Ferrous Metallurgy Im. ~1. P.' Bardizq s "The Present and Fu-ure o He at-RGsilstan' Alloy_-" Moscjw, Metallovedeniye, No Apr 70, Pp 16-28 review is given of develop-merits in heat- Abstract A briel Fe-sistant alloys durin- the last 30 years. 'fn o heat, rcsis'G, LD m -erials Js gove,-ned by t e fallo-wing: s-.:-en.---z;hC-n;.nG .L etallic mau uh o the solid solution with.dissolution of alloying L, I'C' and on separation of scoondary intornletRllidea bind carlbld~,-- pl.-.iasos -h y.. - -, L, from it; tho grain siza of the solid 3olution; 44-aviic-s ot 04 soft hardening and tlening; *-bability of -the 4it hir-,Iin temperatures; resistance to scallng and brittlen-js 0 factors, the first is conatant"I while the otherri are vaTiabl,_~Js h and depend on temperature, time, and the nGdiwii.. Wilz. the a_iten- sion of the service life, great; importance is a~;~tacl'ho(~ -11-o 11-1,10 esistance of alloys to gas corrosion at high tc]M,063ratu~-as, since r oxidation at this stage controls the efficiency.iof the, alloys. 1/3 USSR NAZAROV, YE. G., at al., 1,~.e tall 0v ed(~, niye Ho 4,, A-~~r -0, pp 16-23 Steels and alloys with carb-Ide strengthening are lo~zjs, re.- sistantu than alloys strengthened with intermetallidas. Primav-,, carbides and chromium carbides.have,a hi~~h diszo>'_IU'G~.0!I "U're Z (11500C and higher) and 'he presencatof some of.theiii alloys makes possible high-teraperature stronSthening. -jhases are thermally stable and have an extendc-,d inoubatioL, -4od of 'orna- tion. Con.'riared to inter-metallide >I t-phases, 'Che strengt",,-eninc- effect of the Laves phases is lower. Representr'Lt_iVe Aacat -rc sio U "tan iron-, iron-nickel-, nickel-, and cobalt-base steels and alloys are briefly reviewed, their main f eatures and chavai,.' eri~,tcs de.9cribodf and doz. -ignationa (j;qplalnod. Tables in tI-ij:~ orlig LrfI articlo provido infonnAtion on irons and and alloy3 and nlckol-, and cobalt-10a-a The brand nam es, compositions, origin-, sorvico lifr;,,, and to::_:i,,~ra- tures are also gJ ven, Refractor-baza alloys with volu,~i1--centare'd cubic latticas, I i as vanaditzar- aild cl 10 I]IJOY3, ni-j -Iror q. 4 described, includng, their baoic fez~turos, compoi -:I~, olomenta, a.-Id 2orvico temperatures. llati trondziin 01c; dc;vclop~flcnz USSR 1-TA Zj~ -i OV YE. G., et al,, Mletallovodoniye, lo Apr 70, pp 16-28 of heat-resistant, alloys both in the USSR and el 3owhere are analyzed# high-chromium nickel alloys are noted. nesc.,_-rch in Japanese austenitic stools and.alloys is discusqod. Gl' parbicular interest is the solubility of rultheniwa J.n nickel and the hi&-1 nelting temperature (15500C) of N'3Ru. Plat irrcx,._ba so alloys and stant alloys are radioactive elements as additions to heat-re3i. U mentioned. Particular reference is made to alloys containing -technetium. (melting temperatuxe 21700C). obtained in riuclear -reactors. 3/3 177 USSR 1JDC 542.91:1661.1718.1 N QJMV. 4 V. MUSLI'MCIN, A. A., and ZHELTUKHIN, V. F., Institute of A7 MA-_ 2 -enysical Chemistry imeni A. Urgan1c NO Ye :Aibuzov, Academy of Sciences ."Interaction of Bis-(hydroxymethyl)phosphinic Acid With-Phosphorus 'Pentachloride" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Khimicheskaya, No 8. Aug 71, pp 1806-1808 Abstract: The article describes results of a study of the reaction of bis-(hydrox-Imthyl)phosphinic acid with phosphorus pentachloride in a phosphorus oxychloride medium at t from 60 to 100'. It wa. emperatu res. found that the vield of bis-(chloromethyl)phosphinic chloride, other con- ditions; being equal, decreaspas with.a rise.in the reaction temperature, while the yield of chloromethylphosphonic dichl6ride andimethyl chloride ith the amount of meth which for increasing almost increases, w,- y1 chloride M proportionally to the chloramethylphosphonir- chloride yield. The formation of the latter two products indicates the presence of processes leading to splitting of the P-C bond. f 7 USSR uDc: 621.3T2443 ZAKffARGV, A. A, NAUROVA, A. I. "Inve3tigation of Some Modes of Operation of the Output Resonator of a Klystron With Distributed Interaction" V sb. VoDr. elektron. tekhniki (Problems of,Electronic Technology--collec- tion of ;o-rks), Saratov, 1971, pp 3-10 (from, RZh-Radiot`ekhnika,, No 6, Jun 71, Abstract No 6B163) Translation: It is shown how efficiency is affected by the phase and the modulus of reflection from end plates which short the decelerating system of-the output reconator in a kl~rstrori with distributed iryl;eraction, An estimate Is made of the possibility f I=roving the elact7-onic efficiency 0 of.a klystron with distributed interaction by selecting the electrons with xu3Lxizm=: deceleration from the. interaction space, Five Illustrations, bibliography of four titles. Res=-e. .1,/Z.- 01 5 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSIN34 04TE T I TLE OXIDATIVE 'tHERMAL DEGRADATION OF SOME.OLIGOSTLOXANES -U- HOR-SOBOLEVSKIY* M*Vov CHERNYSHEVI- EsA.'t LOTAREV, M,Bj, VISHNEVSKLY, iN. NAZARDYAA- D.V. C NTRY 0 SR -,4--S0URC E-PL AST. MASSY 19701, (219 2 6-7 -~PUBLISHED------70' A E SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY TOPICTAGS--THERMAL DEGRAOATIONt QXIDATIONj,SIL0XANE,,,M0LECULAR STRUCTUREr ~:BENZENE DERIVATIVE CONTROL 14ARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS OOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY RFEL/FRAME--1987/1057 STEP VO--UR/0191/70/-OOO/CiO2/0026/0027 CIAG ACCESSION NO--AP0104 455 'CLASSIFIED - UN -;~ ~ ~ :~ -015 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--IiSEP70 Wi --AP0104455 IRC ACCESSION NO :1--'ABSTRACT/,EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. MICROFICHC EOF ABSTRACT CONTAINS ,--~-~':::-GRA'PHIC INFORMATiOIJ. THE OXIDATIVE THERMAL DEGRADATION OF OL*IGCHETEROCYCLOSILOXANES, OLIGODIIAETHYLSILOXANES, OLIGOOIE-THYLSILOXANES (1) AND OLIGOMETHYLPHENYLSILOXANES OF STRUCTURE II WAS STUDIED BY i:-: THERM11GRAVIMETRIC ANAL. UNDER ISOTHERMAL CONDITIONS Ar ZOO-350DEGREES. HAD THE KAXe RESISTANCE TO OXIDN.it WHERE-AS I WAS LEAST RESISTANT TO ~.