SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT TOLSTOGUZOV, A. D. - TOLUTIS, V. B.

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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR UDC. 66~.243.51;66i.937 PWRASHOV, V. D., CHERMAK, L. L., T CHERIIYSM, D. F.,and REZHIK, 1. D. "'Experience on Adopting Oxygen in Shaft. Melting of i-Tickel Sinter at the 'Yuzhuralnikel' Combine Moscow, Tsvetnyye metally~ No 3, Mar.72, pp 1-3 Abstract: The use of 24.3% oxygen blast in shaft melting during the fi -rsr six months of 1971 increased the absolute fusion of-the sinter by 13.4% and the per-unit fusion by 22.2'9" against,the,1968 level-prior to oxygen introduction. The per-unit coke consumption dropped by 175;,amiountinp, to 21.9% of the sinter veight. Nickel content in.the slags,;Increased from o.16 to o.i6%1, which is ascribed to greater iron conitents:in the processed ores, The reduction in operating costs through the fuse of the two new oxygen blast lines (with 23.2% 0 ) plus the profit1from additional produc- 2 tion outputs in the 1969-70 period shdV yearly lsayinigs of one Million (2 tables, 7 bibliokraphic r6f erences). p Food.- Te4nol'ogy USSR UDC'61L392.9,61.2.398.3-083 SLOUIDISKIY, G. L., BRAUDO, Ye. Ye., YERTANOV, I. D., TOLSTOGUZOV A41 -BONDAREVA, E. S., and PLASHCHINA, 1. G.,~Laboratory.ot,75i Ell cs of Polymers, Institute of Elementoorganic Compounds, Academy of,.5cien:es USSR "Susceptibility of Proteins in Neu,.F 'd Products to-Attack by Proteolytic 09 Enzymes" Moscow, Voprosy Pitaniya, No 65,1970, ~pp 25-31 Abstract: The susceptibility of proteins in di~rfez-ent kinds of synthetic caviar (based on casein, evaporated milk, etcj~ and tynthetic groats to attack by proteolytic enzymes of the gastrointestinal tract in vitro was compared with the susceptibility of.the!original protein tilixtures used to sake-the caviar and groats. The susceptibility.of p~,oteins to attack by pepsin in all the kinds of caviar studied.was higher.~than that of the proteins in the original =xtize. The',degree of trypsin and chymotrypsin. proteolysis of the pepsin-di-ested proteins in the caviar was equal to or higher than the degree of proteolysis of the pepsin-digested original protein mixtures. The degree of pepsin' proteolysis of proteins in the synthetic groats was equal to or lower than the degreo of protealysis of 1/2 ffd 2/2 015 UNCLASSI FIED PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 C I R-C ACCESSInN NO--AP0104565 :AB,;TRACT/FXTRACT-- (U) GP-O-, ABSTRACT.: THE PLASTICITY OF GELS CONTG. JOP FRC ENT GE LA T I NE ( I I AND 0.2-1j.optrrENT CA ALGI~4ATF (11) WAS "AEASURED 'BY MEANS OF A;Mo3DIFIEO DYNAMOMETER ATj0-50,f)EGRE',F:S AND A STRESS OF 37.00 DYNES-CM PRIME2. THE PLASTIC,I TY OF~ THE 1-11 SYSTE114*. INCREASEO, IN THE ;.RANGE OF 29-35DEGREES REACHING A. MAVW~ AT 34-8DE.GIZEES, THEN DECLINEDI AND -AT 42-4DEGR~ES CORRESPONDED TO THE -PLASTICITY OF1~ 11 GEL OF SIMILAR CONCN. MAX. PLASTICITY OF THE. SYSTEM SHIFTED ON.C00LING TOWARDS THE ''LOWER TEMPS. AND IWAS A FUNCTION OF THE- COOLING RATE. i THE ANOMALOUS OEHAVOIR OF 1-11 GELS WAS ATTRIBUTE0.1TO.A. BREAK004N CIF THE SUPRAMOL. STRUCTURE, WHILE THE MAGNITUDE. 0F.THE~MAX. WAS A+UNCTION OF MEASUREMENT CONDITIONS* UNCLASSIFIED NO 7~--7771' USSR UDC 669,715.018.8 KLIMIA0, A. P., and TOLSTOKOHEVA, G. 14. Kraznoyar IrLstitute of Nonferrous Metals imeni M. *'Bffect of Zirconlurn, on the He0anical Properties and~Corroslon Resistance of An6" Alloy L-,rov Fiziko-Khimicheskaya Mlekhanika Haterialov, No 31 1973, pp 115-116 Abstracti A study was made on the effect of small addition-s of Or and tem- pering temperature on the change in mechanical properties and corrosion resis- tance of AM'g6 type alloys with a developed porosity. These alloys contained (in%)' 5.96 !AZ, M mn, 0.01 Ti, ard 0-005 Be. AMg6 alloy with 0.3% Or was also studied. It was established that development of secondary porosity, occurring at high temperatures, and partial malting of gxain boundaries lowers the tensile. strength and, ductility of the alloy by 2-4 kg/jai2 in comparisp-n with the hardened state which were, for:TS, YS and elongationt 27.5 k,-,/MM z 16.3 kF a2, and 6.6%, respectively, for 'alloy Mig6 a 1 20 1 kgfilm 2 ra 38.5 .3 d 25j~ for the alloy with Zr. . It was conclWed:that alloyi.n.- Al-46 with Zr increases it corrosion rGsistance,in the 80-2000C tempering interval, which proves that Or promotes development of uniform dist Iribution of second-phase particles 1/2 30--t!- USSR KOVSHOV, G. N., T 9L TO~LOGQK~ A. A. 1~-Izelection of an Optimal Form for the Pendulum of aLinear Acceleration Sensor" -Tr. UT-im. Aviats. In-ta., [Works of the Uf1m Aviation Institute] 1971, vol 18, pp 111-118. (Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal H4?khanika, No 1, 1972, Abstract No IA200), Translation: Among bodies of rotation, a b dy is sought having the minimun, 0 moment of inertia relative to the axis of suspension urith i fixed static. moment. Tt is shown that among~the shape dos-zribed by tho oquations Q,- P W where f(-) is the equation of the generatrix, the last form is optimal. 'USSR UDC:629.78.015.533.1 MERKULOV, A. P., OGORODNIKOV.j N. N., T-QLSTONOGOV, A., 1:1. "Filling of High-Pressure Containers with Chilled Gas" Tr. Kuybyshev. Aviats. In-t [Works of Kuybyshev Aviation Institute], 1973, No 56, pp 24-35 (Translated from Referativny Zhurnal Raketostroyeniye, No 10, 1973, Abstract No 10.41.81 fromjhe resume) 11 Translation: Conditions are defined, providi)ig relavive isothermicity of the process of filling of a high-pressure container with gas. Based on the energy balance equation for a body of Variable ma_~s considering exter- ital heat exchange of the system and the:, influence of the temperature choke effect in the feed line, analytic expressions are produced fGr the change in temperature of the gas entering the container. The nature of change of the temperature of the working fluid in~thc container being filled during the initial period of filling is established The temperature of the in- coming gas for which its temperature in the container r~-,,mains practically unchanged is calculated. A method is pre .sented for calculation of the thermal load on the refrigeratiow unit in1which the fe6d ga is preliminar- -ily chilled, Graphs of the change in temperature of the working fluid in 17 USSR A. P., OGORODNIKOV, N. N., TOLSTONOGOV, A. P., Tr. Kuybyshelr. Aviats. In-t, 1973, No 56, pp 24-35 the container as a function of velocity of entering gas and its temperature -are shotm. Calculations and expertmental curves of the chinge in tempera- ture.of the gas with rapid filling of the high-pressu- cO))t;IIn(!r with chilled gas are presented. 6 Figures;I Table; 7 Biblio. Refs. USSR uDc 614.777:632.95 KOSTOVEMIM, Ya. I. TOLSFOPYATOVA G V. and CHEDRINIETS, G. Ya., A. N. Marzeyev Kiev Cormnal Hygiene "Pollution of Open Bodies of Water by Pesticides Usc-d in Agriculture" ~bscow, Gigiyena i Sanitariy-n., 110 101.1973, pp 99-100 Abstract: Of 456 soil samples, 224 water analyses, and 216 datermdnations of bottom, sediments from ponds and small,streams and vejacent fields and shelter- belts in different soil and clinatic Zones of the UkrfLinei DDT, sevin, met hos , chlorophos, etc. were. detected, in 97 (Z1 - 3'%) , 16 (7. =-d 54 a5 J25% , respectively. Mostly organochlorine penticidos wcra found in the soi 'is and bottom sedjjrents (in 92.9 and 85.2% of. the ca.-as) and organophosp~orils compounds in the ponds and streams (in L 75% of the calws). The surface runoff from the fields ard orehard~~ Is a major factor in the pollution of the ponds and stream, for the concentrations of:the pesticides are highest after the first rains followLna spraying. 1.6 Kiev, Gidrobiologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 6, 'No 1,;1970, pp 78-81. Abstract: The toxicity of blue-~reenzlgae, mostly Aphanizomenon I 4f %. flos-aquae and Microcystis aeruginosa,: was studJ.,ad on I , ~,,h~te rnts, fed. in groups: 1) - with concentrated n, ass of ~-.-,l-raa e (55. IWI CeILIS/n, 1) F 2) - with algae (420 cells/nil) in water from Fhe wat,:!r suppl~i after sanitary treatment, and 3) - with artesian water witl-Iok;t A- ie. 0 n the seconrl week, after f ceding rats _0.-E~ the Ist roupi -.Uron;, intoxication ,Ath ClIdynamia. ~Rats~ died durino, t1ho lf~~fftli weelk. Animals oF the second and third group's rem. ainerl_normal.~ oF second' and third groups rent ained normal. Analysia of- ratf. ~~howed that hirli doses of al,-fae increase cholin6stera~s.e activity in the blood and, cause liver and spleen. Protein -degeneration in Live-- was plethora ol- noted.