SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT VINOGRADOV, S. D. - VINOGRADOVA, L. V.

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86-00513R002203520003-4
Release Decision: 
RIF
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
100
Document Creation Date: 
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 10, 2001
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 31, 1967
Content Type: 
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86-00513R002203520003-4.pdf5.3 MB
Body: 
UNCLASSIFIED' ~PAUCESSENG DATE--20NOV70 020 C-IRC ACCESSIGN NG--AP0132719 A6SikACT/EXTRACT--ThUSt THERE IS A REGULAR CHANGE IN THE OIRECTION OF THE PCL POLARIZATIGN AXIS.DURING THE DAY WITH INTERVALS OF POTATION OF TliE SIGN OF-ThE ANGLE (BETWEEN THE- AXIS OF POLARIZATIC'N AND THE HAGNETIC MERIDIAN) AT 0500-OSOC AND L700-1800t:COINCID.I.NG IN T114E WITH THE MAX-IMUM AN:D IMIIIIIVIUM Fki-QUENCY OF APPEARAN*CE OF PCt, IN THE MIDULE LATITUDES. F,1,1CILITY: SIBERIAN :IkSTlTUTE.0F TEkkEsrRIAL 'MAG NETI S P,, I CNGSPHERE AND RADIO, 4AVE PROPAGAY [ON N -Ab S. L- Li &0044051 Ace. Nr. Ref.,Code: P 9- Energy of E~ast~wc Impulses in the Destruction of Sampl~-s --(Abstract: "On the Energy of Elastic-linpulses Accompanying the Destruc- tlon-,of.Samples of Inhomogeneous Materials,.`by D. Vinoarddov and K., M. Mirzoyev, Institute of'Physics of the Earth; Moscow, Izvesciya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Fizika Zemli,,No. 1,11970, pp. 37-45) Samples of cubic form measuring 10-m.10 x;;10 cm1of cement with granite Inclusions were destroyed.. Two types of inhomagenelties were investigated: samples with a large (lj506),numbar of small inclusions of irregular angular configuration with linear dimensions of about 3 mm -a small (20,-25) number of (samples withfine gravel) and samples with inclusions measuring 25-30 mm,-also,.-of angular configuration (samples with,coarse gravel). Samples we destr d;with a constant rate of rp- oye deformation under conditions of unilateral dompression,under a press with a "dry" contact between the sample-and the press plates. The detector of elastic oscillations was a piezo-electric sensor mounted ort the lateral surface of the sample. The elastic impulses forad-ng in the course of destruction of the sample were.registered;on magnetic tape., Four serieu of experiments (8-10 namples in each saries) were run for swiplos with Real/Frawe- AP0044051 these two types of inhomogeneities. The records of destTuction processes And data on stresses and strains made-it possible to compute the seisn;ic energy, elastic energy accumulated In a sample by the time of,its destruc- tion and the work-and mean energy expended:on.deformation of-the sample. ;All-these data are summarized in tables.-,It,was found'that with a.-change in the rate of deformationthere is a' considerable chang, in the quantity of-released seismic energy. Despite;tha.same irate of deCormation, dif- ferent energies are expended on the deformation of sampics.of different inhomogeneity. The seismic energy is:.qu itedependent on,;tlie rate of the deforwtion process. The maximum t4ulse alnUthe frequency ofistrong impulses increase considerably with.4n Increase in the mte of-the defor- ination process.-, The ratio of the~reieased;seismic energy to the stored elastic energy is dependent m degree on.-the rate :of the deforms- tio*u process or on theenergy expet%ded an deformation ofilthe material. 19770513: USSR UDC 621,762.4.001:669 SMIMNOV, V. S., PAVLOV, N. N., and VINOG ..Ye. "Application of the Lagrange Variational Principle in Pressure Working of ~fetallic Powders" Tr. Leningr. politekhn. in-ta [Works~of Leningrad Polytechnical Institute], '40. 