-.~GXIDN* AND AOSORRED 0 AT 200DEGREES'o THE AS�ORPTION~RATE-, OF 0 WAS. TEMP.. FOR ALL OF THE SILOXANES TESTED* UNCLASSIFIED UDC 547.341+5k%261 118 USSR XOSKVA, V. V. r ZYKOVA, T. V., RAZUMOV, A. I. ,arA CHEMO- JWOVA, L. A.# zan' Institute.of Chemical Technology Imeni S. M. Kirov C~-Alkyl- Substituted Vinylphosphonic Acid Derivativesi X~. Aalkoxy- vinylphosphonic and -thiophosphonic'Acid Derivatives": Leningrad, Zhurnal. Ob-shchey Xhimii, Vol 41, No 8, Aug 71, pp 1680-1684 Abstracto For purpose of a more complete study of 01-alkyl- Aalkoxy- -vinylpbospbonic and -thiophosphonic acid derivatives,:dlalkyl esters of these'acids were synthesized by1he reaction of their dichlorides with alcohols In the presenc f triethylaminia or with alkoxides. Hydrolysis -of the esters of d -alkyl- -alkoxyvinylphosphonic and -thio-phosyhon-4e acids (7 percent 7A Kali so hours) gives corresponding phosphorylated: aldehydes, which were Identified from elemental analysis, by.IR and~Mgl spectr&,~,as well as in wthe.form of their 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazonedf~. IR and MR~spectroscopy data indicate the presence of keW-enal taut6merism In tbe~aldelVdes, Phy"to ogy- UD%j 581-02 HAZAR216. 1, G. and YEVSTIGNEYEV, V. B., Institute of Biochemistry imeni A. 11. Bakh, Academy of Sciences USSR, Moscow, and Institute Of PhDtOSYntheSiS, Academy of Sciences USSR, Pushchino-napOke "Spectral Properties and Photosensitizing Capacity of Water-Soluble Analogs of Chlorophyll and Bound With a High-P61yner-Substrate" Moscowq Molekulyarnaya Biologiyal Vol 5, No 61, Nov/Dec ?I Pp 826-833 Abstracts In photosynthesis it is not the free pigment chlorophyll that is photochemically active, but rather its proteinlipid complex. Heace the pro- -e of considerable perties of the latter and the mechaniszz by which it is formed zu Interest. It is in connection with this problem that the authors of the present articel a) investigated the absorption spectra obtained during the interaction of water-soluble analogs of chlorpbyll. (chlorophynin a and1b, chlorin e, and rodin g) with the polymer polyviny1pyr:~olidon,e.(PVP); and b) attempted to deter- mine~the correlation between the degree of bonding of the p~gpment with the given polymer and its photosensitizing activity. The authors found that when the,chloraphyll arualogs were bound with PVP, their absorption spectra showed obvious, shJft's. in the positions of.the red and blue maxizums and changes in the intensity: of absorption, With respect E7.~~ .... :~ . i ..! 'lr,~ IiIhniiihil Ilk-45 - 22 - A -V 4L USSR UDC: 541.49:546-799-3 ffJMIN, A. A., ZAYTSEV, A. A., XMSWA, V. A., PETUEHOVA, I. V. "Synthesis of (Ynthyl Phenyl Phosphonyl) Methyl Phenyl Phosphonic Acid, and an Investigation of Complexing With Trivalent Ions of Americium, Curium and -Promethiwd' Leningrad, Radiokhimiya, Vol 14, No 3, 1972~, pp~374-377 Abstract: The authors studied complexing of trivalent Am, Cm and Pui ions with an organopbosphorus compound containing two P=O groups joinr-,d by a methyl bridge. This compound, (methylphenylphosphonyl)rethyl-pbai-Aylplios-,ohonic acid, was synthesized. The thermodynamic value of its disnociation constant was determined (pe = 2.04). Complexing was studied by the ion-exchanr-e method on KU-2.cation-exchange resin. The loparithms of the constants of stability for complexes of' Am3+ Cm3+ and pm3+ in solutions with constant ionic strength of ()-2'(NH4ClO4) were 3.35, 3-35 and 3.40 respectively, which -*;.s appreciably higher than the corresponding values vith phosphoric and methylphosphonic acids., and approaches the value of the constants vith trimetaphosphoric acid. The~additional stabilization of these complexes was attributed to the chelate effect associated with ring closure. 1/1 C:i621-396.669 8:621-396.6.029.63 USSR UD Voise Suppression in Radiotelejlhone~Signals" Tr. T s ITI Imor. flota (Transactions of the Central Illavy Scientific Institute) -4o 147, 1971 pp,78-83 (from RZh-Ra-dicteldmika, No i~, 1972, Abstract -11o 4A228~ Translation: The need for noise suppression in pauses in speech transmission is verified; a short description i.~ given, with graphical and experimental ahalysis,of a device f or n(Tioe su p- pression, and the reduction in the. noise, &.-X, during the pauses 1G.Tound. Tx-,~o illustrations, bibliography of three titles. Annotation USSR UDC 595.775 VA -1- and TIKHVINSKAYA, M. V., Biological Institute, Kazan' University, and Kazan' State Pedagogical Inbtitute "Fleas of the Water Vole (Arvicola terrestris) in the Middle Volga Region" Leningrad, Parazitologiya, No 5, 1971, pp 413-416 Abstract: Thirteen species were identified among 698 fleas collected from 1,039:water voles caught in theMiddle Volga,region from 1957 to 1967. Ceratophyllus; walkeri.and Ctenophthalmuis wagneri constituted 56 and 10% of all the fleas. Leptopsylla, bidentata, Ctenophthalmus agyr~tes, and Amphip- sylla rossica were less common. Only rare specimens of the other eight species were found. The species variety was. greatest (all 13) in floodplains of-large rivers (Kama, Vyatka, etc.). These floodplains;are natural foci of 'tularemia and the destination of seasonal migrations of the voles, which exchange parasites with other small mammals in these regioas. Water voles are highly sensitive to tularemia and:their.fleas, can harbor and spread the disease.'. It is suggested that in years whenthe voles arelparticularly numerous, their burrows should be poisoned in order to destroy both the rodents.and their ectoparasites. f Ce USSR UDC: 519.4 NAZAROVA, L. A. "Representations of Large arrays of Infinite Type" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR: Ser. Matematicheskaya, Vol 37, No 4, 'Jul Aug 73, pp 752-791 Abstract: The author describes representations of large arrays,(P. Gabriel., Unzerlegbure Darstellungen. 