- The content of vitamin ~C ir. adrenal,-r1ards oil rats o47 the first group- was six times less than in adrdnals of 0oth Ier g-oups. AILI patho- logical effects were absent -in animals of-the second~arid third groups, ELI indicating the effectiveness of sanitary treattwecit of' driakinor water. -- - -- ------- W:d, USSR UDC 535,3?3.2 BORISEVIGH, N. A., KOTOV, A. A., FAVLOVA, V. T,, and. TOLSTOROZHEV, G. B., Institute of Physics, Academy cf Sciences.Belorussiaz'SSR, "Triplet-Triplet Electron tn ergy,Transfbr-tn Gas Phase Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR,Sariya Fizicheskaya, Vol 37, 0 3, 1973, N pp 508-512 Abstraett The authors made a kinetic study of triplet-triplet electron enew- gy transfer~for donor-acceptor pairs of aromatic hydrocarbons and ketones, the lower triplet levels of which have various electron configurations. This phenomenon of T-T energi transfer was u :sed to study Une paths of excitation energy,degradation in anthraquinone and.benwphenone iiiolecules in the gas phase, as well as to obtain senuitized anti"Stokes analhilation retarded fluorescence. TJ.3SR UDC; 535-373.2 BORISBVICH, N. A., KOTOVt A., and TOLSTOROZHEV G. B. "Radiationless Transition of Electro'nic'Ene iii 111onatomic Molecules." Moscow, Izvestiva Uv' SSSR Seriya rizicheska vol, 36, No 5, -1972, pi-193-5-94110 Abstract: Special attention is given in this paper to the triplet- triplet transfer of energy,of exaltation in organic compouna va- subject that has b- n relatively neGl~:,oted in the litera- pore, a e ture although it has been studied in.detail, ift relation to con- densed media. Because few materials phosphovepce with rauch intensit,%r in the gaseous phase, the Aoice of energy donors that can be conveniently studied is difficult., In their experiments, however, the authors used diacety~ Aonorv; tha qu&ntum intercon- W - a -a lo, R, - t version output for this mtoterial i ng-uave ~ bsorption exci a tion is close to unity. Anthxacen*e:, 9.10 dLmethyln th~:z;~ccno, 9.10 diphenylanthracene, vnd pyrene were 'U~,.ed. to SU ~jply ecoptor fjrlcr~sy. -raelleristica of Ahi~ s. mnteriplis Ln. Tables of the chu shortwave excitation, the, quantum ~Utlnlt al t1W intercombination convercion in found to drop. This linai"ItOB I t1t',.1t all ad-ditio-nal proeesLi of highly effective.radiationless dear6dation of the elec- tronic energy is at vork, without, the participation of the lower 1/2 -.77! USSR BORISEVICHY N. A.; TOLSTOROZHEV 'G. B. "Effectiveness of Quenching the Fluorescence of Vapors of Complex Molecules with Oxygen" Leningrad, Optika i Spektroskopiya; October-1970, pp 701-5. ABSTRACT: The authors studied the quenchiilg with oxygen of the fluorescence of rarified vapors of anthracene; 9, 10-ciiineth-jr7..a.-,ithracezie; and 9, 10--diphen:,r1- anthracene. Ali evaluation of the effectivenew of quenching was made on 'Ube baois of direct moaauramonta 'of the dura Ion of: the Ituorationnon. For t the compounds studied the effectiveness of.quenching J.'c les!j than unity and depends on the supp37 of oscillatory energy!of the excitod molecules. It -uaz; assumed that . in com plax molecules the degree of singlet-1ziplet association j-,icreases irith an addition of oxygen. As a resnilt., the Porbidden singlat- triplet transitions decrease: i.e., additional radiationless transitions occur. -The dependence on the supply of oscillatory energy of the of eotiveness of t1l, vi 4.f quenchin- of the fluorescence of vapors of tomplex molecules by oxygen an -]ell as the dependence of the probability of radiationless tramaitions in isoHnt.~cl nolecules (impossible with oxygen), are related to the structure of the ele,3tron lovels of the molecules ntudied. USSR UDC 535.373.2 -BORISEVICH, N. A., Academician of the Belorusaian SSR Academy of epiences, and..T41=ROZHW-, G& B Institute~:of Physics of 'the Belo-Russian.SSR Ac_a-dTMj-bT'4~en'Cesi!_, "Effect of Foreign Gases on the Fluorescence of Anthracene Derivatives" Minsk, Doklady Akademii Nauk.BSSRI Vol 14, No 10, 1970, pp 885- 888 Abstract: The effect of pentane on the fluorescence spectra and quantum yield of vapors of anthracene (A)4 9JO--dimethyLan- thracene (9, 10-MIA); and 9,10-diphenylanthraeane '(9,10-DPA) was investigated. Fluorescence spectra of dilute vapors of A, 9,10-OMA; and 9,10-DPA excited byradiation of different wave- lengths ;t~,,.both in the presence and~in the gibsienc(i of pentane were recoeded. With a decrease it% the wavelettigth -of the exciting radiation the fluorescence spectra of.A vapor~:shifts toward the long-wave side and its structure b .e'comes blurrted. on the addition of pentane, the Uuoreseehce,spectra~of A,excited by radiation 1/2 91 -i:2 USSR em Nauk -B.SSR, Vol- 14, BORISEVICH, N. A., et al., Doklad Akad ii 1970, pp 885-888 No 10, with wavelength 313 microns'shifts'toward the short-wave region and their structure become.s more angul,ar:. i.e., the spec- trum changes just as for:an:incresse in,the,waveLength of the exciting radiation. In the presence.of pentane, :the f lu,ores- spectra of 9,10-MIA for;6xr-= 313.~microns and2myc,= 365 microns ,shifts toward the short-wave region. The fluorescence spectrum excited by radiation with.wavelefigth,,R!~~ 248 microns (second absorption band) is continuous and s~rongly-shiftad toward the long-wave region. It is concluded.that therCs is &.qualitative correspondence between change in:;the.fluoresdence,yield of 9,tO-DMA and 9,10-DPA vapor ':when.pentane,isaidded:and that this .,,depends on the vibrationallenergy.veserve. 2/2 .11 J~f,- 212 021 UNCLASS.IfA ED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT7i C JRC. ACCESSION NO-AP0124339 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT- QUANTUM YIELD, GAMMA, AND FLUORESCENCE LIFETIMEv GAMMAs IN VAPORS OF COMPLEX~MOLS. PROVIDE IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON.THE. INTERNAL CONVERSION OF THE EXCITATION ENERGY IN A MOL. THESE PROPERTIES:~JJERE EXAMD.~OVER A WIDE RANGE OF TEMPS*, 420-670DEGREeSKi AND-WAVELENGTHS OF THL EXClTING RADIATIONt 248-365 KM# IN ANTHRACENE AND ITS 9,10 DIMETHYL AND DIPHENYL DERIVS. -NEGATIVE SEC IS INDEPENDEN' FOR ANTHRACENE PI EQUALS 5.9 TIMES40 PRIME9 OF BOTH NU SUBEX LAMBDA EQUALS 365 w. ~ 348 t 334v 3.13) , AND T 1420-5209EGFREESK) FORTHE..DI ME DERIV. TAU AND GAMMA INCREASE FOR HIGHER NU SUBEX (LAMBDA EQUALS 365 BUT CECR~-ASE FOR LAMBDA EQUALS 254v 248 MM; THESE QUANTITIES INCREASE AND DECAEASE WITH TEMP. FOR EXCITATION WITH LIGHT OF LONGER OR. S14ORTER WAVELENGTH9 RESP. FOR THE D! PM DERIV. THE QUANTITIES ARE-INDEPENDENT OF NU~SUBEKFDR LAMBBA EQUALS 365 NM.BUT DECREASE SLIGHTLY. FOR HIGHER NU SU5EX VALUESo FOR LAMBDA EQUALS 365 NM NO TEMP. EFFECT*;AND,FOR,LAMBPA.EQUALS,~34 AND 313 TEMP. QUENCHING IS OBSO. FACILITYr MST* FIZ'R*ilo~l MINSK, USSR. UNCLASSIFIED'~ USI S R UDQ 617.735-007.28is6l5.84,19-o83.849.l9fi6l?',7-ol�7-ogz.9 UNITIK, L. A., Candidate of bled-4 cal Sciences$ and Engineer, Odessa Scientific Research Inatitute of Eye Diseases and Tissue Therapy iwni Academician V. P. F-11;itov "The Nleodymium Laser. The effects of Its Radiation on Eye Tissue as Compared. With The Ruby Laser" Odessa, Oftal'molgicheskiy Zhurml, Ho asi 1971, PP 581-585 Abstracti The eyes of 60 rabbits were Irradiated with a neorlyniwn 1~-sar with 0.06, 0.09, 0,4, and 0.8 joules, Cliftical histomorp-hological inwatigations revealed that, the neodymium laser~cau.-Oo, considerable inflam-zation in the area of applicationandithe surrou6ding,zone. The tior severity and duration of the inflwfmatoxyl reaction is piopox, ,al to the energy applied, but eventuallya laxge atrophic area.L-q forned. In contrast to the ruby laser, the neodymium lazor produces neither ederaa nor hemorrhage into the vitreous body, but tends -to coajg~aate the blocd In the choroid b2ood vessels, It is concluded.that neodymium lasex-s'itay be used for thora- peutic purposes In clinical ophthalmologyl including Useatment of intra-!- ocular tumors. 80 SRI" 1/2 024 UkLASS LFIED PROCESSING D.ATE---230CTTO .TITLE--STUDY OF THE ACOUSTIC AND,GASO:YNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF A JET NOISU MUFFLER.-U- H. N. ~.~~AUTHOR-(04).-KRASHENINNIKOVv S.YU., SORKINt L.I.,.TOLSTO YAKUVLEVSKIY, D.V. COUNTRY OF.-,INFO--USSR SOURCE--AK USTICHESKII ZHURNALs. VOL. 1'69 JAN.-MARSI~ 1970, P- 38-95 DATE PUBLISHED -----70 SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICSt PROPULSION AND FUELS TURBOJET. ENGINE, NOISE'REDUCTION, EXHAUSE GAS T 0 P I CTAGS--ENGINE MUFFLER, DYNAMICS .--,.-CONTROL .4ARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMEtj CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED 'PROXY' REEL/FRAME-1988/1459 --UR/0046/70/016/000/0038/0095 STEP NO CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0106215 UNCLASSIFIED 2/2 024 UNCL ASS IF I E D PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 ^-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0106215 i--ABSTRACT/F-XTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. STUDY OF /4 JET NOISE MUFFLER CONSTURCTED IN THE FORM OF A SETIOF ADAPTERS LOCATED AT THE OUTLET SECTION OF A JET NOZZLE. IN THIS CASE AIR OR SOME OTHER GAS IS BLOWN THROUGH THE ADAPTERS PERPENDICULAR TO THE ENGINE~ EXHAUST JET. THE EXPERIMENTALLY OBTAINED REDUCTION IN THE MAXIMUM INTENSfTY OF rflE i\IOISE LEVEL AMOUNTS TO.4 TO 503, IN STUDIES ON MODEL.S SIGNIFICANT CHANGES IN THE STURCTURE OF THE EXHAUST.JETt UNDER. THE ACTILON OF THE INJECTED GAS ARE NOTED NAMELY, A REDUCTION IN THE~;LENGTH OF TFiE 1NITIAL SECTION OF THE JET9 AN-INCREASE IN TH- TRANSVERSE DIMENSIONS OF :THE JET, AND OTHER CHANGES* UNCLASSIFIED U6C 612.8+612.766.1 NAVAKAWKY)W, 0. 0. , Kn, DIYEV, Yus I., LYSYNA, G. G. JIP-YSIIIKO,~F. 1., DEMLAXH, V. S., Ka-sllulc' 0.