315,1970, pp. 10-15 (Translated fro -Referativriyy Zh urnal-Metal lurgiya, No. 2, 1971, Abstract No. 2 G388 by the;au--hors) Translation: The possibility is studied of applying methods of the solution of Droblems of elasticity znd~,plasticity for,solid bodies to discrete bodies. A criterion is developed alloiring.the applicability of such methods to be evaluated. Formulas ikre producedf6r solution of the planar problem of pressing of powdersby,variational nothods. 3 figures; 6biblio. refs. -30- - - USSR BUDAGOV, YU. A., QQgWOV L~FIEIEPOV V4 P. ~jaj.h~ VOLOD'XO, A. G., ..r KL4DT=-6XIY, V. S., ZU-PSIDI,- N. X., Tbilisi State University, LUMMI, YU. F., FARSIMIKO, V. A. , XARMISKA#~, G., FLYAGIN, V. B~, MnHEYEV, YU. N.1 and "Possible Existence of Resonance With a Mass of 270 ReV" X03cov, PisIma v 4-1hurnal Eksperimental'noy i Teovetichaskoy Fizikij Vol 131 No 12, 20 Jun 71, pp 665-668~~ Abstra-att The preliminary results of this experDient were presented in 1970 at the Fifteenth International. Conference on Eigh-Energy Physics in Kiev. The author-.3 firA experizental signs of the possible existence of a Itew neson resonance. They observe a:narrow peak! when DI. - 270 bleV in the spectrum of effective wsses of the tq~rstem 7-1 which fo=s in -the reaction 3-1 -P P Q 3)0>' at .5 GeV/r.- The authors study events of the tr)e Tj P + (2.3)o Rhich'satis:ry the following oom1itionat (I the D?*otons areAdeAtified by ionization and stopping in the camera, and the In-Dulses of the Drotons do no texceed 900 Mey/c; (2) the length of the tracks of secDM-Z&17--cha~ged particles from the star is no less then 2 am, and the impulses of these particles miv measured with an 1/2 oi4 UNCLASSIPTE6' .,PROCESSING DATE--13NOV70 f I TL.E--s ru.!)Y UF THE IMASS SP-CUUM OF. TfiE A 1,! 3 D AK :'S Y S 7 E . MIN PI PRI14E NEGATIVE P :INTERACTIONS AT 4'-AND 5.1 1; -GEV-C -~-U- YU.4.t VINCGRADOV~,;:,V.;S.s,~ VOLODKOs' A.G., DZHELEPOV, V.P'* KIRILLOVUGRYUMOV~ ~-CCWITRY OF lMlFO-:-USSR .-SOURCE JETP LETTERS (USA), :VUL; 11 NO:, P.3L~5 (JAN. 1970) uATE PUBLISHC D- J AN 10 ~-SUBJECT AREAS--PHYS IC- S -TOPIC TAi~S-PkOPAME bU3BLE CHAMBER1 SYNCHROTRON, PROTON, MP S S SPECTRUMi -!'ACTION PION ~PION INTC CCNTROL PlARKIING--NO RESTRICTIONS J~~-DOCWMEINIT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY RELL/FRAME-3005/1778 ST~P NO" US/0000 11/0031/0035 CIRC ACCESSION 1410--AP0133683 ilig iWii&ii~,i imi ~i ~b 1 a1.-u i, ti! 1 ph. im d ii uma,n -- I - ~ -, . I ~; : .i j; . : - ; : I i ~ I I . , ` w I - 1 ; . : I : - . .1 . : I 1 1. . . : ~.~ ; .-. : ~ !: , ,- : t . I I ;j , i [ , 21? ' 01.4 * - UNC L A S S I F I.E D: PROCESSING DATE--13NOV70 PROCESSING DATE--13NOV70 1/2 013 UNCLASSIFIED: T:lTLE7 -PRO CUCT ION OF Xt HYPEKSGNS IN JAU. -P INTERACTIONS AT 5.1 GEV-C. -U- `AUTHf)R-(05)-8U0AGQVr YU.A.# V I;v*o*p UZHELC-PUVt v V*F* ~.Vo P a IDUSHENK01 CMiTRY OF 1.766--USSR ti 'TTER ,~SOURCE-_-JRTP LE -S iJ'A) VOL. 11, 1). 26-31 AJAN", 197.01 PUBLISHED ---- J AN' 70 ~_SUBJECT AKLAt*)--PHY S I C S -,0 D U C T I 01~ I 40PIC PtWPANE 6 Lid b LEE c 1-1 A M bP AI f 1 Cv NTAGL MAkK f NG--NO :-ESTRICTIUNS: C o 00CUMENT CLA S S--tJ%'CL,% S S I F I ED ~PRGXY P FEL/FRAME--300 511795 STEP P4-0--US /000 0/70 /G I 1 /30 1/0026/00 31 C IRC ACCE.SSION NC.-APOL33700. 