1, Manus. Math.,,v. 6, Fa.sc. 1(1972), pp 71-10~) which do not contain problems on reducing.& Matrix pair by similarity trans- formations. Gabriel had noted that a set of large arrays,of finite type coin- cides with a set of Dynkin schemes without double connections. Moreover, for each such large array there is a puzzling Mutual one-to-one correspondence between the set of its undecomposable representations and the set of positive roots of the corresponding Lie algebra. Gabriel recognized thatthis relation was not accidental but mas unable to find the explanation., Corresponding to the.large arrays examined in Nazarova's paper are expanded Dy.-Jcin schemes Wl 'thout double connections) which,-in turn,-havie correspohding, simple, (infinite -dimensional) graduated Lie algebras of finite ine~rbase. USSR UDC 534.285 ABRAMOV, G. V., NAZAROVA, L. A. "Calculation of the Distribution Funct-ions for -the Intensity and Phase of an Ultrasonic Field in the Aperture of Planoconcave Elliptical Lenses and Reflectors With Exposure From an Isotropic Emitter". Tr. Kuybyshev. aviats. in-t (Works of the Kuybyshev Airlation Institute) , 1970, vyp. 44, pp 3-12 (from RZh-Elektronika i yeye Primencniye, No 6, jizi 71, Abstract No 6A389) Translation: The authors consider the intensity distribution function of an ultrasonic field in the aperture of a p1mocortcave lens, and derive ex- pressions which account for the following factors: ch~urges.in the cross section of the tubes of energy.in the i6cide nt and refracted iraves, tran- sition through the refracting interface,.transition through the flat inter- face, and attenuation with propagation in the mediumi and in the lens nza- terial. Graphs are given of the intensity distribution function in the aperture of planoconcave elliptical lenses. These graphs are plotted by using expressions derived for lenses made from aluminum, brass, pleyiglas and polystyrene. The maxim= phase error is given as~& function of the 1/2 ABRAMV, G. V. , NAWROVA, L. A.,.Tr. KWbyshev., aviaf:i. in-t, 1970, vyp. 44, pp3-12 ratio of the wave impedances of the lers material and the medium, and the phase lead is given as a function of lens thickness., it is noted that the phase distribution function for a quasiplane ultrasonic field of a reflector depends or. the accuracy of making the reflector profile and on the precision h with which t e phase center of the~eirdtter is set on t1he principal focus of the system. Eight illustrations, one table, bibliography Of five titles. L K. 2/2 58 UNCLASSIFf PROCESSING UATF---l3jNl)V U_ER KNA -v; V H 'ITLE-COMPLEXES. OF M F SE.',j T PAOT~L:il NIN T H E PU L YR 13, S LjA A L I C),'q E -.PLjl,,,,T -CELL EXTRACTS -U- M.A. NALATZOVA, L.M-, 13 LEMISHEV A. B. 'CGUNTRY OF INFO-USSR tE-~-VESTN. AKAU. NAUK KAL. SSR 1970, 26,3)~ 56-8 ,Q~A.,E:.PUDL ISHED ------- 70 asuf r AREAS-SWILOGICAL AND ?4EQ [CAL SC I ENCES TAGS--.RN.At :PROTEN"It R190SONEv, PLANT PHYSI,)LOGY,, U V ~SPECTROPHOTOMFTER, RADIOACTIVITY IMEASUREMENT Z-ONTROL 14M~K I NG-NO RESTRICTIONS :06C 0 P'. F N TCLA S 5--U:NlCLA z5o". I F I E D *PROXY REEL/FRAME-300210470 STEP NO-UR /00 3 1 70 02 00 3 0 056/ 005 8 'CIRC A'CCESSION N0--AP012.'3040 U'1-1 j 01 :'PRCCESSING DAT E-- 1 3-"IUV7 0 ur, C- ACCESSION t,10--AP0128040 -W.T--,U) GP-0- A6STRACT. SHOOTS OF P I SUM S AT I ~,A aS TA'A C fEX T R ilERE IN -A-ii SUI-12 PRIME32 PD SUB4 FOF U :HR. AFTre-'k:;sl*lRi-.l.,,4G 1.',l --%BUFFER 0. 5,4 SUCAOSE, 0.05M TRIS, 0.07M PIGCL SUB2 0.025M r~-CL, 0.005t-,, --MERCAPTOETHA140L)t PH 7.6 SEPD. FRACTLONS OF RlaoSO14ES WERE 06TAINED 13Y CEN ~IFUGATION AND ULTRACENTkIFUGAT.10N. RIBOSOME FRACTIONS wFRE STUDIED UV. 5PECTROPl-l0TOi'-)EkY AND PADIACTIVITY MEASU'EMENT. .THE HIGHEST -~-',-RADIOACTIVITY HAS FUU111) IN HEAVY R1110-SOMES.' MOM AND! POLY106USOME ';.-':-;C0f4P0NENTS AWITH THE ACTIVITY OF 1.50GP , 1.4601~ AND 1.391) G-Cl-l PRIME3 WERE DETECTED. IT 14AS CALCO. THERE ARE COMPLEXES OF -MESSE"GER RNA ',,IITHI -CALISE FREE 'N A T OF PROTEfIllt r3c PROTE I NI NRATI10 OF 20 PEkGFNT k-80PERCEr. P NA JIA STHE ACTIVITY 1.800 G-Cf'l Pl~ I ME 3 U NL A S."S I f- 11) USSR VASIL YEV, L. A., KURAMSHIN, T. A. UA&AAQ",MWL16P. and TRAVNIKOVA, L. I. "Measurement of Pressure of Light and Aerodynamic Forces Acting on Complex Shape Body in Free -Mo'le'cule Flow" Leningrad, Aerodinamika Razrezhennykh Gasov, 1970, pp 113-118 Abstract: The principle of the rnethod is to,measure the intensity of reflected light from an. illuminated,body.,in all directions in space, ~k, then:to calculate the pressure of light force' by integratirig the inten- sity of light. A model of the body to be investigated made of the same material is placed on a gimbals mount,: it is illuminated by a collimator mounted in a fixed position relative to,thelmode'l. The model is ro- tated in all directions relative to a statioha'ry~ photocell located at a ei distance exceeding 50 times the size of th~ -model. Thejntensity of eflected light measured by the photdcell is, integrat d by means of r a computer. 1/2 - 17 - VSSR UDC 615.285.7.015:551.581(213) ATABAYEV, Sh. T., KHASANOV, Yu. U., and NAZAROVA L. S., Candidates of Medical Sciences, Uzbek Scientific Research Ins itationt Hygiene, and Oc- .,--.,.eupationn1I Diseases 'tPersitence of the Pesticide Aldrin in a Hot Climate," -Moscow, Gigiyena i Sanitariya, No 4, 1970, pp 108-109 Abstract; Aldrin is used in Tashkent, Andizhan, Fergana, and Khorezoi oblasts to tton seeds and control various insects. 