- P., Kyarn 11,11,0, A. Ye. , Kidu'KAS11YAN, A. N. I KOVAL'OVA, G. I., RATUSIRTA, A. kt.,~ TOMASUEVJ"KA, L.. I., IIAGOMNA, A. '111., and MAYDYROV, Yu. L., Kiev Institute of Occupational Diseases, Kiev Nervous Emotional Stresses as~ a Proble ogy miaf.Modern Uyb~k Physiol Mev, Fiziolohichnyy Zhurnal, Vol 18, No Jul/Aug 72, pp 535-546 Abstract: The introduction of machines -a-nd -automatic coitrol instrum-~nntaLion into production lines at plants and factories and at.r--iny -jthLr in3titutions requires of workers rapid coo rditnation, of . actions combined with mental activity. The volume of information input which requires a. combination of physical and mantal ability has been increasing tremendously for thii last decade. T'lliz; has produced nervous and emot' i:)n--l stresses and disturbancez; in the normal functions of i---Tiy hu-man organs. Analysis of many work-ers from v-arious branches of indus- try as well as people occupied wi.th mental Work has shown that modern technology imposes heavy stresses on an individual ~.hich are acco,,~paniei by abnormal func- on of the adrenal glands, and hypothalamus, and the h U ypopl-ilysial and sympatho- adrenal systems. Measurements have :sho-,~m that corticntaroid blood xid urine .1/2 USSR NAVAY.&TWAN, 0. 0. , e tal., Fiziolohidlinvy Zhur-.4al, V ol 18, No 4, Jul/Aug 72, pp 535-546 levels 'e%ceed the nom by as much as 4.2-57% in people under heavy stress. Emotional stress with distortio .~zi thd,4unct-on.of many systems were more n n of ten * encountered among the young (17-18. year olds) ., These malfunctions included the secretion of adrenalin an&noradrenalin, and disturbances in he=odynamics. Shifts in physiological functions ar-ong different occupational groups under identical stresses occur at different times and are closely re- lated to age. They were more pronounced among older people~(31-40 years old). The. cardiovascular system occupies a pro~iiinent place in labor physiology, and, there are many methods and approacher, ' to.~study iL,. ~ Some literature menta methods,and those of the authors are described, including ins.Lrw atica. Mental work which is accompanied by nervous-emotional,stresses influences profoundly the cardiovascular system within a wide range of deviations, ill- eluding' pa thological functional disturbances,,and hyperti!nsion. The same is true for. other occupations as well.. The auithors, reco=end the rational usc of working hours wai6 rest periods to avoid overstresses, 2/2 51 UDC USSR 62i-37~-`572-51-001-57 KOLOMIYETS V. D. WNW= "Synthesis of Inverter Structures Based on Controlled Semiconductor De- vices Avtomatiz. proyektir. velektron. RdsD. =zhved. nduch-a-tek-h-1. sb. (De- sira Automation in Electronics. Republic Interdepartmental Scientific and Technical Collection), vyp. 2. Kiev,."Teldmika",, 1970, pp 46-52 Abstract: A procedure is,outlined for synthesizing inverter structures from controlled semiconductor devices-operating in,the switched made with respect to a given shape of output signal. Seven illustrations, bibliography of nine titles. 19: - 1101MOMIUMIRM Now i USSR UDO 621.314,14 GRAFOV,. V.P., KOLOMIYETS, V.D., TOLSTOUKROV A.S., USIXOV, V.A. 00n The Principles Of Construction Of A Statio Convertor Using Semiconductor Devices" J' -Ye-stn. Kiyev.. politekinn. in-ta. Sor. radioelektron. (Bolletin Of The Kiev Polytechnical Inatitute. Radioelectronics.5aries)o 1970, No 7, pp 106-108 (from RZh--Elektronike i yeye primeneniye, No 1, January 19"(1., Abstract No 1B460) Translation: The main possibilities are,considered for constnaction of the circuits of autonomous inverters, which intlude a devico:j for7regulation of current or voltage, filters, systems for protection# monitoring, etc. VariouB combinations are compared o "I electronic and electromagnotic e1ementB in differ- ant functional units of the circuit. At present the mo6t conucan is the synthe- eized electronic and eloctrowgnetic conetruction.of sfAtic *aneietorized con- -verters. I table. I.A. uDe 669. 374 USSR 715-018-29 D~9-4539 211-9,1539.' SMIRNIM, M. A., KAREVA, 14. T., AGOSHRIN, H. G. , and "Investigation of the Relation of the 'HardeninG of Aluminux Alloy D16 to Temperature of Plastic Deforn-ation During Therzomeeh~.nical Treatments" V. ab. Materialy XXIII Nauch. Tekhn. konforentsii Chelyabinsk. politekhn. in-ta. Sekts. Metallurg. Fak. Chelyabinsk (231d!Scienttfic~-technological I e M aterWs Conference of Chelyabinsk Polyt chnical Institute, Metalluxgical Practice Section Chelyabinsk.--- Collection $ Works),11970,;P 74 (frox Referativnrl Zhurnal -- Metallurg*aj No 6, Jun 71,~Abstraat No 61631 by V. Boahkareva) Translation of Abstracti Deformation Is realize Idby rolling in the interval of 26-5000. The greatest increase in the stability properties is Drovided wben thd plastic deformation occux-z.at 1500 and, lowerii Thelbest c'ombination 61*4coLl Tb6atm.e The3momr; USSR UDC 6690'15-018,M21.785.74 SHTEYNBERG, 14. M., SMIUMV, M. A., TOLSTOV, A. )i., ahd BUL&NOV, YU. P. "Effect of the Type of Thermomeebanical-Tre-alcmant, on the Stx-acture, Phase Composition and Strengthening of M81ilOT-Steel" V sb. Povysh, konstruktivn. prochnosti.staley I splayov (Increasing the Structural Strength of Steels and Alloys -- Collection of 11orks)v 110 20 Moscow, 1970, pp, 202-207 (from Mh-Metallurgiyaj lio 3 Mar 71~'~ Abstract No 31599 by N* Kalinkina) Translationt The effect of low-temperature thermomecl=,icad treatment (Lwu), high-temperature the=omech4uical treatment (HThT)O aid thermomechartieml treatment (Txr) on the structure and 0mechanical properties of KU8110'r steel was studied. h7hT was perfoxned at 01000 0 LTHT at roon t0mperatmra 0and 60D0, and THT at room temperature and 600 with subsequent heating at 600 for 100 hrs. In all cases deforra-tion was effected by 12!-15 and 25-2a% rolling. X-ray diffraction analysis and electron microscope study by transillumination ahowed that with increased degree of deformation the dislocation density (DD) increases at all deformation temperatur6s.,, There is a sliLent decline in ED with a change from room tenperature to 600 ; there is:a, significant xeduc- tion in DDafter defornation at,10000, Cold and thermal deformation gives 1/2 USSR SHUMIBBOL, M. M. et al., Povysh. konstruktivn. prochnosti staley I spl-avov, No 2p hoscow, 1970, pp 202-207 rise to a cellular disloaction structure, wpich is more pronounced the higher the deformation degree. Deformation at 600 causes precipitation of fine!), dispersed TiC particles along the. dislocations. Ann&a1J.n& of deformed speci- 0 mens at 600 causes additional precipitation of the mtrbides TIC and Cr C mainly on t~e dislocations. Cold 25-28~ deformation Lnereazes fr2orl E to 77 kg/= , 6?-' , fron 59 t2 81 - 7kgfiuvl~, The .9an deformation J-900c, 0 is o< to 64 kg/.-ui :Heatirig at 600 In TMT increase and - 01- +.o; 75 - 5 kg/mm pleads tc B a r.212&ht increase in steel strength. THT i~creaSil-s the time to 18,kg/MM2 sixfold as rapture at 650 and a stress of compared with hardening. This difference.disappears at stresses of 14~ kg/=2 or~beldv. Two illustra- tiohs. One table. BibliograpbY::v1th.two.t1tles. 2 /2 - UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--13NOV70 CIRC ACCEISSION NO--AP0123080 ABST,-'~ACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. PRODUCTS J0 F H)'G,-',[)LYTIC PPr!q. OF V(V) FROM LI, ,jA, AND K ',-)ETAVANA0ATt-: SOUNS, AT H PRIME POSITIV~-VO SUB3 PRIME NEGATIV~ RATICIS.:AIERE ST-WIED ~3Y IR SPECTROSCOPY, TWO TYPES OF PPT. WEkl OBTAINED: A'~PPT- HAVINIG~~ A STRUCTURE ANALCGOUS TO AMORPHOUS VO SIJB5 WITH AN APPARENT- PRESENCE OF, '~O SUB2 PRIAE PUSITIVE ,AND,IA RPT-HAVING THE STRUCTURE OF'HEXAVANADATE~~ T.HE IST TYPE PPT. HAD OH' SUtiN GROUPS ( 361 C-3600, CM: P& IME tl EG AT IME, I) SAMPLE S Oil I ED IN ATM. HAD SOR6ED H SUB2 0 AND 'ri SUB7 0 OF 'C:RYSTN. UNC LASS I F I E 0 OP USSR UDC:'621.787 BURNAKOV, K. K., SMIMOV, M.A., BRAZGrN, L.' A. BYPRYAZT-IKIN, V. P., NABIULLIN, N. M, TOLST Kurgan: "High Temperature Thermomechanical.:Treatment of r,-r sn stainless Steel" Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Metally, No 4j Jul-Aug 73, pp 129-131. Abstract: This work studied the possibility of increasin-7 the strength of El 811 steel by high temperature heat:and pechanical treatment. The studies 'were performed using a steel of the following,composition- 0.13%.C, 0.33% tbi, C, ~0.37% Si, 0.023-0 P, 0.07740 S, 5.71 Ni, 21.1'a Cr, 0. 43% Ti:, Fe -- remainder- The material was plastically deformed by ralling at'1100-M" C, 301 compres- CO sion,-velocity 4.3 m/min. Specimens 20.mrn in diameter anti 150 niii long were heated to 1000 or 1100* C, held 30.minutes, then deformed:at these temperatures with subsequent i=.ediate quenching in water. - Specimens. heated to 1000" C were allowed to cool in air to 900' C, then~rolled at that temperature and 7' held 5 minutes at that temnerature before quenching.1 It was found that the -selection. of the ILCmerature made foipl~astfc' deformation must be based on consideratio In of the different tende In.cies oithe'ferritic land aus te riftic components toward softening. The strength characteristics~ OE this steel were 'increased si nificantly only after do_,-Ormation at 900.0 C which causes 9 1/2 -A USSR K. K. Barn ak Smirnov, IM. A4 Brazgin,~ . A., Byprynhilin, V. P., . Nabiullin, N., M., , Tolstov A. M., Izvestiyi Akademii Nauk SSSR' Metally, No 4;P Jul -Aug 73, pp 129-131 hardening of both the y and a phases. The y conversion occurring duri n g aging at.650-700' C has no significant influence on I:the:h aTdening effect achieved-by high temperature heat.and mchanical ti"tment- 2/2 48 112 027 UNCL AS S I P t ED PROC,ESSING DATE--020r_T70 ,TITLE--PRODUCTS OF THE HYDROLYTIC PRECIPITATION OF V PAIME5 POSITIVE CONTAINING SODIUM -U- AUTHOR-iO3)-PLETNEVP R.N.v ZOLOTA TOLSTOV, L.K* :-,COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR PRIKL. KHIM. (LENINGRAD) 1970, 43(2), 427-9 DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 "'SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY JOP IC-1 TAG S-CHEA I r AL PRECIPITATION, METAL- I ON VANAD I UM VAIVADATE, mTRIC .