2/2 013 ONC L A S-S I F 1ED ~OkGCESSIN(; DATE-13NOV70 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP 0 13 3 700. GP-G- ABSTRACT. R E, G, TS T Fi F; G3,S!:l-lVAT[C;N 0 F THE :.DECAYS OF THE CASCADIF HYPE-1113N- XI YIELDS ALPHA PLUS 1) 1' PR U-1 E A r I V E A N D .,A DETERMINAT( ON OF ITS PROOUCTIO~4 CKUSS SECTION I i,i pi p i,,-4rEKAc-rl0t4S AT 5.1 GFV-C IN A NIETER PROPANE BUBLE CHAMBER, UiNCLASSIFIED I -4f2,'- UNCILASSIFIED: PROCESSING DATE--160CT70 TTITLE 'MEASUREMENT OF TOTAL AND~PA,RTIAL CROSS SECTTONS OF THE 5.1 GEV-C PI 'PRIME.,NEGATIVE MESON INTERACTION-4N A PROPANE BUBBLE CHAMBER -U- ;-AUTHOR"7(05J-BUDAGOV, YU.A., VINOGRAD0Vv.V-.,B.j VOLODKO, A.G.v DZHELEPOV, 0-8 P A 0 0-yo-MARTINSKAy G. ,"..C13UNTRY -OF INFO--U,SSR YAD. FIZ. 1970, 11121, 395-8. ~OATE PUBL IS HED------ 70 ~-SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS lJOPIC TAGS--MESON INTERACTIONt PIONt PROTON, NEUTRON, Cil,4'80N, BUBBLE ~CHAMBERr PROPANEi INTEGRAL.CROSS-SECTION CONTROL MARKfN,G--NO RESTRICTIONS, ~1)'GCUMENT C[ASS-UNCLASSIFIED ROXY REEL/FRAW;-1991/1033 ~STEP NU--t]R/0367/.'10/011/002/0395/0396 ICIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0110723 __1/2 013 w4cLASSUPt ED. ~PROC.ESSING [)ATE--160CT70 ION OF XT PRIME NEGATIVE.HYPERONS IN PI PRIME NEGATIVE P ,.:~-TNTERACTIONS AT 5-1 GEV-C - U-l' w -AUTHOR-(05)-aUDAGOVI YU.A., VIN YA""Aw VOLODKO# A-G.i DZHELEPOVp V, P,, DUSHENKOr V.F. ...":;COUNTRY OF.INFG--USSR ,:.!:-SOURCE"PIS MA ZH. EKSP. TEOR. FIZ. 1910t II(l)r .218-31 ,'.~DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 -SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICSt NUCLEAR SCTENCE AND TECHNW.OGY JOPIC TAGS--HYPERON, PION PROTON INTERACTIUNv RADIOACTIVE DECAYt PARTICLE ;~._.":.-~PRODUCTIONt PARTICLE CROSS:SECT ION#, BUBBLE CHAM.BtR MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS 'DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~_~,PROXY REEL/FRAME--198a/0678 STEP NO -,UR/0386170/OIL/001/0028/0031 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0105654 ING DATE--s.60CT70 2/2 013 UNCLASSIFIED~' PROCESS CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0105654 APSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. ANAL. OF 230000 PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN IN AC SUB3 H SUBS BUBBLE CHAMi3Et,'Z OF PI PAIME NEGATIVE P INTERACTIONS AT 5.1 GEV-C SHOWED 28 NUCLEAR EVENTS WHOSE SECONDARY NEG. TRACKS COMING OUT THE INTERACTION STARS HAD THE CHARACTER OF THE XI PRIME NEGATIVE YIELDS 0 PLUS PI PRIME NEGATIVE DECAY,- ONLY 6 0.F THEM SATISFIED:THE CRITERION FOR A XI HYPERON DECAY, I.. E.,,-. IONIATICIN Of EACH TRACK; NOT CONTRADICTING THE XI DECAY HYPOTHESISAND EFFECTAVE AASS (0 PLUS PI PRIME NEGATIVE) NOT DIFFERING FRUM M,EQ,UALS 1.321~MEV-C PRIMEZ MORE THAN -50 MEV-C PRIME2. ALL 6 EVENTS IN THE NUCLEAR STAR WERE UNEQUIVOCALLY IDENT-IFIED AS THE FOLLOWING: (SHOWN UPI MICROFICHEj. THE TOTAL CROSS SECTION FOR XI PRIME NEGATIVE.H .YPERON.PRODUCTIDN~IN rHE PI PRI14E NEGATIVE-P INTERACTION WAS (Z.9iNEGATIVEISUSI.O POSITIVE PRIME1.81MU B. THE_,CROSS SECTION INCREASED ON INCREASING~THE INTERACTION ENERUY. FAC I L I TY': 081EDINt INST- YADo. ISSLEDv~~QUBNAj U.SSR. USSR -7 BUDAGOV, YU. A,,_Y VOLOD'KO, A. G., DaiELEPOV, V. P., KIR-'-LOV- 'Er "'IKOVA, -UGRT1JMOV I V, G. XiJA S. , KUZN_ETSOV, A. A., LONAK_1117,~ _11J. F. , N 41 br. N. , POITOSOV, K, , FLYAGIN, V. B. , -SHI;fANNIKOV, P. V. , MARTIKSI~A, G. (15, ~BOLDEA, N. (2), MM]UL, A. (2), MUM(RANU, D,:: (2~,~ PONTAj (2) FELZA, S. ~ (2), CHA (3), joillt Tnstftute of-Nualear:Research; (I) UnJive-rs-ity imeni P. nd '%D?J,,A 51 - - J. a 1. Shafar Kc - I: ` - mic~Physics, Bucharest, _'K -shitse, Czechoslovak SSR; (2) Institute c MEO Rouar-'a; (3) Phvs~cs JnSt4tUte of the Acadery,of,Sciences Mongol-,an P ople's Repub- -Bator 1~c, Ulan "Study of the 'L%ass GD-ectrun o-f a AK-Syster, in w p-Interactlans at 4 and 5.1 Gev/c" Moscow, Pis'ma v Zhurnal Eksperimentallnoy i:Teoretiches;,-.6y Fiz L-Ri, Vol. 11, No. 1, ~5 Jan 70,.pp 31-35 A`Ixtract: The re3ults of a tn~tudy 01" t h e spectrum Of -~he ef.