'The pesticide tends to disappear :,treat co fairly quickly in the upper soil layers due to the effect of bigh temperature '(decomposition), microbiological processes, uptake by plants, and removal by ir- .'rigation. However, it was found to persist in the.70-100 cm layer for 5 years more. The amount persisting varies with the soil group. The, residue is greater in meadow-bog soils than in clayey or sandy soils, because there is more organic matter and, consequently, greater uptake of aldrin in the former than in -the-latter. Aldrin constitutes a health hazard because soils sprayedvith it or aoils.in which treated seeds of plantsare grown become a seconditry source of pollution of open bodies of water, which are usedby ajarge part of the Uzbek population for drinking and household purposes. Acc. Nr,- AM484847 104779p Crystals durin - I a T : . . gm . tallopra.A)v, 1 of the -H humid we tic;ally.transp long) were su sec,Iollow6d deformation Under these c according to t a similarity ductors, whic anistn~oi plas Dislocation g. 04745 Ugh-temp. re ar-ent bject by was ondiiitows heir in h tic Abstr cting*Serv ce a CHE14ICAL ABST.Zi Ref Code: in~ structure i~~ 'threadlike sap hire def6rniatlon under cou~enttatq-4 loiding, .; uIx: I.: , (USSR). ~~'Kris- INazarova- IE P - -A4Yslalso -taip6d ag a' - (11); - Russ)i uxidn. ~6~ At OdWdek:4Tb4J"Wi a, -flux of th~,Iorm ~,bf op-- The. crystw's, inwstigi.Wd platei.(2046#,thick! WO Ide 34 mril to indentation underli load of 20 ko~~ 5-10! heating'in a'H--~O flame at>.IOW*. Thei pct of' detd b tc~'"g the Sainplest i.n HsP04~a 3200- Upriimatic lbbos ot dislq~atioa i hifted Burgers 4ectori, . The resilU ohiiined i 36wed the behavior Pf. sapphire . and, brittle sei nicon-a may be explaint-4 by th6 action of a~ pip. ~-J, Pabis-Mgoh deformaitio'n.'air4orn W REEL/FRAME 19800:192 57 q -7. ~USSR G, -1.2 UDC 681.x AKSENOV, V.I., NAZAROVA, ?.-.V. #*'U merical. Solution Of Ti- Problem Of lron*tnlasion Of Vary"Loa Froquency a Electromagnetic Waves Throtigb T, e Lower AtmPaph re" Radiotekhnika i elektronike, Vol XVII No 7 JulY 1972, p1) ae paper is concerned with the dovelor.,:L~3nt of tin alljori-11 m ond a Abstrac. T1 Program off numerical integration of a system of equationv describ~n- t1he proi~a- ration of elec4-ro,-ajvnutir, waves. in a plene-et.ratified rml~,,,njtcacLive placn~z~. The ~ 9 polarization, the angle of incidence of tha,wave, and the orieritution of t-he ex- ternal =.~Rnetic ficid are arbitrary. The ulgorithm io b~tzed on intep- ation of a vyotom of field Oq11:AAonn with tho unn of oC corr,;,ci ion r of tho E1011A1011 and roo.1,1GLion of U13 GontI1113ity. Tho 11:~~Olotl of' eloped it; uned Cor an analytile of the pocu!1t,.,rifA.:j(t (not pfavj.r~.,;I-.J~t V ed in othor Wor)'s) of' tlic tran!3mission of very-low _-Fr,,iqi.ienOy 'ble netic waveo throu,-%h the loaar attnoophere. The proZrar.~ develops;d ra!,.-,~s 1-L in the I"U band to deternine the rantrix of ti'm coe1lficier,(U~ of rtiflactioa, tr-_ .1 1; v a I u, a c f t 1, ro components of the wave f 4--ald tit any level in tho ioncep', erc, t. 0 transmiae'Lan coefficient, and the vector direotion of the energy flow. -T!-~e _---thc-d 1/2 IMSSR X, AKUSENOV) V. I., XAZf~ROVA, 1'. V., Radiotcl~hnika i eleXtromka, Vol III, N-0 7, JulY,1972, pp 135,3-11361 ~of solution used it., this paper ct~n be used for study of tht) prai~21~i.,tion of alect- Jc waves in any plane- at rat if ied aniaotropic medir; for uh~lc! it i s ii:~- romagnet.L 1 .1 - possible to usa more simple approximation mathodu. The authors thiank and I.-V. Lishin for discussion of the work. 7 f i IV-. 14 ref.Rpecived by editarso, 23 June 1971. USSR UDC 621-371.029.4 AkSENOV, V. I. and UZAROVA, M. V+ :,of :t;ie' F PMieoretieal:Investigation Pas q~)~e of.Ultra-Long Waves 7!1~bu&-the~--Loywe3~- lonosph6i-e" Moscow, V sb. X Vses. Akonf., no rasprostr. radio,,.roln. Te:,,iq~y dolel. 73 (Tenth All-Union Uonference;on the Propa6atibn of Radio Waves; Report Theses; Section 3-collection of works) "Nauka, 1972 PP 114-118 (from RZh--RadiotekhniIm,,No 10, 19720 Abstract No 1OA370) 'Pr U_ anslation: An algorithm proposed earlier by the authors for com- puting the fields in a plane-layer anisotropic plasma is used for investigating the angular, frequency latitude, and azimuthal de- endences of the transmission coefficient of ultra-long waves --lMkHz) through the lower ionosp#er-e. Two,' lustrations, bib- liography of -two. N. S. USSR UDC 621-371-029.4 AKSENOV, V. I. and HAZAROVA, 1,1. V. "Investigatin- the Interference Structure of Ultra-lonj~ 1-lave Radio Fields in the Ionosphere" Moscow, V sb. X Vses.. konf. po rasprostr. radiovolii. Tezisy do-1:1. 'adio Sekts. 3 (Tenth All-Union Conference onothe Propagation oX h Waves; Report Theses; Section 3--collection of works):",Nauka," 1972 PP-119-123 (from RZh--Radiotekhnika, No 10, 19721,~'Abstract No 10A 371) Translation: This paper is devoted to a the oretical manlys is of the spatial structure for the field of a grounded ultra-long wave ~transmitter in '-whe ionosphere result.Lng.from interfer i radiation incident on the lower boundary of. tile' ionos-ohere.. ~ The, resW ts of the..compiitatioria are compared,:w.Lth the~experimentql data obtained tif-ldial-_,earth. sa LL-ti t.0 jj~tg59 N~ H J i USSR UDC 538.576.454.001.572 AKSENOV, V. I., and NAZAROVA, M. V. "Coefficients of Reflection and Transmission of Ultraloa$ Waves in a Model of the Lower Ionosphere With Exponential Profiles of V and v" Moscow, Radiotekhnika i Elektronika, Vol 16, No 7, Jul 711, pp 1113-1119 St sion and~re und for an A ract: Coefficients of transmis flection aie fo ionospheric model of the form v (z) It/. e- qz); const; Kp fp exo 2 t,qz p) where v is the effective number of collisions, ;FH is the gyrofrequency of an electron, and N is- electron concentration. The-problem reduces to solving the. equation &F + We (z)F 0. dz2. for a layer of the form 1/2 USSR AKSENOV, V. I., and NAZAROVA, M. V., Radiotekhnika i ElektrorLika, Vol 16, No 7, jul 71, pp 1113-1.119 where a