~MOLECULAR STRUCTURE VA.NADIU,'4 PENTOXIDE, SOLUTION, ArIDITY I:Z ACID, :SPECTRUM, NMR SPECTRUM C.UNT L P A k I Gj - Rr-STPICI 101, S D 0 C U i'I-- % TCLASS--UNCLASSIfLIED A X Y E L L F K A M C- 19 8 7 0 3 5 1 STE U K 0 0 8 0 7 0 1 00 2 0 4 2 7 0 2 9 .P NO "C-IRC ACCFSSIUN NO--AP0104-287 UsNCLASSIF FED 2f2 027 UNCLASSIFIF0 PROCESSING DATE--O?'JCT70 CIRC ACf_ESSIU.%,;%lG--AP0104Z87f ;A6ST4,ACT/EXTRAl_-T--(U) GP-0- A13STRACTio. HYD-RA TED i)PTS.. OF V P,~I'-IF5 POS-ITIVE OBTAINED BY ACIDIFLICATAON OF NA METAVAI4ADATE WIT'-l HNO SUB3 UNDER DIFFER.ENT CONDITIONS WERF EXAMb. 2 YEARS AFTER PREPN., AND FRESH PRTS. SHOW QUITE DIFFERENT PROPERTIES. NMR AT 770EGRECSK Af"19 R0314 TEMP. AND IR SPECTRA WERE STUDIED. STARTiNG CONCNS OF V PRIHE5' POSITIVE 14ERE 0.2175, 0.0435, AND 0.0184M. ANO DEGREE OF ACI;[FICATION (RAT13kl (H PRIME POSITIVE)-(VO' SUB3 PRIME NEGATfVE)) WAS CHANGED -IN TIIE REGION 0.7-2.1 FOR EACH. CONCN. TWO TYPES OF PPT. WERE-FOUND- THE PRIMARY PRODIJ:T HAS A STRUCTURE SIMILAR TO THAT OF*V SU32:0~SUB5 IN WHICH THE EXISTENCE JF vo.suLAz PRIME PosirivE IS POSSIBLE. mTHE SECOND TYPE!OF PRODUCT, F3?,'iED -ONLY*AT 0.2175 AND PH 4.25t SHOWS THE.S.AME STRUCTURE AS HEXAVANADATE. PMR AND IR SPECTRA VALENCE OSCILLATIONS.OF CH GROUPS AND DEFORMATION OSCILLATIONS OF H SUB? 0 AND OH,GROUPS.C'ONFIRI-I THE COMPN. GIVEN PREVIOUSLY-AS-NA SU 'BX (V0 'SUB2) SUB5 ~tN-EGATIVEX-HV SU5~0-'D SUB28--NH SIJB2 -3 WIVERE I IS SMALL-FiR THAN'.OR EQUAL TO X, I S~SMALLER THAN OR E.QJAL TU 5. UNCLASSIFt 0 E USSR UDC 621-371-332 BORODAVKO, Yu. 1-11., TOLSTOV, V. V.; KAYNARA, V: N., and GAPONOV, A. P. 11investigating the-Structureiof Radio.Signals Reflected from the Ionosphere on the Basis of an Analysis of the.iStatistical Para- meters for Their Orthogonal-Components" Moscow, V sb. X Vses. konf. -oo raspyostr. radiovolm,. Tezisy dokl. Sekts. 1.(Tenth Al' Union Conference on the Propagation of Radio Waves; Report Theses; Section 1--c6llection of.works) "Navka," .1972$ pp 321-325 (from RZh-Radiotekhnika.,, No~10, 1972, Abstract 110 10A329) Translation.: On the basis of a detailed analysis of the character- istics of a mathematical model represented by a vector with nor- mally correlated orthogonal components, a method is proposed for inveestiSatLng the structure of.radio signals reflected from the ionosphere, based on the measurement of,the statistical parameters of their normal coordinates. Biblid1graphy of f aur. A. L. LP,)(',* 621.J)O'.2:621-371.1 TOLSTG'V V. 'Y"Final Devices of the SIIP-I? System 'Which Realize its Transmois- sivity" V sb. Radiof~lektron_ v nar. kh-ve 32M, Th. (l ctranics R'idioele in the ~'.ational _-;conomy of tae US3R, ll-art 2-_~colli~-ctiori of -works) Kuyb%,sliev, ~970, -~q 300-312 (from RZh-Radio 01--.1inika, 3, -.,arcli 71, Abstract 110. 311251) Trat_,slaticn: Thc~ ooscible aor,14-ations of th'u- discrete radio com- -is syst~";,, anzion un! 7 rancmitt',i.- =1- m.unica"io, .-Illow"I a, r-t A, - - tinuotis iiform-atic.-ii are di -(-,-us~3eds. Thv,~ syst,~ii! pf-rmdts trsnqmis- sion ovtr a Qllortw,~ve channel of allarr~,',, voliurue of' inforn-a- 'Gion-regardl.:..ss of the rai-lb-,-wr of b~ams-p use of the -he beams. hy Separation effect of lu One illustration, bibliograpl of one . USSR Mc:64.793.6,669,292,620.198 FOKKNUMM, V. I. TOIBTOYA, S. V., and MMMOVA, A. R. Physico-Mechanical Id the Tula Pedagogical Institutes Academy of-sumcFeW SSRI L'voy, an Institute "Effect of a Steel's Chemical Composition on Structure of Vanadized Layers" Xiev, Fiziko-Kbimicheskaya Rekbanika Materialov, Vol go No 6, 1973, pp 16 19 Abstracti Low-, medium-, and high-carbon steals and Btalnlei3s steels iere vanadium coated from which it was found that-Fe and V form a-contirluous 5erie3 of substitutional solid solutions and the~thickness of the diffusion layer was 10-18 microns for the carbon.steels, 22-25 microns in steel Kh17N2v 70 microns In Kh18NIOT, and 200 microns in steel 2Kh13. The microhardness of the diffusion layer was hardest for the carbon steels, rz.~nglng froza 1100 to 2800 while steels Kb17N2, XhI81140T, and M13, had values of ~ 2000, 800-300, ard 200 resDectively. The microhardness of steel D17142 with the vanadium coat-ing was lower than that of the base metal and1no carbide zone was found. This was explained by the increased concentration of ~caibidel!!formlng elements which bonded the carbon into carbides as a result of whieb an alphar'solid solution of 1/2, 51 WIN USSR UDC 632.95.021.3 SUKHORUCTIENKO, G. I., Candidate of Agricultural Sciences and TOLSTOVA, Yu. S., Candidate of Biological Sciences, (VIZR),(All-Unioii Institute for the Pro- tection of Plants) "Susceptibility of Assassin Bugs to Insecticides and:Acaricides" Moscow, Khimiya v Sel'skom Khozyaystue,,N,o 7, Vol 11, 1973, pp 35-38 Abstract: The LD50's Of 18 different insecticides and acaricides, including:, Seven, DDT, chlorophos and similar compounds were determined for 10 different pests and for phytophage. The Imostsensitive species-were nabid (transliter- ated) (Nabis palifer Seid.) and,ligeid (translirerated)land the least sensitive was mirid (translitetated) (Deraeocoris Ounctulatus Schill). The toxicity varied with compounds causing systemic poisoning. A rather high degree of selectivity was observed for gardon, fozalon,.rogor, miteks, dilor (all transliterated), and methylmercaptaphos for nabids and ligeids. The hazards of compounds causing systemic poisoning and possessing a high initial toxi- city in natural conditions are reduced due.to~the rapid,loss of insecticidal activity. 52 USSR ..UDC 44--163:669.107.3 GITGARTS, M. I.r and IVASHIllp V.~ V., Institute of the Pro- A* V' ReliablRylanT Telb'f hachines, of th Acad blens of 0 amy of.Sciences Belorussian SSR "Volumetric Changes During Agin of Nix6dc Alloy" 9 Sverdlovsk, Fizika F4tallov I Metallovedeniye; Vol 33, No 4, Apr 72, Pp 820-L23 Abstracte An experimental investigation was zade of the dependence of the relative elongation 4 1/1 and.the relative change of~tbe lattice constant a/a of Nimonic alloy (N-i-,Cr-Al-Ti) on itz volumetric separation share p. Dilatometric Investigations revealed that the decomposition:of the solid solution of Nimonic is accompanyed by a,vohmetric co.nizaction effect. The degree of contraction is a linear function of the volwietric content of the phase. The lattice constant of the.matrix a-easurad by normal reflections changes equally to the linear dilation. It is demonstreated that the volumetric effect results from concentration changes and interfacila, elastic deforrations. Thereforet the dilation by decomposition:of the solid solution of Ni-Cr-Al-Ti be described as consisting of compras5iva and.clastic- dilations. The first Is caused by impoverishing of the i4rix phazet by Al wid T1 atomsi the other Is deterained by the inadequacy of,specific atomid volumes of the Nuclear' Fh~sics USSR UDO; 621-384.64:539.1?2 ALEYSHVILI, D. I., GR I SHAYEV I. Ya., MOCHES111TIMOV, N. I. and A. Ye. "Reduct-lion of Idle Time in the Operation of aLinear Accelerator" Moscow, Atomnaya Energiya, Vol 33,111o 1, July 1972, pp 593-594 Abstract: In this paper. it is shom that, by lasin(., an accumulator with no. essential- struGtural changes, the pulsed electron beam ofa linear electron accelerator containing an accumulator trans- forms to a flow of gamma quanta with an intensity and duration that may vary within broad, limits. The experimentation which led to this conclusion was conducted with the aecLziulator of the -Phyoicotechnical Institute of the U,krainian Academy of Sciences, using the first five sections of a linear accelerato.- with an energy of 300 Mev acting as ihjector~.: In the accelerator, the electron energy was 70 Plev, the. pulse current 50 Ma with a du- ration of 1.2 tAs, and the injection~frequency 1-50 Hz. The accele- ratbr beam was formed by the rotatory focusing systom of the accu- mulator, introduced into the ring. and then captured~by the pulse field of the inflector before its accumulation in the magnetic 1/2 USZR UDC: 621,384.64:539.122 'ALEYSHVILI, D. I., et al, Atomnaya energiya Vol. 33, ho 1, JulY 1972 pp 593-594 bing. A description circuit with the high-frequency syst6m opera' of the target is given. The radiation obtaiji6d from the target5 braking the electron stream was picked up by kecording equipment, A diagram of the apparatus is-given,along with curves of the life- time of the accumulated electron-beam.as 'a function of the target position and for the intensity of,the braked radiation as a func- tion of time. It is found that by incressinSJhe number of accu- mulated particles to 1011, the photon' output c~ui be raised to 109- 1010 per cycle. 