-E-M2J.'ria TMASSes of a arol 1,fTcjrtx.,d. Tht~ uzm obtalned in inwin't].gating -v~ p-interactionri In a 24-liter and r, propane bW)ble chaw6ar irradiatt_-6 in -,r-mif~,oon beams of _rotron 0_~ -E:-. - - the P-noton syric'. e jo~,,t Institute of lNuclear Rei-,;:arch inth pulses of on of the s 11 and 5.1 Gev/c, re-spect"vely, An investigati Z I t jr-1 of the, ei-Tective -is of iriterbst~:From, the viewp Int of observing new -rum of a AK-system wL mass specL 1/2 USSR BUDAGOV, YU. A., a-, al, Pjis'ma v Zhurnal Ekqperimentallnqy i Tc-oreticheskoy Fi7iki, Vol. 'l No. 1$ 5 Jan 70, pp 31-35~ the. decays of d-"' rtL-nz isobar:3 via -the chan- resonances with zero stranaeness and nel N-* -A Z, to determine -the relative p~obabilities~oi! these decays. Approxi- mately 230, 000 photog-raphs were analyzed for 'each bubble- The ef T-ective maS8 soect-ra Or AKO conn' inations for events in.which the A(acays ~ of a A-hyperon and b a zo-meson were s1multaneously recorded In the chamber are:. ~r_~apted. The graphs. how'a considerable excess in the nlmiber ofavents above tllr-- back- ound i -;-Je mass s frr n z region Gev/c2. Tt is shown that this anomaly is~not associated w4th -che reflection of known resonances Y* (1385) an& K4 (890). -,n -the AKO.-spectrum. The total excess in the number of events over th e-background In the -mass interval 1.61- -1.96 Gelt/c2 was 114 j: 13. The exper.inental, dataIverify the existence of two reso- nances with masses about 1685 and 1935.111ev/c2 and widths of the *ovder of 150 Mev/C2. it is concluded that the anornkily observed in~-~he,effective nass spectrum of AK can be explained on-ly by the decay of the isobar~Sjj (17-10:1, PILI (175'0) via the~channel JIP --~- A t K or by the existence of a: new resonance witli masa: cabout 1685 MGv/c2, as the data of, R. Erbe at al indicate. 2/2 USSR UDC 531 VINTOGRADOV, V. A., IVIN, S. PETROV, A.- S.. "Dynamic Balancing of Rotors Without:.a Compensation Systee' Tr. Ufim. Aviats. In-ta. [Works of Ufim Aviation Institute), 1972, No 38, pp 34-40 (Translated from Referativnyy.Zhurnal, Aviatsionnye i Raketnye No 12, 1972, Abstract No 12.34.117). Translation: A method is resented for dynamic balancing of rotors without P a compensatien.system, The method.utilizes the resul,ts of theoretical con- clusions, theoretical and experimental stiEdies of the dependences of the phase shift -angles of oscillations of supports of a iiinchine tool on the magnitude and location of imbalance. A-method is pre'sented for graphic determination of the imbalance in each~plane from the sigmals of sensors in the moving supports. 5 Figures; 2~Biblio. Refs., USSR UDC: 629-78.062.2 VINOGRADOV, V. I., MKOVLEV, V. 1. "Possibility of Using the Method of Frequency Charact(~ri sties for Situdy of Special Nonlinear Effects" Tr.. Mosk. Aviats.. In-ta (Works of Moscow Institute of Aviation], 1972, No 240, 53-61 (Translated from ReferativnyT Zhurnal Raketbstroyeni.ye, No 6, 1973, p p Abstract No 6.41.191, by E. R. S.). Translation: A method of harmonic linearization is tised to suidy the proper- ties of a nonlinear filter, the.input signal in which, -basses thrOLigh two independent channels; one of the channels forms the phase, while the other forms the magnittide of the signal, the outpit signal at the outpit of the filter being formed as the product of these signals. ~ The dynamic properties of the nonlinear portion of the filter are analyzed for the. fi-rst and third harmonies. It is demonstrated. that the:effectivejies-,~ of the filter cannot be determined by analysis of the~first harmonic alone. Vi USSR VD-%. 