e2/maf HF; e, m are the charge and mass of an electron; f is the wave frequency. The solutions of-the wave equation, which are expressed in terms of Whittaker functions, are analyzed. The resultant formulas define the coefficients of transmission and reflection of a plane electromagnetic wave incident an the layer from above or.from below. The frequency dependence of these coefficients is studied for the case.of longitudinal propagation of ultralong waves in a plane laminar magnetically activelonospheric plasma (angle.between the wave vector and the external magnetic4ield equal to zero with:exponential profiles N(z) and v(z)). The proposed mwiel of the lower ionosphere is close to reality and has never been previously studied. If information is available on the change in electron concentration over a 24- hour period, the results found im this paper can be used.to determine the diurnal variation in the coefficients of transmission an&reflection of ultralong waves in the ionosphere. The formulas derived can also be used to find the electron concentration profile when the coefficients:of transmission (of reflection) are known on several frequencies in the ultralong wave band. 2/2 . . . . . . . . . . . . lip KIYBRYO, D IN. I and niOMLOV, V "Parametric Light Sc_nttering in 'he Field of an VIturasonic ve" -Moscow Zhurnal i TO ore t iche sl_~:oy F if& i_. ,vol. 61, 110 4 (10T,70etober 1971, r-D 1422-1426- 'hod for com- Abstract: This article considers another possible r,_et pensating the dispersion ol --?-It in cubic crystals ithout inver- ultrasonic pLmpin;~~- of a particular auxiliary U_ sion centers b- usinr mie vector tion of ouadru-)ie .1, the condi frequency and - satisfyin.- Wave synchronism. Besido3 the pumpir.C.--, wave, the other thr~,_e ~v;aves are those involved j-q t-he reaction-143-4 (al + fa2, I%-hc:M 03 iO t1he -III- litj,,ht o-n a cryotal, and. (42 , froquency of the incidezi and 01 Clire the -Trequencles of the ocattoreld waves. 3xporimc-nts involving these waves provide useful infornation concorning the, char,,cter- isl'-,ics of crystals asynmetrical th reB-pect. to their cem-,",cr, par- ticularly the disnersion of the re-fractive indicoor, in the Ln'Lr--red -f the spectrum. _r c the. anuthors con- region o, T om their omputations, it is possible to obBerve~parametric liCht ocatte:ring elude that tric crystals through the use of the auxiliary in cubic Piezoelec4 ultrasonic pump p. ected with the 11r. V. Lonionosov ing They are conn M'oscow State Univers-ity. -41 7 Ace. Kr: Ref Code: UR 0056' Ae004.3(;84-'8 P~ff SOMCE: Zhumal Ekspe,riment 1'noy i Teoreticheskoy Flzikis 1970;*Vol 58 Nr 30 p SCkTTERING OF.LIGHT -BY:LIGHT IN A NOMONTRALLY SYMMETRICAL MEDIM A Ar. Kivsh,to :ff ~ The -main characteristics 'intensity, dependenc!e of freque-ney aa scatteririg anglo. line.sliapo) of.the radiation scattered by a transparent crystal not" possessing a sym- metry center are calculated. Scattf.-ring due to the, quadratic, aad t:ubic terms in the macro5copic polarizability expansion in ampUtude of the incidem lij~jit (which is assu- med to he mouocliromatic) is considered. It is shown that as a rifle the,officiency of two cons-ecutive three-photon proce�it~s is greater than the efficiency of a four-pboton ppcess, The effect of Me finite cross sedion of Elio incident light kivarn Is takpn. into accounL EVFRAII& USSR tMC 517-1,615-7/9 NAZAROYAp 0. "On the-Problem of the Changein Activity of Cholinesteraze of the Blood Of Animals Under the Effect of Magnesium Chlorate" "urkmen M-dical Institute), 1971, 15, Tr. Turlm. med. in-ta (Works of the t44-W (from M-Biologicheskaya. Kbimiya.t Ho 17# SOP 711t Abstract No P P -?F2086) Translationt Feeding magnesium chlorate (1) to rabbits in doses of 0.04 or 0.4 g/kg for 30 days caused an increase in the activity of pzeudocholin- esterase an(i a reduction in the period after conpletion of inooulation; the changes in activity of pseudocholinesterase axe more pronounced after a laxger dose of I. ' The activity of true cholinesterase of the blood was suppressed by a dose of 0.4 g/kg of I during the ingestion period and for 3-4 months after comDletion of ingestion, Compound I in a dose of 0.04 g/kg did notchange the activity of chol-inesterase.: It Is concluded that the activity of cholinesterase of the blood zay serve as an early indication of zagneslum chlorate poisoning. yz USSR NAZAROM, 0. B. "Change in the Activity of Blood Cholinesterase Due to the Action of Magnesium Chlorate on Intact Skin" Zdravookhran. Turkmenistana (Turkmenistan Public Health), 1973, No 5, pp 3-5 (from RZh-Biologicheskaya n-imiya, No 24, Dec 73, Abstract No 24F 2176) 2), 8-10 drops of Translation: Onto a shaven skin patch.of rabbits (4 X 5 cm 40%, 12%, and 1.5% solution of Mg chlorate were deposited~(I, cotton de- foliant, daily administration for 30 days).' Prior to the,experiment, during,the application period (7, 14, and 30 days) and 15 and 30 days "after the completion of the regimen, the general state, local clianges on the skin and the activity of CE in blood serum and in the erythrocytes (ER) were determined. It was shown thaL, due to,thd action of a 40%:solution of I at-tim 7th day, the activity of GIE in blood and ER dropped by 26 and 30.9% respectively; on the 14th day by 36.2.and-43.0% respectively, at the 21st day, in absence of obvious toxic manifestations, the activity of CE in blood and ER dropped by 30.9 and 38.8% respectively; 15 days after cam- pletion of the exposure tol, the activity of CH in blood and Elt was lowered by 19.6 and 29.1% respectively. The recovery of the CE activity was ob- served 30 days after completion of the experiment. In case of lower LOSR UDC 62M93,401:t669-~~5 TOMASHOV, IT. D.j RLOOKOL, Y11. S., AMAR, G. VU. M., PLAMIK, G. 11.g and HAZAROVA, R. I., Academy of Sciences USSR 71hh"Utute of Physical