2/2 41 I/Z 029 PROCESSING DAT~--ISSEP70 _E--0 T .ITL PTICAL CONSTANTSt LUMI NESCE-N'C-' AND, INDUCED, RADIATION OF LANITHANUM -NtOBATE SINGLE CRYSTALS ACTIVATED~6Y~NEODYMIUM -U- AUTHOR-(051-BAKIiSHIYEVAt G.Fet KARAPETYAN* V,YE*9'.M0ROZ0Vt A.M.v MOROZOVAR L's G j 0, Y TOLSTO ~c =NRY ;w_'_SOURCE--OPT. SPEKTROSK, 1970 28 6-81 A DATE PUBLISHED--------70 ~:SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS ~-''TOPIC TAGS--SINGLE CRYSTALt OPTIC PROPERTY, THERMALI~EFFEGTt LUMINESCENCE9 _-:_ANISOTROPY, LANTHANUM COMPOUND# N108ATEt -CR.YSTAL-MUCTURE v-CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS 0OCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED 1. .-PROXY REEL/FRAME--1980/1315 STEP NO,-~-UR/0051/70/028,'001/0076/0081 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0049477 UNCLASSIFIED V41 UNCLASSI~IED; PROCESSING DATE-18SEP70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--APOO49477 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-O- ABSTRACTo: LAN80 SUB4- SINGLE CRYSTALS 8-15v LENGTH TO MM WERE ISOLATED FROM THE MELT AFTEVHIGH T~t"':P. TREATMENT OF LANBO SUB4 IN INERT ATM* UNACTIVATP-D CRYSTALS AND CRYSTALS -ACT-IVATED WITH 1 MOLE PERCENT ND PRI,14E3,- POSITIV&WERE STUDIED. UNACTI VATED CRYSTALS ARE TRANSPARENTilN,THE RANGE 0.27-6.5MU; THE LIGHT ABSORPTION IN THE RANGE 6.5-9.'Q~MU CORRESPONDS TO THE VIBRATIONAL ~N-VAS..OBTAINEO AT 5 IWAVELENGTIHIS FREQUENCIES OF NBO SUB4 TETRAHEDRONSc IN THE RANGE 435.8-6569.3 MMU.,.STRONG,BIREFR[NGENCE WAS OBSD. THE SINGLE CRYSTALS WITH ND PRIME3 POSITIVE CAUSED sYRoi%,G ACTIVATION OF k.,$ - ANISOTROPY OF THE CRYSTALS. LUMINESCENCE SPECTRA.WERE RUN AT 7TOr-GREESK. THE LUMINESCENCE DURATION WAS 120 IMUSEC AT ROOM TEMP.-. IT DID NOT CHANGE ON HEATING OF THE~ACTIVATED SINGLE.'CRYSTAL TO 250DEGIREE-So. THREE AXIAL ELLIPSOIDS WERE CONSTRUCTED'FOR THE~SfP. LINES IN THE LUMINESCENCE SPECTRA OF LANSO SUB4 MINUS NO PRIME3:POSITIVE SCANNE-D I ti POLARIZED LIGHT. GENERATION OF~FORCED,RADIATION..OCCURRED IN THE '0624 14U. SHIFT TO ACTIVATED SINGLE CRYSTALS AT A'SINGLE FREQUENCYr lo 14F06R2 MU QCCURRED ON HEATING OF-THE CRYSTAL TO 300DEGREES. UNCLASSIFIED Xl 4 OZ9 UNCL AS ST F I EV PROC.ESSING OATE--16SEP70 ~ ND- INDUCED RADIATION OF LANT TITLE--OPTICAL CONSTANTSt LUPlINESCENCFi,A HANUA ..NFOBATE SINGLE CRYSTALS ACTIVATED BY'NEODYmIUW_u_ 4UTHOR-(a3)-_8AKliSHIYEVA, G.F., KARAPETYAN, VOYE41 MOROZOVt A.M.s KGROZOVA, L.,gqtL TOLSTOY M.No j_ SOURCE--OPT. SPEKTROSK, L970* 28(l)1.76-81 _DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS TAGS--SINGLE CRYSTAL, OPTIC PROPERTYi- THERMAL-EFFECT? LUMINESCENCE, ANISOTROPYt LANTHANUM COMPOUND, NIOBATEV CRYSTAL STRUCTURE CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS. CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED .-,-:--PROXY'REEL/FRAME--1980/1315 STEP NO--UR/0051/70/028/001/0076/0081 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0049477. UNCLASSIFIED UZ9 UNCL:kSSrfIED PROCESSING OATE--;-IBSEP70 C; IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0049477 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT LANBO SU84 SINGLE CRYSTALS DiAlf-lia B-15, LENGTH 70 MM WERE ISOLATED FR;,Il THE MELT. AFTER HIGH TEMP. TREATMENT OF LANBO SUB4 IN INERT ATM. UNACTIVATED CRYSTALS AND cRYSTALS ACTIVATED WITH 1 MOLE PERCENT. NO PRIME3 POSITIVE.WERE STUDIED. UNACTIVATED CRYSTALS ARE TRANSPARENT IN THE RANGE 0.27-6.5,*IU; THE LIGHT ABSORPTIONJN THE RANGE 605-900 MU CORRESPONDS TO THE VIBRATIONAL FREQUENCIES OF NBC SUB4 TETRAHEDRON&# N WAS OBTAINED AT 5 WAVELENGTHS IN THE RANGE 435e8-656.,3 MMU* STRONG aIREFRINGENCE WAS OBSD. ACTIVATION OF THE SINGLE CRYSTALS. WITH NO PAIME3~POSITIVE CAUSED STRONO ANISOTROPY OF THE CRYSTALS* LUMINESCENCE SPECTRA~WERE RUN AT 77MGREESK. THE LUMINESCENCE DURATION WAS 120 MUSEC AT ROOM TEMP.; IT OID~NOT CHANGE ON HEATING OF THE ACTTVATED SINGLE CRYSTAL TO 25=:GR ES.. THREE AXIAL ELLIPSOIDS WERE CONSTRUCTED.FOR THE~SEP,,'LINES IN THE LUMINESCENCE SPECTRA OF LANBO SUB4 MINUS NO PRIME3 POSITIVE SCANNED IN POLARIZED LIGHT. GENERATION OF FORCEO~.RAOIATION.O(CURREO IN THC- ACTIVATED SINGLE CRYSTALS AT A'SINGLE~FREQUENCY#.1~0624 MU. SHIFT TO 1.0622- KU qCCURRED ON HEATING OF" THE CRYSTAL TO 300DEGREES. UNCLASSIFIED ONCI_ASSIPIEFJ~~ PROCESSING GATE-04DEC70 ACCESSION NO-A.P01,25340 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--tO) GP-0- ASSTRACTI~~ THE SPECTROSCOPIC CHARACTERISTICS OF MD PRIME3POS[TIVE SOLINS. 11-4 SNCL ~SUBrt-POCL SUB3 (~ IN GENERAL, SNCL ~SU34~:POCL SUB3 EQUALS l"10) WERE INV, ;ESTIGATED ASt ABSURPTION SPECTRA IN THE RANGE OF 0.4-2.5 MU AND AS LUMINE$CFlNCEtSPEC,TJRA IN THE RANGE 0.!3-2.0 11U. I THE SPECTRAL PROPERTIES DEPE,NDEL)' WEAKLY ON *,THE COMPONENT RATIO BETWEEN SNCL SUB4 AND 00CL SU,B,3. :BQTH TYPES OF "PECTRA WERE STUDrEo IN -THE FROZEN SOLNS& AT 77 AND 4,20EGREESK., A :DEPENDENCE OF THE RELATIVE INTENSLT,Y AND LINE WIDTH ON THE FREEZING REGIME: 'liAS OBSO. THE RESULTS ARE INTERPRETEU 0,N THE BASIS OF 'THE EXI SYENCE OF ~'%JD COMPDS. IN SOLN SEVERAL TYPES OF LUMINESCENCECENTFRS~ARE PRESENT, MINE-CTED WITH EACH OTHER THROUGH NONRAOIATIVE_ INTERACTION. UNCLASSIF IED USS'O 1-aLYUKOV, Ye. M. REYSH-AMRIT, A. L., TOLSTOY, :M. N. ItLiquatioq Nature of Activator Segregation in Glasses" Leninirad, Fizika Tverdogo Tela, Vol 12, No 2,~lM, pp 525-527 Abstract; There -i's no, data or, liquation which may cause changes ill the structure -ge=.anate glasses appearing with var1ations, in the: Spectroscopic char- of al]kali 4 -the state o.` the i~llass. This paper acteristics of neody iua due to changes n obtains this data by making and studying electron microscope,~ photographs which aw had been.spectroscopically investigated.in an earlier articl~a, The photomicro- raphs shm,, that for srrall alkali metal content,: the natura.,'o-f the nonunif orni i ties is typical of glasses which have undergone :midioliquation, Tive tiuch photoaicro- phs are reproduced, each for a different composition of NanO and Ge02- Tlie r2 g results show that the conclusions drawn in an earlier paper.: co-authored by two of the writers of the present article (Reysha.khrit and Tolstoy, ZhPS, Vol 12, a. 110 3, 1970) are valid; the conclusions of.thd earlier ;nxticlie were obtained on lies. ~ 'In this paper, the authors. conclude the basis of spectroscopic researc. that the division of the glass inco phases ender:the microliquatiou conditions 1/2 47 U24 UNCLASSIFIED' PROCESSING DATE-27NOV70 CIRC ACCESSIOM NO--AP0124940 ABSTRACT/ EXTRACT- (U) GP-0- ABSTRACT.: INVESTIIGAT10,14 OF THE SPE-17TRUM AND IT BY R U M I UM LUMINESCENCE KINETICS OF SYN HETIC RUE POWDER 141 "' HA, C Hi -CONCENTRATION OF 2 MOL PERCENT AT TE1,1PERATURES Rr"u"GING FRO,"'I 4,2 TO 293DEGREESK. THE RESULTS ARE USEO TO DERIVEE INI"1011AVION ON THE INTEPACTION BETWEEN TH"_: LUMINOSITY CENITERS, IN RU3Y. AT IS FOUND THAT THE LUMNUSITY OF THE IN LI~NESlCHANGES BY ROUGHLY ORDERS OF IMAGNITUDE AS THE TEiMPERATURE CIVAINIGES TROM 4.2 M 2930EGREC-SX, AND THAT fU EXCEEoS BY AT LEAST Gitqc 08-DER OF MAGMfTUDE THL, LUMIINO.SIM OF THE R LINES WHICH DOES NOT EXPERIENCE ANY LARGER CHANGES:,QVER THIS TE-MPERATURE RANGE. THIS INDICATES THAT THE DARKENING OF TH& N L11NES MAY BE ATTRIBUtEo TO ENERGY TRANSPORT TO THF CENTERS WHlCH.A.RE*RESPONSf,BLE FOR THE 7800 A BATID PN C L A S S I F I C- UDC 5) 35-373. 2. o96 GERLOVYN, I. YA., &OL~TOY, 1~t~ A. ItEf f act of Temperature on the Glow ofaConc,entrated Ruby" Leningrad, Optika i Spektroskop&a, Vol 28, Wo 4, April 1970, pp 833-835 Abstract: This paper contains additional information about the -~Lined as a result interaction of,the glow centers ih-a.ruby obt of investigating the s-oectrum,and~lujninescenco kinatics of a owdered sample of s7nthetic~ruby,1n the temp ture range of era M-2930K. The chromium concentration in the eample was 2 molo%. Me results of the investigations are-presented in a figure from ~vrhich the nature of the temperature~variations~in the luminescence spectrum is clear. It is.pointed out,that the behavior of the leadiLg R-lines emitted by single chromium ions) two rolatively narrow N-lines attributed to paired, centers --. dimor3 -- and the most intense band in the long-wave region with 4 maximum about 'When the.temperature is varied 7i8OO A, is of greatost interest, from 4.2 to 2930K, the brightness o:tthe N-lines"varies by approxi- mataly two orders, exceoding,the brightnaps of tho R-lines by 1261- USSR GERLOIMT, I. YA., et al,. Optikai Spektroskopiy Vol 28, No April 1970, PP 833-835 more than an.order, whereas the latter does not e:Terience essential changes throughout the,entire indicated temperature range, From this it is concluded-that there.is an additional channel for quenching N-lines., This channel is the transfer of energy to the centers responsible~for.the long-wave band of 7$800 W. Use of pulse excitationiwhich did not, in practice, heat the sample permitted the nature,of the temperature varia tion of the 11-line intensity to be traced in'datail, However, further research is needed to obt iwdefinite,infoimation about the nature of the oenters responsible~for the 7,800 band. Rubber -and'~ ome WSR MC 678.049.002.612 IaTVINOVA, T. V., VOL'CHENKOj R. L. jand TOISTUMNA F. S. "New Plasticizer for Cold Resistent Rubbers!' Moscow, Kauchuk I Rezina, No 12# 1972# pp,2&-28 Abstracti The nature of the plasticizer is important In producing cold resistance in rubbers. The eater.plasticizexe usually 7used axe limited 'by high cost, laok of starting materials, and high volatility. Other plasticizers have lower volatility, but cannot'-producathe needed cold resistance. A Possible solution to this problem lies in the use of a iiew ester plasticizer, using synthetic monobasic fatty aclds(SFA)~which am reaAlly available on a large scale from oil refineries from.the.bxidation~of.pAxaffins, Synthesis of these new plasticizers was realized In one instance with'Idletbylene glycol and SFA of various fractions (from 0 -C to C -C 4 in azother ins-Lance 5 6 ~ 10 11) 1. by eaterification of a SFA fraction with various alcohoU. The effectiveness of these new plasticizers was estiuated by~comparing the magnitude of the~cold resistance coefficients of standazil but-adieneritrile and.nairit B vulcanized rubbers. The maximum. coefficient--of1cold.resistance, was'obtained from SFA Plasticizers vit alcoh fraction 0 -C . h normal a *Is, irare auch more effective 7 9 USSR .11TINOVA, T. V.