616.831-085-832.9-073-65 BUKOV, V. A., BOBKOV, 1. G., and,,, Laboratory of Pathological '6f Clinloal and Experimental Physiology and Experimental SurgeriP Sur ery,~Ministry of Health USSR 9 "Determination of Brain Temperature During; Coolin~ of Lh6 Head" Leningrad, Vestnik Khirurgii imeni I. I. Grokov, Vol 104, No 5, MaY 70, pp 113-114 Abstract; Clinical application of craniocerebral hypothermia requires a reliable, simple, and precise method of indirect determination of;t1he degree of cooling of the brain. Numerous experimental and clinical studies using simultaneous msasure- ments have demonstrated thAt tha temperature in the auditory canal wall near the tympanic membrane rlisters the temperature of the bpsal portion of the brain with a precision of - 0.4 degrees. The twiperaturg of the collebral cortex my simultaneously be 5 degrees (or nora) lowior, depewling c~n the.depth of surface hypothernia. Since this method is biMle.. and. praotica4y nontraumatiot it can be safely used in clinical practice.: 1 r 1/2 031 UNCLA5SIFfED 'PROCESSING DATE--090CT70 _.':-T4TLE-_DETERMINATlUN OF THE BRAIN TEMPEPLATURE IN CRANIOCEREBRAL -U- HYPOTHERMIA '-'_AUTH0R---(03)-t3UK0Vv V.A., BOBKOVi I.G.0, VINOGRADOV V 1. _'Cr JUNT RY OF INFO--USSR ;,SOURCE--VESTNIK KHIRURGII IMIENI 1. 1. GREKOVA, 19701 VOL 104o NR 51 pp -114 ,-'--A)ATE PUBLlSHEO--_----70 .',..._,SUBjECT AREAS--BLULCGICAL AND MEDICAL St'IENCES~ LINICAL M E DI C I NE TOPIC TAGS-CEREBRU14y HYPOTHERMIAr, C L ~:':CWTRGL 14ARK IiNG--N0 RESTR I CT IONS ._-DOCUMENT CLASS ~UNCLASSIFIED --UR/0589/70/1"/005/01131OL14 ..PROXY REEL/FRAME--1990/0577 STEP NO, ~CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0103792 2/2 031 UNCCASSIFIEb PROCESSING L)ATE--090CT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0108792 ABSTRACY/EXTRACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. 114 CLINICAL APPLICATIO"ll OF CRANIG HYPOTHERIMIA IT IS NECESSARY TO HAVE A RELIABLY SIMPLE AND PRECISE METHOD OF INDIRECT DETERMINA-TION.OF THE 'DEGREE OF THE BRAIN COOLING. AS-A RESULT OF EXPERIMENTALrAND CLINICAL srUDIES IT HAS BEEN DEMONSTRATED T14AT TEMPERATURE OF THE~AUDITORY CA INAL WALL NEAR THE TYMPANIC MEMBRANE REFLECTS TEMPEAATURE OF THE BASAL -BRAIN PORTIO1,4 WITH A PREC I SION UP~ TO PLUS OR MINUS 0~.40EGREES. 14HEREAS TEMPERATURE OF THE CEREBRAL CORTEX IS 5DEGREES AND MORE.LGWER fJEPENDING.ON THE DEPTH OF HYROTHERMIA., SINCE THIS METHOUIS SILMPLE AND NEARLY ATRAUIAATICo IY COULD BE WIDELY USED IN CLINICAL PRACTICE. FACILITY: LABORATORIll PATOFIZIOLOGI-I I-EKSPERIMENTALINOY KHIRURGII INSTITUTA KLINI CHESKOYl EKSPERIMENTALINOY KHIRUR GII KIN I STERSTVA .-.-lDk-AV00KHRA-NEN,lYlA -SSSR*, UNIC-LA-ScIlt- En 4 1 tz W USSR TJDC 615.217.24.015 YINQGR6WXI-V- A. and SPIVAKOVA, R. P'. ,Kirov Academy of Military Medicine, Leningrad "Rechanism of Action of Sympatholytics of the Guanethidine Series" Moscow, Farmakologiya i Toksikologiya, No 3, 1973, pp 273-277 Abstract: Following intravenous injection of cats with hemedine (1-N- (hexamethylenimino)-ethyl-2-guanidine (sulfate)], secretion of cate- cholamines, epinephrine in particular, by the adrenals increased the first 60 minutes but sharply-decreased within 72.to 96 minutes. The residual content of catecholamines in Cie adrenals was less than half that of the control at this time. The effect of the sympatholytic is attributed to exhaustion of the catecholamine reserv.e dueto depression of their synthesis and adsorption by the.nierve endin'sq. UsW VIROGRAD Ov. m. "Three-Dimensional Relativistic Equations Applied td So-me Three- Body. Theory Problems Moscow, Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 14,!No 5, 1971, 'OP 1091-1100 Abstract: Two areas of the Dlication of three-body equations lap are now known: the study ol" high-energy dispersion in a complex, weakly-bonded syste-ni, 3uc-.h as the deuteron, of the parameters of a three-body system.to explain nuclear interac 1-1 ions. U In-the first instance the Glauber fornula, frai;i nonrclativistic considerations, is used; in the second the Fiadde-ev ecuations areused. Since it. is im-partant to take into,account relativistic effects in the consideration of subatomic three-body problemz, the author discusses -nethods of solving such.relativistic equations. 