Chemistry "The Effect of Alloying Elements on the Corrosion Behavior. off Titanlum" 'o 1, Jan-Feb 73A PPA 15 Moscolit Zashchita Metallov, Vol 9j 1% Abstracti The mthod of potentiostatic p3larization curves, coincosion tests, and electron diffraction investigations were applied to investipte the corrosion and elect-rochenical properties of, alloys based on titanium iodide with small additioni of chroniwu, molybdenun, niobiun, almiinuzrij r-ang-ariese, aaid tin in a 40;7., iY114, solutior. at 606underratural aoration, conditions. Thestructure of the anodic oxide films developing on -these alloys vias analyzed. The passivation and full passivation potentWs. were- found to.be ctically.inderendent of the nature and conc-atra'ion of the a2loyi= ra Q g addition, vhexyeas the critical passivation curronto ana the currents in thn passive zone varied significantly. . AltuAnum inpairs tile cormsion rrOPf:?rUO3 of titanim both in the active ard passive stit s. M&nganece and chromAur, Ge increase the rate of corrosion in the active state and decrease it in the U -duces titanium co=osion rate passive state, V obium, on the other,bandg n in- the active state and increases it in the passivo atate.t One,figurc, three tables, thirteen bibliographic references. 7 UDC 620.193-01 TOXASHOV, F. .D., CRUALOVSYMA, T. V,j CHERNOVAp G. P., PLMMIKO,~;P. 'ii. t, HAZAMVA, 131, .11, ZML OT, A. P., and SHMMMIA, Z. NO., Acadeny of Sciences --ute 5- - T Physical Ch emistl uStructural Stiidy of Surface layer on.Ti-Pd.Alloys" 11oscoup Zas-bachita Hetallov, Vol 8, No 3. Nay-Jun 72t pp 291-294 Abstracts Vae arl-iclo describes results of an electron nicroscopic, elec- tron diffraction,and X-ray study of the surface layer foxming on I -Fd alloy (Ti-0.2 percent Pd and Ti-l percent Fd) during cor=zion in 40 percent H.-.,504 and 20 percent R1.11 at 1000. The electron microscopic study of the surface of Ti-Fd alloys -,fts-r +-hcir corrosion confirms -the 3upposition as to 'tho acct:--iu- lation of P-11adlun on 'ho nurfaca In tho forn of vev y finely (11:5psa-zed crys- talline for.-ations. After t=f-ment of the zurfaco,vith hot c,.=entratad q I n elect=n t-licrophotographs h,,u ln'03t uhich dissolves Pdj tho o Farticles. alla, -a rmiiily forms vory fine pzrticlos InAho caro of TL'-I'pcrc-.nt Fd p, Jiu: on the ouxTace, 7he Pd accwnulations on n-0.2 percent 1q. allby rclical a -towarxLs the branchad groirth of prir,,xl crysta-111zation centers, tmdency 1/3 !6 MR -Jun 72, pp 291- TOMASHOV, It. D., at al. Zashchita Netallovt Vol 8, No 3, Fay 294 7he results of the electxon diffraction study of the surTace of Ti-1 percent Pd alloy z;hou that after coxxosion in 20 parcent 1101 at 1000 thora are stron-, lines. chamutcr1rtic of Pd and var!Y wealk lines characteristic of -Ster treatnent of the alloyin IWIO the lines ch=acteeLstic TiO2 and Tll 1 3 H2. of Pd disar-pear.z--nd only TiH2 and 1102 are f6tind on -the strfacd. lbo rela- tive intensity of flhe rcf1ections characteristic of Pd Immases with an in- 'he corrosior time, whilo it decreazes for riU?.and 'C102. After creas-a in 5-n 40 porctmt 112S04 et 1000 reflections clamotollstic of Pd, TIF12, and TiG2 axe obscxved. It vor, the intensity of the Pd_c:harac-lorintic lbie3 i eonsiderably im-aker than after'coTrosion, in 20 porcent 1101 at 1000, r-nd ''they are of a diffuse clia=ctar, while the int nsity of tho ref2ections chaz- acteristic of M-12 and TiO2 is strongor. X-rwj an_nlysiis of the powderad sui-face layer that for.-m on Ti-l per- cent Fd alloy c-hows tbat aftor cormsion in, 20 percent Hal at 1000 the alloy I I 5-_-.*443'1~_-.~.~'-- ~038 UNCLASSIFI'80,~ 'PROCESSING~DATE-09OCT70 '~.-TlTLE-CORROS ION RESISTANCE OF REFRACTORY MATERIALS IWANTIMONY SALr,MELTS .'q-TH1)R-(04)-BULDAK0Vs A.A.j RLIZLOVSKIY, A.A*#. IGNATOVAp T.S.r NAZAROVAt WNTRY UF INFO-USSR ~,:'-s cURC E-0 GN EU P ORY 1970, 3511J, 35-7 DATE -PUBLISHED ------ 70 SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS TOPIC TAGS-MAGNESIUM OXIDE, ALU14INUM OXIDE# TINo ALLOY, REFRACTORY SOVIUM CHWRIDE, -POTASSIUM CHLURIDE, 1LECTROLYTEJ, .__~~:-_.~7MATERIALt: ANTIMONYt P r-- RCORROS I UN RES I STANCEf _1AETAL :POWOER/(U)SUZ ANTIMONY _lRuN ~Cop `~,.Ca~TROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS ENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED :,--.lPADXY REEL/FRAME--1993/1955 STEP NO--UR/0131/70/035/001/0035/0037 'CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0114373 UNCLASS IF [ED ---------- UNCLASSI~tED`: PROUSSIN~ DATE--090C T70 038 ---CIRC ~ACCESSI ON NO--AP0114373 '.-.A.bVRACT/EXlRACT--(U) Gil-0- ABSTRACT. CORROSION Rr-SI"TANCE OF A LARGE -NU. OF REFRACTORY MATERIALS SIMULTANEOUSLY IN CONTACT POR 250 HR WITH S8 .11.-SALTS AND NACL PLUS KCL SOLN. AT 87000EGREE5 IN AN EXPTL. INDUSTRIAL ~ELECTROLYZER WAS DETD. THE ELECTRULYTE CONTAINEU EQU114GLAR MIXT. OF -TECHp GRADE NAGL AND KCL. INTERACTION OF THE MATERIALS USED OCCUAkED THESC NUT ONLY WITH CHLORIDES BUT ALSO WITH SOLNS. OF NA AND K 114 CHLORIDES. THE ELELYROLYTE WAS SATO. WITH IMPURITIE$ COINSIST(ING OF Pi~- G~iZ5-0.60, FE 0.0~'t-0.28, CU 0.006-0.071 NI 0.001, AS 0.01-0.054, AND S -0.14-0.595PERCENT. RECIANGULAR PRISMS OR TABLOID SHhPE0-S,-*'EClM-F-NS GIF -AGO AL SUB? 0 SU83t AIN, Sl SUB3 N SUB4~ BN, 8OBN PLUS 20SI SU53 N SUB3 N SU841 78SI SU83:N, SUB4 PLus SIC, 20MGO PLUS :SUB4, 60BN PLUS 40SI .80SI SU-63,N SUB4s 40MGO PLUS 60S1 SUB3 N.SUB4r KMG SUB3 SI SU53 ALO :,SU410 F SUB2 AN,D~ Of CEMENT OF, 14G PHOSPHATE 41TH, CARBDRUND11M -FILLER WERE TESTED. . THESE, WERE PLACED VERTICALLY IN: A GRAP111 TE CRUCIBLE OF 30 MM 'ILLED WITH PONOER 0- U-2 i-lEAGHT ANU 20 14M DIAM. WHICH WAS HALF F SB s -NINU OF 4 M14 DIAM. WAS MADE IN THE UPPI"k 1) AT OF THE GRADE AN OPC -CRU G I UL F. FOR MCULATION OF THE ELCIROLYTE. rH)-51-: WFRC- 'met4 :SUBjECTED TO THE ACTION OF Sa MELT AND THE- CLEC ROLYTE AT Bouf)EGREES 