# et al., Kauchuk i Rezina, No 12, 1972, pp, 26-28 -than those of branched alcohols, with diethylene glycol pl*oducing optimal results. The ester from the SFA fraction C -C and diethylene glycol is 7 called IZ-7. It is much less volatile than co2monly used eaters(dibutyl sebacate and dibutyl phthal&te), In conditioned cold resistance LZ-,? Is close to dibutyl sebacate and surpasses dibutyl phthalate. A definite cor-rela- tion between the effectiveness of plasticizer action and the degree of change in its'VISCOSity with a lowering-of temperature was demonstrated, with LZ-7 showing-an insignificant change in its viscosity with a lowering of temperature. The effectiveness of ester LZ-7 was confirmad.with resins.fron both polax and ronpol.ex rubbers used in production of.various rubber materials, in which LZ-? surpasses dibutyl phthalate and is close to dibutyl'sebae'ate. :2 43 -~71--- 7-IT'l- USSR UDC: 8.74 VIZNM, A. N., TOLSTUN, A. 1. "An Algorithm for Laying out Computer ifiring", Kiev, Konstruirovanf-ye i vnedrenlye novykh sredstv~vychiql. teklin.- abornik (Designing and Introducing New Computer Facilities-collection of works), t. 1, 1971,,pp 177-184 (from RZh-Kibernetika,-110 7, Jul 73, abstract No 7V594) Translation: The paper is devoted to the question of automating the compilation of.wiring tables. Arr algorithm.:is~,propased for laying out high-speed-computer viring. The algorithm As bas ed:. on an!attenpt to simulate the thinking of the designer in ccImpil Ing stiring, tables. 51 11ME In mom ei, USSR UDC: 6r .396.96.ol TOLSTUNOV V A. "Concerning the Function of Indeterminacy in Radar.A Surve~" Tr. Sib. fiz.-teklin. in-ta Dri Tolpsk. un-te (Works of the Siberian Physi- cotechnical Institute Affiliated Vith Tomsk University), 1972, VYp. 62, pp 173-183 (from RZI,-Radj otel-jinika, Vo 8, Aug; 72, Abstract Ho 8G4) properties of the functior Translation: The paper considers the generlal ofindeterminacy of deterministic and rdnd.om signals as applied to radar. 'Bibliography of 16 titles. N. S., c: USSR uj 621-39' TERFUGOV, A. F. MILM-DY 1L. 'A. "Concerning the Uncertainty. Fun6t,ion. of :Random Signals Kiev, IVUZ: Radioelektronika, Val 15, No 3, Mar 72, pp 343-349 Abstract: A new approach is proposed for extending the concept of the uncertainty function to the case of random signals. Let the probing sig- nal B(t) be a realization of a.random process vhich is stored in a radar station and then utilized in reception. . Let 0 be the parameters and 0 be the estimates of the parameters ~of this: signal. if p(iCI/W is the proba- bility density function for estimates of the unknoum parameters, then for signal reception -In normal uhite noise Y4d. have A p vhere g(8,()) is the uncertaintly-fUnction, q is the signal-to-noise ratio, C is a normalization constant. It i6.shown that-the expression A A g (0, 8)~- In P (S) ds 1/2 _7 USSR UDC 0-19;616.988.43:636.22/.Zs NA, k. aMIMENKO, M. D., CiECHETM 7. P., KONOZENKO, P. A., and -IRNKO, A. A., Uk-rainian Scientific Research Institute of ExperLmental Veterinary Xedj~cine IlEpizo otiology of Food-and-Mbuth Disbas'e, Variant A 22 Moscow, Veterinariya, No 51 May 71, PP 45-~6 Abstract: The history of foot-and-mouth disease variant A22 in the Ukraine can be. separated i-rito two periods: the prevaccinatioh period, when the fight against the infection consists primarily of veterinary sanitation T.,c!asures, and the vaccim-tion period, characterized by witlespread use of alumzinum 2 virus. Still, active itqmu- hydroxide for=ldehyde vaccine from lapinized A? nizat-ion of animals in the Ukraine was required.. The dovelop',lient of tho disease iA recent years (106-19059) in~vario= regiorAa of the Ukraine is re- viewed. It was concluded that.the establishment of !*=une,zones for cattle, using the above vaccine,. might solve the' foot-avd-rnouLh di5oase problem for all animals within a given region.~ 96 USSR UDC 621.391.154 TOLSY VI Editor "0 "Error Detection and Correctiori in Digital Devices"' 2 Moscow, Izd-vo "Savetskaye radio, 1972,,.~Ip' Translation: This book presents ithe resuAts of the authors' investigations in developing digital devices,with error:correction. It considers methods for improving the reliability of ths devices, based on the use of correcting ir-mirLimum chec:~s and codes; explains methods for constructing minimum:or ne., diagnostic tests; discusses methods for.controlling and taking into account functional expressions for the operatiorx of.typica nits, and analyzes some characteristics of their capabilities.- kgreat deal of attention is devoted to the specific operation of devices for rational use, of input redundancy. The theoretical material of the book is illustrated by' practical examples. The book is designed for scientific personnel, engineen, and graduate students specializing in the design of digital.devi-ces for ~elect~onic ~rystems, computer techniques automation, and xemote control'. 115- 68 loom USSR TOLSTYAXOV, V. S., Editor, Izd-~vo "SovetAoye radio,"'1972,, pp 286-287 2.1. General information,regarding,the:synthesis',of nonredundant ..digital devices 2.2. Abstract and structural synthesislof redundant devices .2.3. Minimizing the memory.volume of,digital devites with error correction 2.4. Real-ization of the combination'~part of redundant digital devices 2.5. Estimating the volume of, the equipment of digital devices with error correction 3. Error Correction in Digital Devices Specified by Stiuctural. Systems 3.1. Methods of error correction 3.2. Structural peculiariti 'in error correction systems for 3-imear digital devices 3.3. Structure of coding and d coding devices in binary counters Pr 9 3.4. Controlling decoders', pulse dist~xibuters, and digital. phase shifters using correction codes 3.5. Controlling logic operations.-~ . 3/5.- 69 USSR TOLSTYAKOV, V. S., Editor, Izd-vo "Soveitskoye radio,",1972, p 2 4. 'Error Correction in Digital Devices~Pdrfoxming Arithmetic Operations 4.1., Constructing coding and decoding devices for arithmetic codes 4.2. Examples of devices using arithmetic correcting codes 4.3. Examples of correcting codes in;'systems of remainder classes 5. Test Control of Digital Device's 5.1. General information on.test cottrol'' 5.2. Determination of tests from:ch~ln -,(cross section) matrices 5.3. Detection and diagnosis~ of .'~.inaccuracies in undirected grids 5.4. Detection and diagnosis of 'inaccuracies in directed: grids 5.5. Setting up tests for digital devices with mecory 6. Functional Control of Digital Devices' 6.1. General problems of functional, ~ control i ital~de%,ices by the analog thod 6.2. Functional control ofd g me 6.3. Constructing potential digital devices with reduction correction 6.4. Constructing couating, systems with' asymmetrical ~breakdown. patterns 6.5. Taking into account operational peculiarities of digital devices in realization of redu-ndance. 4/5 USSR UDC: 533.6.oll TOLSTYKH A.-.ICentral Aerohydrodynamics Institute Imeni 11. Ye. Zhukov- skiy,,Moscow "On -a Method of Numerical Solution,of Navier-Stok6s Equationa for a Com- pres&ed Gas Over a Wide Range. of ~ Reynolds~~ Numbers" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR,.Vol 210., No 1, May 1973, PP h8-51 s A tract: At sufficiently largevalues of.the Reynolds number It calcu- latibn of the field of flow of a viscous c6ripressible gas runs into serious difficulties involving in particular,abrupt changes in the wilmown fune- tions in regions with che-racteristic dimensions l1rR (boundary layers) and 1/11 (shock waves). The effectiveness of conventional methods is consid- erably reduced wider these conditions due to the excessive error in ap- proximating the convective terms of equations, and i~onmonotonicity of the solutions, requiring the use of "smoothing":.. In this paper an approach is suggested which obviates these difficulties. to a great degree by extending regions with large gradients of unknown functions and using schemes of a higher order of accuracy. Cases- of plane and axisymmel-ric flows are con- sidered for the sake of simplicity, and it is assumed that an orthogonal 4A I-" i"e C into a rectangular region, a difference grid is introduced, and the eq%iatirnin of Ow proMem ivi- rt,pr-ew-l iii 0ifferenco forn, ~ilh arcond-order of accur.