'Using the ex-en-ple for sejarable appbmximat ions for the interaction potential in two- and t-hree-body problems, he Qualitatively ccm- pares the relativistic ands nonrelativistic equattl-ions in detemin- ing the energy of bonded statos. '1"he:-problem of relativist--c 1/2 3.00 A 46.16im-iZe. .212 tf -ilk 1~ R USSR UPC 66..074.7 KAZAINMEV,AE. I.,. Ural Polytechnical Institute W, -C Imeni Kirov "Interaction of Some Oxidants With'AV-17x6:Ani6n Exchan-e Resin" Ivanovo, IVUZ Khimiya i Khimicheskaya Tekhnoloffi.ya, Vol 13, No 9, 1970, pp 1294-1296 Abstract: The authors investigated the,dif'.ferences in interaction of such oxidants as potassium broraate4,hydrogen peroxide, ammonium per- sulfate and nitric acid with Vne strongly banic- anion. exchange resin All-17x6l It was found that when the a.nion w-change resin is treated with oxidant- solutions, there are gene 'rally thrilie processes which take place to varying degrees with the participitition of ionogenic groups: deamination, degradation and a,transition of part of the nitrogen to the "inactive' state. The addition:of nitric acid to is leads to a re- hydrogen peroxide and potassium bronate- solutio( duction in the deaminazion process as compared rilith processea of degradation and transition of nitrogen~to the "inactive" state. Raising the temperature has no effect on the type; of'change in the na-ure of functional groups. However,: in the case of hydrogen per- oxide there is an intensificatior. of the process of destruction of the copolymer macromolecule-1/1 -2/2 007 UNCLASSIFTED. PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSICN NO-AP0124623, -AdS,ITRACT"EXTR-ACT-W) GP-i)- ABSTRACT. PHYS. AND CHEM. ANAL. OF CATION EXCHANGE RESIN KU-2 (1) IN THE PRESENCE OF VARIOUS OXIDIZING AGENTS ~INDLCATED THAT THE EXCHANGE CAPACITY OF I DECLI10-:0 GUE TO DESULFONATION AND AS A RESULT OF INCORPORATION OF ON-BR9 A14D WATOAS INTO THE MACKMOL. THE GXIDJZING AGENTS.ATTACKEO:THE C-WBONOS OF CH SUB2 GROUPS 'D OXIDIZING AGENTS (AT -Es I A N TERTIARY C ATOMS* THE STRONGEST, 293DEGRE K WERE:l O.IM K SU82 CR SUB20 507 PLUS M HMO SUB3v 0.141 KBRO SUB3 PLUS M HNO SU83s. AND 0.1M (NH SUfi4)SUQ2- SU62!~SU86;.WHEREAS AT 353VEGREESK, 0.1M KBRO-SU83 PLUS M HIND SUB3~ANO~0:.IH W$UBZ 0 SUBZ~'WERE THE MOST F um.~ INST-i. IM. KIROVAL. FACILITYZ URAL, P60~ SVEROLOVSKe USSRS iWm )OCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED WXY REEL/FRAMF---1989/0929 STEP NQ--UR/0065/701015/00210034f'0036 C ACCESSMN NO--AP'0107458 UNCLASS l'FlEO Z/Z 013 Ui"ICLASS IF I ED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0107458 ~ASSTRACTIIEXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE MOVE MENT G FNCHAR GEO WATER DROPLETS SUSPENDED IN A HYI~ROCARBON f4lUEUM IN A: ;D.C. ELEC. FIELD, 4,ND THE EFFECT OF SALTS DISSOLVED IN WATtR ON THE MOY' E tM E P IT 6AS mv;:srI(;Al-EU. '~'A COMPARISON OF EXPTL. DATA FOR T14E RATE OF MOYEMENT OF CHARGE -rS GF A 0.4760 N NACL SOLN. WITH THE DRopLc -CAL COI RAT:Ev AS INFLUENCED BY 1HE RADIUS OF THE DROPLETt ISI PRESENTED's. UNCLASSIFIED UDC 66-674.7 ISZR KAZANT-SEV, YE. I., and VINOGRADOV, V M Ural Polytechnical Insti- ry.of Higher and Secondary tute imeni S. 14. Kirov, Specialized Education ARSSR: "Effect of Some Oxidizers on the Properties of~the Sulfocation :Exchange Resin Ku-211 Ivanovo, IQ,-imiya. i Khimicheskay 12hologiy Vol 12, No 1, 70, -a Told 59 Abstract; The paper concerns:the che2tical and physical methods of studying the cher-u-cal stability of pthe., KU-2 cationite