'D AFTER .,-CRUCIBLF- WAS HEATED IN A SILIT OVERN. SPECIMENS WERE- THEN WEIGHE BOILING IN DISTDO WATER FOR 14 HRI'AND DRIED AT 150DEGREES FOR 10 HR. TKE OUTER-APPEARANCE AND THE CONDITION-OF;SPECIMENS, AFTER TESTING HAVE BEEN GIVEN. BIC' -A-S S I F 1 E:D - I 11--ir L A L)- Im ~. I ~ - - - USSR UDC 66-09k.53:678-53:678-744:661,728 PRED-IODITELEV, D. A., All-Union institute of V. A. Artificial Fibers "Synthesis of PhosDhorus-Containing Derivatives of Polyhydroxy Compounds, by the Action of Oxaphospholanes" Leningrad, Zhurnal Prikladnoy nimii,~ 1971, Vol 44, Ro 8, Pp 1845- i84'1 Abstract: As Dhosphorylizing agents'' the anhydrides of the ID o D orus.acids possess strong advantages, since when they act on.hydroxyl-containing compounds, no side-produebs which miSht destroy the initial Dolyhydroxy compounds are oroduced; but the formerly used acids of Dentavalent Dhosphorus wel-e inadequate in having a low reactivity. For this reason the development of syn- thatic methods for rhosDhorus-contalning esters 1.3 of great interest. An aDDroach is made by the author by,v.sing as acylatinc- ri reagent3, the mixed anhydrides of pentavalent phosphorus and of the carboxylic acids--and in -oarticular that of a /3-carboxydi- athylphosphinic acid. All these offar advantagea in tha Prenara- -tion and with regard to the amount of extraction of -ohos-ohorus by 1/1 the polymer' USSR UDC 615.31.,547.72'L'.5.012.1-.542.9 __NAZAR0VA,_Z_V_,,. and POTEMKIN, G. F., Rostov University- "Synthesis of Some Furylnitroolefins With Potential Biological Activityll 'Moscow, Khimiko-Farmatsevticheskiy Z"humal,:Vol.6, No 10,~Oct 72, pp 5-8 Abstract: The article describes the synthesis by~ the authors of new .$-(5-nitrofuryl-2)--a-bromoLiitroethylene and,$-(5-nitrofuryl-2)--a-phenyl- nitrcathylene, as well as corresponding furyl-,~5-methylfaryl- and 5- --halofury.Initroolefius, and considers the effect of substituents -in the furan nucleus and side chaip. an their physiological activity. Yu. N. 11'ina took.part in a portion of the work. ~The~arti.cle aiso describes tests-of.some a-(furyl-2)--nitroolef-ins at the Chair of Microbiology of v.Medical Institute under the direction:of-Professor,A.. A.:Kashayeva Rosto and at,the All-Union Scientific.Research Pharmacbchemical:Institute imeni S..Grdzhonikidze. PROC~ --30OCTTO _012 UNCLASSU eSSING DATE t., tT L E--MECHANIISM OF ADSORPTION OF METAL-IONS, ON, CARBOXYLICZATION wA,i-EXCHANGERS. IV. ADSORPTION OF:URANYL.ION;ON KB-4RE54N -U- k6k7(03)-CHUVELEVAv E.A.t NALAROyi.. P.P.j i'CHtAUTOV.#IK'o V. OUNTRY Of INFO--USSR --ZH. FIZ.. KHlf4. 166-70 ..WURCE 1970, 441.1)t PUBLISHED ------- 70 ,SV8JECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY ..TQPlC.TAGS-_CATI0N EXCHANGE RESINt BENZENE DERIVATIVEv URANIUM COMPOUND, ~_--iCOMPLEX COMPOUNDr CALCULATION/(U)KB4:ION EXCHANGE RESIN t-ONTROL 'MARK I NG--NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED STEP NO--UR/0076/70/0441001/016610170 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0116850 UNCLASS I F IV-D, -- - I I lit -0 PROCLSS 1111G 0ATC--20N'0V70 UrliGLASSUF [E IRC Autt S N 'C I EXTRACT-M G P At5STRACT THE: K EACT I CNS U 1: R G Tt~IPLE 13OND A 5 S.TIRA CCHE -5U132 GtME (R 15 IM 1~ i LTY PRY 13U) WITIV R PRIME1 liGOR (it P1,1:AEL IS ME LJq E T) P~k',CECIJ 6Y A fl:Eli HADICAtL MILGHANISM (G. 1-1 Kl;k'f A N ET AL., 1966, A~419 R P K I E '19611 IS &3 THE RADIC,LS PC TRIPLE BCIND- CC.MIE SU32: (1) I N T E; PR IME L, :RC TRIPLE GOND SIJU2 R P RACT GIVING R m4o R L TR I F L E UONG CCV~ '.-)Ut!2 CMIE SUR2 G TRI:PLF dit"JO Gk I REARRANGES TO RC.:C: CME SU132 WHICH r1-1Ei,,, j1MERIZES GlVlt%!;G, MC SUt32 (;:L:11*RC;~.C:%,,'--,-1E SU8z I H-) "AND KC TRIPLE FiCNO CC.!-,IE SU82 CA:G:C14E SUB2. OR I~ KEAcTS wITH R PIUME1. GIVING RR PRINLI. (;:C:CME SU82 ( 111) : 11 AND I I I "%EKE DETECTED B Y: G A Ch-kCHATOG. ONLY. FACIUry.-: ;5 E S . INNUCH.-ISSLEU. PRUEKT. PGL I M . PROD. USSR _'PROCEI~SlNti DATE-300 T 0 UNcLAs c 7 ini-m c- OF :AGIDIG ECHANISM OF 10 DIOL CONVERSIONS-INITHE PRESEN I -1 NEDIOLAND 2 MEfliVL 2.4 PENTANEDICIL =ALYS -S. Z. CGNVERSION OF 214: PENTA ,7AVrfioR- (G31-SHARF, V.Z., FREYDLIN, L.KH., NAZARYAN, A.!A. A ZONT RY OF INFO-USSR ~--SOURCE-IM. AKAD..-NAUK SSSR, SER KHIM. 197'0t 43), 9 6 5 7- 02 --bAlg PusLISHED-70 _~-66ACT AREAS_~HEMLSTRY PENT'ANEY TAGS-CHEMICAL-REACTION MECHANISM, ALCOHQLw CATALYST9 il-*_'~'. nvi4vng) AT inm- qzTr_j)r_nri4PmflZTQV_. rmntatdvi rnmonnhin- r~'rlmpm nfp:mr- lc-~,'ORUXY-REEL/FRAME-2000/0839 STEP NO--UR/0062/70/600/003;/059710602 ION NO-AP0124506 D 0 14 UNCLASSIFIM ~'PROCESSING DATE--3 OOCT70 'LC-IRC ~ACCESSLCN NO-AP0124506 CT. -.-:45STRACT/EXTRACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRAC THE-CONVERSIONS OF 2t4 PENTAN.DIOL -!AND-ITS 2 ME ANALOG OVER CA SUB3 IPO SUaltJ5UB2 OR AL SU132 Q SU33 ~--CATALYS7SIN THE TEMP. INTERVAL 140-360DEGREES WERE 51-IOWN GRAPHICALLY* ~DEIJ - R ~.:-THC IYORATION OF THESE ALCS. OCCURS SPECIFICALLY IN:RESPECT Of THLI STEREGCHENISTRY AND RESULTS IN TRANS;1,3 PENTA0IENE'F(-'.OM T:HE IST ALC. ..:ALSCv APPRECIABLE DECOMPN. TAKES PLACE: THE-PHOSPHATE~ CATALYSTS LEADS TO AE SUB2 CO AND ISO PROH, WHILE AL SUBZ 0 SU133.GIVE$ ALSO OSME ACH. THE-CARBONYL COMPDS. ARE FORMED BY EITHER ISQbtElclLATl(3,N or- DEHYDRATION :-PRODUCTS:SUCH AS THE EPOXIDE OR U,%S'ATD. ALC.~ ~OR BY DEALDOLIZATION OF THE -ETOL.FOkl4ED AS AN INTERMEDIATE. I k N THE CASE OF 'THE, PHOSPHATE CATAtYSI ".~.:-.-TH&CLEAVAGE IS CAUSED BY H TRANSFER.FORM THE HO GROU3)S OF THE DIOL TO -THE-CARBONYL GROUP TO FORM THIS KETOLv.WHICH THEN CLEAVES BY REACTIONS OCCUR IN THE 100-50DEGREES INTERVAL@ AT AL, SUR2 0 SU83 THE DECOMPN. ~-HlCh VEHYDRATICN CANNOT TAKE PLACE. OVER DIOL 15 LESS.PRONOUNCED AND CLEAVAGE *VIA THE.XLYOL IS INHIBITED N5 NG OF THE BY H,SUBZ 0 GENERATED IN THE REACTION OWLNG40 P01504 CATALYSTS IN RESPECT Of THE H TRANSFER REACTION. OEHYDRATI 'ON OF THE IST OVER CA SUB31PO SUB4)SUB2 AT 290DEGREE-S YIELDS MIXED LINSATD. ALCS. WHILE 68PERCENT 4 PENTEN 20L AND 32PERCENr TRANS 3 PENTEN OL9 -',.lGR-EA7ER.