-icy, Tht- system of nonlinear Oiffrrenv~ equativns it, %~lvtd by thr rncthod oi succ'!Ssivo approximations. Each iteration deals with a system of linear equatio,4s, to which the method of aucccarive elimination is applied. In contrast to the numerical method of Babenko, et at, (Babenko, Vo#krexcnski)', LyubirtioY. and Rusanov . Prostranstvennoye obtekaniye fladkLkh let ideal'n)m gazorn. Three-dirnensionat flow arousid 6mooth. - bodies by an ideal gaff . Moskva. N4ukm. t964. RZhM ckh, 1965. 411207K), the system of difference equations In the iteration process it not broken down into equations alvvng individual radl&t-lin". -b=t is solved the antire region, Tht method of successive matrix eliminatiors to also son Cratized (or the case of cell matrices. Damping is used to accelerate Iteration convergence. Some calcutation results are presented to,illustrjike the convergence of the numerical solution. Molodtilov, V. X And A. N. Tolstykh. C-alculation of'suversoniv -Siswu;-R-ow around blunthodies IN: TxudySektalipachislennym, metodarn v gazovoy dinamikv Z-go Methilunarodoogo kollokviuma pa gazodinamike vzr)V& L reap I.-uyughchikh sixteen, Moskva. v. 1, 1971. 37-S4. (RZ13),tekh, $172. no.' 5B335) Supplementary results are presented to calculations using Navier-Stokem equations of hypersonic flow around a spherically bluzt modet by methods proposed earlier by the authors (Tolstykh_A. WAINfNIF no. 1, 1966. 113-1ZO. RZhMckb. 1966. BBZ57*. Moledtiov, ZhVM4tF, no. 1% 1969, 1211-IZ17. RZhMakh. 1970, 2B384). The calculations were for 21Ad x 10 und various Reynolds numbers. and & temperature factor and inde= r, w within the law of the relationship of the viscosity coefficient to temperature, USSR UDC'629.78.615:533.16 MOIDDTSOV, V. K.,.TOLSTYK.Ii N. "Calculation of Hypersonic ViscouS Flow Around Blunt Bodies" Tr. Sektsii~ po Chi-ql. Metodam v ga7c. Dinamike 2-go Mezliclunar. Kollokviyuma po Gazodinanike Vzryva i Reagiruyushchikh Sistcrji, 1969.~ 1'. 1 [Works oi Section on Nu-merical Methods in Cas Dyn aril i c s2nd International Colloquim ,on Gas Dynamics of Explosions and Reacting Systems, 1969, Vol 1] , Moscow, 1971, pp 37-54, (Translated.from Referativny -nal, Raketostroyeniye, _y Zhui. No 4, 1972, Abstract No 4.41.153 from the Trauslation: In studying the ae'rodynamic characteristics of blunt bodies in a stream of low-donsity gas, when the forccs of visct)si ty b(~come 5igni- ficant, numerical integration of the, Navier-Stokes equation becomes nece~,- sary. Certain results are presented, produced in studies of the flow around the spherical nose portion-of blunt,bodies b), asupersonic flow of a viscous gas. 11 Figures; 10 Biblio. Ref.. Ace. Nr: 00051945 Ref. Code: VA PRIMARY SOURCE: Antibiotiki, 1970' Vol 15, Nr 1~r TV( CHEMICAL STUDIES ON SIBIROMYCIN, AN ANTITUAIOR ANTIBIOTIC M. 0. Brazlinikova, 1. N. Kovsharova, X. V. Konsta vlova, S. bfi~2enfsev, 'Institute for New Antibiotic's of USSP, Aca edical Scion deffiv of At antibiotic named sibiromycin was isolated. it 17as Ne* ~Rowinjr empirical formula: C24-231-133-a6N306-7i Ic"" 2 0 a d 310 mR, ~ Sibiromycin posscsses amphoteric max n properties, pKa 7.5 (in 75 per cent ethanol). - It contains I amine, 3~,C-methA and 2-ace. tylatigg groups. A crystalline sulfur contalnih~- derivative with a comoosition of Cj4.uHu-ssN3SO" And a melting point of 203'. v~as pr T epared. he ltraviolet. spectrum 20 is Identical to that of an antibiotic, [a] l00-!:2*.(c.0.I5,PMPhA). REEL/FRAME;. 1982042&' USSR mc. 621.382.002 TDLSTYKH S. A. SYNOROV, V.: F. !Masking-Properties of Silicon Nitride Film" V sb. Radiofiz. i mikroelektronika (R--dio Physics and Microelectronics- collection.of works), Voronezh, 1970, PP 86-88 (from FZh-Elektronika i yeye. Primeneniye, No 6, Jun 71, Abstract Nol,6B519) Translation: Silicon nitride f i 1 rm are produced by rAf vacirum vaporization of a silicon electrode onto polished, (13-1) silicon surfaces. A LOOO lay,erof molybdenum was vacuum deposited by thermal vatporization onto the sil i con nitr4 de lms, as a bas is for photoli thography. Iffie thickness and index of. refraction. (2.000-2.105) of the nitride filmz were checked by F_n method in monochromatic light i-rith a wavelength of 5461 N The electric strength, (5-9) -106 V/cm, was measured On '~--Sj- 3" 4-3i stru.c- tures. The protective properties of the silicon nitride fiJ_Tm3 against dif- fusion of boron, gallium and phosphorus were studied by detc!rmining the depth of the junction beneath the film, and on unprotected sg~gments. Films with athickness of '300 A and more give complete protection, a.gpiast boron dif- fusion when the 4unction lies 12 V beneath the surface an unprotected sec- 1/2 TOISTYKH, S. A., SYTIOROV, V. F. , Radiofiz. i mikroelektronika, pp 86-88 tions. The source of boron. was B203; diffusion conditions vere 1,OOOOC for 20 minutes; dispersion conditions. were 11500C for 30 liours- A 200 A film of Si3N4 reacts co=letely with the diffusing age nt afteil 40 rdnutes of dif- -0 fusion. Distillation in a molecular ozygen atmosnhere ohould not last too long since silicon dioxide is formed. After*~10-12.hours of.distillation in a molecular nitrogen atmosphere, aadense B-Si~-B film which is insoluble in hydrofluoric acid forms on the surface. Nitride gives:complete protection against prolonged diffusion of gallium at'12001C from r-- Ga203 source in a molecular hydrogen atmosphere. silicon. nitride films 1,000-23,000 o thick protect silicon against phosphorus~diffusion from a P205 source in an argon ~atmosphere under 12001C distillation conditions for th6time:needed to. produce a junction at adepth of Tit, _,ive no pro Films, 300-2500,1 thick, ir tection against diffusion. since -they:readt' with phosphorits anhydride to form Compaction of films by anti 'allng for. 7 hours at 1150'C phosphoric glassg. k' e in a nitragcn atmosphere improves the protective properties. With a film thickness of 1000-2400 A, a junction at a.depth of. 11 jj_c-9n be obtained on open sections. Bibliography of 5 titles. I. M. 105 1/3 033 UNICL ASS IF I ED,: P-KOCESS114G UATE-11I)EC70 OF THE CLL-,FFIC;IE' -.~.UIFFUSIUN IN ThE FREE T I TLE NT, OF TUKbULEi%T USII-NG UIPUE kEFLEC -~.,At,TmZR-(02)-GGAELIKt A.G., TJLSiTYK4l9.V.G!o-" -.TRY~ OF I%FO---USSR -L& IZVESTIYA AKADE, I I NAL) K S,5S R, MIKA :ATMOSFERY I OKEANA, '(4a, Vl- N~j - 6, 1971), PP- 635-b38 t ISHED -- - --- 70 PU6 AkE4S-ELECTRONICS AND, ELECTKICAL~ENGR~l ATPOSPHER11C SCIENCES, TAG S FREE ATMOSPHEREY DIPOLE ANTENNA, DIFFUSION. COEFFICIENT, NEFLECTEr, SIGNAL9 CLOW FORIMATION1 RADIO ECHO "C04REL l-lAkKIf%G--N0 RESrPICTIONS 4T CLASS-O'NCLASSIFIEU _.PiWXY- HCHE kX---;--FU70/6050qlYE07 STEP NG--UR/d36Z/70/G,06/Ot36/()ti35/CIC'>'38 c I RE ACCESSICN INJ-00142752 UNr LAS -7- 777 - 2/3 033 UNCLASSIFIEt) PROCESSING JA TE-- 110~--C70 ~CIRC'ACC ESSION tNO-AP0142-752 --AaSfRACT/EXTR-ACT--(UJ GP-0- AUSTRACT. IN,1966 AN AT r E M P~ Ti~AS MADE AT .51MULTANEGUS YEASUREMENT OF THE UIFFUSIQN~ COEFFICII'NT KIAND THE RATE OF D. I S S I P A T I C &OF TURBULENT ENERG GY ERSILO.TROM CLOUDS OF DIPOLE ~REFLECTCRS. THE DIFFUSIGN cbEFFI(;IENT 4,!A& MEASURE-6- US ViG ~ CLOUD Of THE ~.DIPCLE REFLECTORS INTRODUCED INTO THE ATMO'~PHERE i;R!.~~-4 A HELICOPTER, TE-IMPGRAL CHANGE 114 THE EXTENT OF THE CLOUD:,WAS~MEASIJRED, AS WAS THE DISTRIBLTION OF THE INTENSITY Of THE~REFLECTED SIGNAL I N. THE CLOUD AND -IAL TtAPORAL VARIATIONS. T ATS,~,SPAT IN AQUITiO,N, DUkli~,N15 THE EXPERtMENT 1, WAS POSSIbLE TO DETERMINE THE SPECTRUM 0~:f-.LUCT.UAT1ibfvS Uv:: Jr-11E INTENSITY RADIO ECHO't'-:S Atli) VARIATIONS 0 F THE-MEAN" 00PPLER~FAEQUENCY. THIS MADE ~.IIT: PUSS IFJLE -TO COMPUTE THE RATE OF DISSIPATION OF TURBULENT ENERGY IN ATYCiSPHERE AND ATTEMPT TO FIND A' REL'TATICNSHIP ~HETW-EEN K ANO EPSILON~ .-THE EXPER-IMENTAL -METKOD IS FULLY -DESCRIBED. MEASUREMENT JATA ARE SUMMARAIZED 11~' A T*13LE. THE MEASURED THE OIFFUSION VALUES OF COEFFICIENT VARY AT ABOUT 10 PRIME51 CM PRIME2-SECI WHICH IS CLOSE TO E'SUREMENTS MADE BY OTHER AUTHORS UNDER~51M.ILAR CONUETIONS. DURING THE .4EASUREMtNTS EPSILON VAKIED FROM 1.5 TO' 10 Civ PRIME2~,~,SEC PRIME3; THE AILHARGSCtv COEFFICIENT, C0.4PUTED FOR 300 METE IR LAYERS, FOR THE ENTIRE LU"ER KILGRETEk LAVER ON THE 6ASIS OF. RAD.I'OSO-NrJE ~ DATA', VARIED FROM 0.09 J`OwO.00145* OUI%ING SCMiE EVENING' UkURS. TVE;~ SCATTERERS~ ilitPNG "AT SOME ALTITUDE (USUALLY 200-400 14) ANO THEN I)ESCENULD NQ FAI~THEI-c. AT THIS ~T.IML UNLY HORIZU-NTAL SLAT T-:F. I NS, OF ThE CLOUD WAS QJSCI~-V-11) ANU APP;~~IXIVATELY AN h!'JUR AFTER' THE DROPPING Q F TkiL RLFLE(TORS T11EY uCCUPIEU A N~- AKLA -tt SEVI-i"'.AL S,~UAfif, KILL-MIJERS UtIGLASSIFIED 3/3 033 UPICL ASS IF I ED Pl~il(_ESSING DATE-~-IIDEC70 I '--AP0142752 -T-THIS bEHAVl0,-. OF THE CLLUD CAN isE ATTRJOUTE Ii THE L W P"ESUNCE LF A CLCSEiJ C114CULATIOP4 IN THE E VIE N I'ING K,,URS IN THI. 0 E LAYEAS bF Ti--E ATMOSPHEKE. H06E VEK v THIS HYPMIESES KF--CUlt 10-12. The effect of pressure in the investigated region was in- 1/2 U19SE TOLUBINSKIY, V. I., MATORD-1, A. S., Teplo- i massoperenos. T. 2. Ch. 1, Minsk, 1972, pp 62-66 significant. in mixtures with azectron Isic) the depaildence Of acr on con- centration has maxirA coinciding with thb~ maxima of excess content of tile high-volatility component in the vapor as com-pared with the liquid. The increase in qcr is attributed to the-reduction in'theAetachment diameters of bubbles, their average rate of grotth ~an4,the nur~be-r OIL vapor-generat- ing centers. All this reduce.