to oxidizers. The treat, ox -ment of KU-2 with various idizers and its physico-chemical n oDerti es after treatment are, desc -ibed. An Inarlbase in the. tem- r Derature of the oxidizer solution induces consider&ble chan-ea in the basic charactoristics of the ionite. Treatanont with oxidizers causos a dron in the exch-Wo capacity with re ect to sulfo-groups F-P at. the expense of both desulfu--ation.and.inou:LcRi-~-*Lon of orygon, bromine, and nitrorron into tha~Btruoturo of tho,rezin. Tho prooonce of alcohol, ket.,one, and carb=yl groupa in oxid:Uer*-~treated ct-tionite specimens was establishod. It,is suspected tha-:ox-Idizers attack V 4 t~o C--H bonds of riethyleno rou-ps and tertiarv. aarbon atoms. Of all 112 USSR UDC~533.92i621-039.01 VINOGRADOVA, A. K. VINQ5UDOV 1! V4 P. and MOROZOV, 1..I. Z pressor" "Neutrons Eadiation in a Yagnetic,plasma Com- Leningrad, Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoy Fizikl, Vol 43, No 8, Aig pp 1637 1640 Abetracti A . -magnetic pl"na corapressor is a quasi-equilibrium.co-axial plasma accelerator. Previous: com ression system experiments had reported a neutron yield of 0.5 - 1 times 15 at an initial discharge.voltarge of 24kv and a discharge current of '050 ka. The experiments reportod in this article vsed significantly lower values and longer process t1mes, It was found that a yield or up to 4 times 105 neutrons was observed over a wide raftFe of deuterium gas pressures and condenser voltages. _ The temperature and-density of -the plasma in the zone of focus vas not high enoA-,h to pernit a noticeable intensity of D-D-temDerature" reactions, indIcating that the neutrons were produced moat probably by some unstable processes. The eyDerimental device contains a central electrode and ten peripheral electrodes. When the central electrode-vas negative,,~both the neutron arid. X-ray emission showed a series of unequal peaks I I when the central electrode was positive, both fornis of radiation bad a single, sharp peak. The radiation intensity also varied along, the axis of ~:.the electrodes. =IMAM NMI 00 e7a t try USSR UDC _r>417..5h.8. 8 1-4-66-093. 8 BIE-S.T1INS=, S. V., UT7 P I S'it ute of Inorganic Chemistry, A o and Physical iences o:f the ;irgiz SSR "Sunerheated Water as an Active Hydrolyzing Agent" F n' irgizSICOV May/Jun 71, PP 47-51 ru ze, IAN K SSR, No 31 Abstract: The authors eXamined the action of suDerheated water on eel ulose, a component of the tissues of plants, peat, and M pertly con-verted coal deDosits vvihich are extensively processed to obtain orpanic materials and 4,o extract valuable inor-'anic oomonontn (rare clenonts). it is shown thmil, the*rmal destruction in the Dresence of wator may lead to,intensive hy6z-olysis of cellulose to ~71ucose. It is calculated tht-t the -process of con- version of ceilulose to P.Sucose anhydride is accom'panied by absorntion of 5670 calories Der mole of levoglucos'an forned. It is f ou-nd "Llhat the n. a-m-,inum -iold of ~ glucose and f ornation of levoRlucosan tale -Dlace a-t. the critlical temnerature of vater (37400- -This indicates that the -orocess of high-temperature neid-free hydrolysis of cellulose goes through a stage of radical 112 UTDC 51" 9191 Y1 V VIra"i'l 01 , "A Bound.,., ry Value Problem for aSpecial Typ-, of Elliptical System" Minsk, DifTerentsial nyye Uravneniva, Uo. 7, vol. 7, July 1971, pp 1226-1234 Abstract: In the section o J~ the j ournal devoted to partial diif- ferential equations, this articleconsiders the system of equa- tions -b _j. - 21L P DIT + V Y _ k 3, F: W +B 3z where B is a unit matr izz and A,,ond B are co mtplex square ma- trices of order n, defined in asimply- conrje ct~,-d rr;.