-THAN 325OF-GREES THE PRODUCT is oNLY 4 PENTEN 2 OL; AS THE TEMP. ThE YIELDS OF TH.LSE -ALCS. DECLINE AND THAT OF DIENE RISES# AND -.PACDUCT CONTAINS 75-100PERUNT TRANS ?JPERYp.FNE:JMD FINAL 6~~20PEkCENT CIS ISOMER; THE YIELD 0F.1,4.PENTADIENE I'S LESS THAN SPERCENT.1 UINCLAS-SIFIEG ---- C - -- ---- -- ---- ---- U I tt ii, L A SO SO AT ~ I - 0-10 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-30OCT70 CESSION NO-AP0124419 T -(U)-GP-0- ABSTRACT.- THE PRODUCTS FORMED BY PASSAGE AT EX RACT V 5.ODEGREES OVER CA SUB3 (PC) SUa4l SUB2 ~ OF HO(CH~'!SUB21 SUB3 OHv AND ALLYL ALC* WERE TAB:uLATED FOR EACH TEMP. I N '-250EGREES:STEPS. SIMILAR DATA ARE-REPORTED FOR:H0(cH s a a F. U 2) SU 2 CHMEO AND ZIMETHYLTETTRAHYDROFURAN, BOTH~RUN OVER 230-300DEGREF-.5.0 THE lo3vDlOLS ARE CGNVERTED INTO A MIXT. OF SATO. AND UNSATOV ALCS.v ALDEHYDES9 KETONES, EPOXIDES, AND OTHER COMPOS. DEHYDRATION OCCURS BY 2 ..PATHS- TO AN UNSATO. ALC. AND TO A CYCLIC: OXIDE, WITH; INTRAMOL. :CYCLILATION-BEING PREDOMINANT. OXIDES ARE THEN CONVERTF,0 BY IS014ERIZATION TO UNSATD. ALCS. A140 CARBONYL COMPDS. MUCH OF THE SATD. ALCS. AND UNSATD. ALDEHYDES IS FORMED BY THE H TRANSFER REACTIONS. Zf2iDJETHYLv1#3tPROPANEDI0L GAVE 11PERCENT 3p3tDLETHYLTRIMiETHYLENE OXIDE, 18PERCENT ISOMERIC HEPTENOLSiAWTIPERCENT WXEDPRODUCTS AT 300DEGREES; 2tBUTYLvlr3tPROPANEDIOL- GAVE ':NO TRIMETHYLENE OXIDE I)ERIVS. BUT-~-20PERCENT IS014ERIC HEPTENOLS AND-:80PERCENT MIXED, PRODUCTS. ~~.:%ZOIUTYLTAINETHYLENE OXIDE WAS 98PERCENT.CQNORTED TO:ALCS.. AND OTHER PRODUCTS,AT300DEGREES. FACILITY04;'- INST*,, ORG, ~KHLH* IN. ~,_ZtLINSKOGOt -MOSCOW# USSR* U NC L AS S I F -1-E 0 thenatic-'i" obl-~ii in seiniotid F. Ma ica Pr. CIS USSR NAUMAN, G. A. "Some Estimates of the Realization of Boolean Functions in Algorithmic Languages" Dokl. AN.ArmSSR [Reports of Academy of Sciences, Arm. SSR], 1972, Vol 55,- No 3, pp 129-133 (Translated from Refe-rativnyy 7hurnal Kiber- netika, No 10, 1973, Abstract No IOV834). Translation: The following results, relating to a treitd based on the works of,A. A. Markov, 1. D. Zaslavskiy and V. A. KuzImin, are formu- ~Iated within the framework of constructive mathematics. Let M be a recursively denumerable set of Boolean functions, M be a subset of M n of Boolean functions of n variables, d (n):= IM be t~c power of M M n n (dM in constructive arithmetic is generally not a function but a pseudo- function). The list L < A., A., slJU >.is called an algorithmic Ian- guage if A-, A are alphabets, H4Ai(jAj~ R are ceftain sets of words in: Ai, $U is a normal algorithm in ALU A. such that VP (tiords in A and V f2!-U(XE3P)Di1(XOP) is a word in A.. Words from 0 refer to the ex- E pressions of this language. I/S USSR NAZARYAN, G. 'A. Dokl. AN Arm.SSR, 1972, Vol 55, No 3, :pp 129-133 'If Li and L~ < A Ai 12 > are il J2 1 2' ~2 ji, 2 2 two languages, while normal algorithm Z:in A. U A.* performs fixed, 31 .32 mutually unambiguous mapping of the set of all words Di A. and the set of all words in A. . Normal algorithm Z in-A, U A. r6fers.to a trans- 32 lator from L to L2P if it can be applied to any message in language L,, where%(X) and VP in A 51 r-11 (XEIP)) JU2 (Z(X)j30(P)) AI:l s tate- 2 ii, ments in language L are numbered in.lexicographic order, and the normal algorithm Min A UJO, 11 refers to the criterion of.complexity of Ian- guage L if for any statement X in L I.T (X) (X) - 1 (0 M). whereM(X) is th-- number X r1more precisefy-, the binary representation of this number), while I is the length of the-binary rep-resentation of the number X. If Lit L17 are the criteria. of. comp) exi ty: of I-anguages L and L respectively, then trailslator X from 1, to L is called additive)), 2 Car multiplicatively) Iiinited, if there are constants c and d such that 2/5 USSR NAZARYAN, G. A., Dokl. AN ArmSSRj 1972, Vol SS, No 3,~pp 129-133 YX in L (T M) 4 M + C d) (92 (Z (X) 4 c21 (X) I and asymptotically limited if 2 r M) 2M .(This formula, like the others, is understood constructively). Lan- guage L is universal (a-optimal,.5-optimal,,y-optimal) if for any lan- guage L we can construct a translator (additively, asymptotically or multiplicatively limited translator, respectively) front language L into L. N. P. Ter-Zakharyan,* in the article from which the definitions presented above were taken (RZHNIat 1970 6A72), proved that the lan- guage of normal algorithms, also defined there, is 0-optimal- Suppose < A., Aip SI, V > is a $-optimal language with.complipxity criterion L. iriables -X=- Statement X in L realizes the Boolean fUnction f of n vt~ L\f if for any word P of length n in A {O, 11 V(XOP) f(P). We define 0 3/5 USSR NAZARYAN G. A., Dokl. AN ArmSSR, 1972,'Vol 55, No 3,~pp 129-133 the,pseudo function rhak m1p, (L (X)JX=~-fj. The author formulates Theorem 1: 1) if d (n) then ~,,(n) Id (n) 2) if 9C Vn(d, (n) < Q then a CVn (1~ (n) < Q. For a Q-normal algorithm or Turing machine in alphabet A where a 0, al. ... a k- a 1, the realization Q=4f is defined, where f is a Boolean function 21 of n variables, if for any binary word P of length n, converts word P into f(P). The complexit y of tie normal algorithm Q r;fers !to tho length r of its mapping [Q while the :(:Omplexit~ o.': a Tit' ing. machine Q refers /Q =:>f I to the number of its internal states (n) = max min {[Q, f pt Q n k and similarly we define (n) for a Turing machine by replacing with.N(Q). 4/S 79 USSR 14AZARYAN, 197-1, Vol~ 55, No 3, pp 129-133 G. A., Dokl. AN ArmSSR id. (n) k M Theorem 2: 1) if d,(n) then (n) - _; 2) if JCIV-i M n-*.. f0i (d.(n) < C then aCVn P, (n) C (for formal algorithms), and M (n) k' Theorem 3: 1) if d (n) then D j (n) m n-,,w (k I)Ild (n)' k if K Vn(d (n)