~, the vapor,content of the,wall layer. Another reason for incref-se of qcr i.s assumed to be the rise in the gradient of surface tension on the phase interface. Du4., to the "tlaranjgcni effect", these increased gradients prevent:the merging of vapor bubbles and, the, formation of a stable vapor film. ~ In mixtures. vithout an azeo- trope, the dependence of qcr oil concentration,is.monotomic, vithout maxima, vhich is due to the fact thatjhere~is.no'.reduction in tle detachment diar-- eters of vapor bubbles and their rate of f6rmation.in this case. A dimen- sional couTutational formula which generalizes the results,of~the experi- ments to,an accuracy of �20% is.proposed. Yu..' Ye. Pokhv&.1ov. 2/2 6o - USSR TOLU81 SKIY,V. I.. KOSTANCHUK,. D. M. "Influence of Underheating on.lieat Exchan e During Boiling of.Water" 9% Vopr. Tekh. Tellofiz, Vyp. 3, (Problems of Engineering Heat Physics No 3], ..Kiev- Nauk. Dumka, Press, 1971', pp~,3 6. (Translated fro' Refe'rativnyy Zhurnal Mekhanika, No 1, 1972, Abstract No-IB882, by Yu. E..Pokhvalov). Translation: Experiments were performed with forced flow of waiter in a vertical, circular,channel, formed of an external tube.28 mm i n diameter (wall thickness 4 mm) and an internal heat-liberating stainless tube 6 mm'An diameter. Cold- drawn tubing was used without further treatment (averclgin~, clasti 4 smoothness), as.well as turned tubing (class 6 smoothness) with wall thicknesses of 0.3 and 0.25 mm respectively; the length of the channel was 50 miw. The underheating Atif varied from 5 to 60', heat flux q -- f roMi 0. 1 to 2 MwIM2. Experiments were performed at atmospheric pressure with a .~water velocity at the input to the workinji channel 0.2 m/sec. It was discovered 09at the~,characteristic relationship of heat transfer coefficient cc and,q..' depends,essentially on 0.7 At-0.14. the underheating a=4.2 c1 . H The exponent with the.underheating can be assumed constant only approxinately.. increasing underheating increases the mean rate of growth of steam bubbles P = U-f (d and f are the maximum diameter m and frequency of foimation of steam bubbles respectively), dm dropping more slowly than f increases. Me heat transfer coefficient chango-s' similarly with 1/2 USSR TOLUBINSKI V..I., KOSTANCHUK,' D M., OCTROVSKIY-, Yu.'N.', "Influence of Smoothness of Heating Surface on Intensity of Heat Transfer During Boiling of Water" Vopr. Tekh. Tellofiz. Vyp. 3, [Problems of Engineering [feat Physics No 3], -Kiev, Nauk-. Dumka Press, 1971, pp-12-14, (Translated from Referativnvy Zhurnal Mekhanika, No 1, 1972, Abstract No IB883 by~Yu. E. Toklivalov). Traitslation. An experimental study was,perforified in a circular channel with internal heating. The internal heated tubes, made of stainless steel, had the following dimensions: Diameter 6 nim, wall thickness 0.215~Mm (precise, class 6 smoothness) and 6 mi-ii and 0.25 mm (cold drxvin, averagifig'class 4 smoothness), 5 mm. and 0.2mm (polished, class 11 smoothness).I.The external tube was made of organic glass 28 mm in diameter (wall thickness,-4 mm); channel,length was 50 mm. The limits of change of the modes of the parameters were: heat flux 2 q=0.2-2 Mw/m , pressure P=2-6 bar, underheating AtH=200, water speed at input to channel V=0.2 m/sec. The divergence in intensity of heat transfer a on the technical surfaces was found not to be too great, while on the polished surface a was 25% or more lower, even at high heat fluxes.~ This effect is re- lated to the impoverishment of the polished surface in vapor formation centers. The experimental data were processed as a crite.rial dependence, suggested 1/2 053 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0141364 UNCL ASsIFl E'D PROCESSING DATE-04DEC70 w.A BSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) (;p-o- ABSTRACT. ~EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF THE DISTR IBUTION OF THE LOCAL TEMPERATURE I CHARACTEq I Sl",cs GF THERMAL COMPOSITION PYROLYSIS PROCESSES IN AN ETHYL ALCO~iOj. OIFFUSION FLAlE. JHE FREE "ELECTRON i,-ONCEN'fRA.T.I[)N-.I)ISTRIBUT'i'ON 15 AtAO DETERMINED, IT IS SHOWN -THAT ELECTRICAL PHENOMENA IN THE ~FLAVIE MAY lii,VE A' SIDE'ABLE EFFECT ON THE MASS TRANSFEk PROCESSES OCCURRING DURING COMBUSTION. FACILITY: AKADENIIA NAUK UKRAINSKOI ~Ssqt INSTITLIT TEAHNICHESKOI TEPLOFIZIKII KIEV, UKRAINIAWSSR.~ UNCLASS I F TED UINICLASSMtb," PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 ..L-c--HELICONS IN N TYPE GERMANfUM -U4.. zlZ 015 UNCLASStFIED'. PROCESSING DATE CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0054657 "ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. COMPONENTS WERE UETD. OF THE ELEC. COND. TENSOR IN A MAGNFT IC FIELD PARALLEL To THE CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC AXES ~F(100)1 (1101, AND (111); THE EFFECTIVE MASS.ANISOTROPY AND THE ANISOTROPY OF rHE COLLISION FREQUENCIES:WERE TAKENiNTO ACCOUNT. THE RE-AL AND IMAGINARY PARTS OF THE~WAVE VECTOR.AND.THE DIMENSIONAL RESONANCE OF HELICON WAVES WERE CALCD.- ~~A RATIO WAS'DET0. BY COMPARING -,_'.THE THEORETICAL RESULTS WITH EXPTL.-OATA-. K,EQUALS Pt SUBL T SUBT M SUST T SUBL APPROXIMATELY EQUALS TO 191 WHERE M SUBL, T SUBL,~M SUBT, AND T SUBT CORRESPOND TO MASSES AND RELAXATION.TIMES OF ELECTRONS ALONG.THE LONGITUDINAL AND TRANSVERSE AXES OF THE CONST. ENERGY,ELLIPSOIDY RESPI -THE-HELICON WAVE ANISOTROPY WAS FOUND EXPTU. AT.1300OEGREESK IN A DIMENSIONAL RESONANCE REGIME*~ UNCLASSIFIED USSR UDC 1537.226'-537 - 311 - 331:1551+5351 POZBELA, 'YU. K.J RYAUKA, V., L'., and T01MM R.'B. "Divensional P_-aonances of Helicon avet;~in Axial Ccinmressed n-Gell W Lit. fiz. sb. (Collection of Lithuanian 'Niorks on Physics), 1971, 11, No 2, pp 253-261 (summries in Lithuanian and English) (from:Mh-Fizika, No 10, Oct 71, Abstract 110 IO)M785 by authors) 'Translation: An investigation was rade of the effect of axial compression P oaAhe frequency of dimensional resonanc6a CO of helicoi~ waves in n-Se. Curves of WV/B as a function of the inductlon~of nagretic field B Wre calcu- ffbi cry~ lated for axial compression P in the [110] and stalaographic directions when k#B// [ 1101, as vell as P// [ 1111 when kl/B[/'Clllj. !It was established that the form. of curves W `/B_-f (B) and the Absblute values of .10"/B with varia- tion of P reflect the redistribution of current. carriers~-emong groups with different mobility. Dependences CP / V(P, were experimentally obtained with the above-mentioned orientations P, 13, and k. It was fowid that the quality factor of the helicon resonator depends on the ragnitude and direction of F relative to the cnstallographic &Yes. Th. -experimental recults confirm the theoretical calculations. USSR -6tc 621. 3-4.2 QaT o f Yh~ s i cs of Sem-conductom Acadeq,, of POZHELA, Yu. K., S, R. 3. , inst-L Sciences of the lithuartiem SS? A High-Frequency Transformer" USSR Author's Certificate 11o 254601 Filed 9 A',Q r 68n I rom RM-Radiotekhpika, No 10, Oct 70, Abstract No.10V374 P ansla~- -Tr tion: The proposed high-freque ncy-trans former contaii~s a core iix~d inri.lt and put',vindings. As a distinguishing, featwe of the patent, v-c!tiIIyirj~, pvoptrties -are - i mparted to the transformer by making the core i n the form, of it squai -,micon- :ductor plate of N type ZPSb mounted be'ween the poles of a Eyv.rmane.",it magnet, and arranging the. input end output wirdings at wn an~gle close to .(L right arigle. Ille initial.ends o f the windings are interconnected thi~ough a resistor, and the terrrdnal leads are shorted together. J4 MULUV 11 C ors USSR UDC: 537.2i6.2+542.~'5- TOLUTIS,V,1B., Institute,of Physics of Semiconductors, Aca4emy of Sciences, of the Lithuanian SSR "Determination of Some Kinetic Parametersi.tof Recrystallization of Thin Films by Mathematical and Graphic Analysis of the Shapes of Grain Boundaries" Villnyus, Litovskiy Fizicheskiy Sbornik, Vol 12, No 3, 1972, pp 445-~52 Abstract: The authcr considers the possibility of determining certain kinetic parameters of recrystallization of.tbin films in.the case of radial grovth.of grains at a time-constant rate by mathematical'ard graphic analysis of the forms of boundaxies between grains.~. lt'is.shown -that in -the given instance the shape of the boundaries of the re .crystalli,,,qd film car bc de- scribed by a fourth-order equatlon which con be uaed to 6~*.'.tculate tile div- tance betieen centorr~ of recryLit.!)LIlizatiorrof it given pAt',t-r. of grains, the ratio of,their rates of gTovth, apd a quantity which characterizes the dif- ference betveen their incubation periods, all based on certain data concern- ing the parameters of the curve describing the boundary.' It is shown that in-most cases the singularities of,the visible structure of recrystallized films is determined by the concentration and the pattern of distribution of a