~gion D, vihile + P I U 7~ DY is asz-;um-d 'L; h a t, -he '10 eigellvalues of. matriy -re in;: ide ~-h~ a unit circle 1/2 Will USSR VINOGRADOV, V. S., Differentsial'Me Uravneniya, No 7,,vol. 7, July 1971, pp 1226-1234 ail The first equation is ar CoMpleXtfo-rM Of ac-)ecial type OiC system, considered in an earlier article (VollperL A. T. , Timady tem. ob-va, 10, Moscow, 1961, PP 111-67): and the second equatio-n. above determines its ellipticity. The proble.1m is to f ind `Uhose solu- tions of the first equation -,flhich, ath eboundary r of D, satis- fy the relationship Refewl the:matrix G being diagonal and F of the form G, diag ...$tT t where all Xa,> .0, and X,,,~ 0f Or s. Thpi author Ls connected with the V. A. Steklov 1-lathematical 'Institute. 2/2 4 64,1 1PHOW9 m"Wimm 1P M 3 IM 41i'm -.11 ink will 0 - I I I 1 "113 6 1 1,91 01 us9t uDC: 621-78:5314-8 AUENTSON, YE. G.,,~VINOGR~ADOV, ~V-V-,~WMOV, L. M. and SYCHEV, YE. N., Perm State Unive rsity *7he Effect of Ultrasound on the High-Temperature Aging of B169 Grade Steel" Moscow, Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedeniy, Chernaya Uetalllurgiya, No 4, 1973, 342-145 Abstract: The authors study the effect of ultrasound Qn the carbide formation and state of the F,169 grade austenit6 steel (0.48 percent C, 0.27 percent Si, 0.42 percent Mn, 0.015 percent P, 0.02D percent 3, 13.23 percent Cr, 13.30 percent Ni, 0.39 percent Mo, and 2.27 percent 17) during its hi&h-te=erature aging process. Billets from this arade of steel were hold'at 1215 C in' a salt ba-th for one hour --and cooled in water* Specimens were turned from these billets 10 mm, in diameter and 210 = long. These were subjected to~ultrasound with an amplitude within an antinode shift of 15 microns at 700 and 7500C for 15., 30j 60j 90,, and 120 minutes with subsequent cooling in water. Control specimens were subjected to the same heat treatment but without ultrasound. Maximal stress c~ross sections of control and specimens subjected to ultrasound were -subjected to x-ray,and electron micro- scope studies. The results show that processing B1069 grade steel with ultrasound during its high-temperature aging leads to the development of a dislocation type atructure in the mairix. To this is related, the more'intense granulation of the W W IM110v 0 S. S.1 iand ~YAWMNG, S. A6 Leningrad "On the Relationship Between an Electro'eacephalogram and Various Types of Memory Under the Influence of Anizil" Mosco w, Zhurnal Vysshey Nerynoy peyatel.snos tJ. imeni It P. Pailloval Vol 21, YY-D 6. JJov/Dec 71, pp 1,22371-t-229 Abstracts Two-, three-, and five-milliggram doses of anizil, were administered intr=uscularly to a group of dogs and cats, 'Rthin 5-10 ninutes after the injection of the drug, which is known to block the brain's' cholinore-ce-DtorS, the EEG's of all the animals exhibited slow, high-anipllviude I-faves, simliar to those that occur during natural sleep. These am-izil-Induced changes werze- accompaniea by loss of zhort-termimage~,meaory and lo:3,i of prolonged retention of current information and consequent inability -to loaxii. The animals re- gained their short-term zera-ory within 54 houxs, at the.same time that the blockade of the chohnoreceptols deased,. and the EECts; *'roturned to normal. Simple, stable conditioned reflexes, involving long-tei-,a moi-tory, -were disrupted for only about 4 hours, although the moxe. complex alinentary motor typr-% were disrupted for 24-J48 hours. These disturbances were caused by the indirect Interference of amizil in the zatabolisra:of biogenic arAnes.,Tarticularly -catecholamines. J/Z1 70 USSR UDC:. 669.189:621.746.7.001 BORISOV, V. T., i--RADQ1Z__NZ_ DUK-11IN, A. 1. ,1-WOKIIIN, A. 1. , MATVEYEV, YU. YE'._, �5 JKOLOV, L A. and SHISIMOV, V.~~ T. , (Ibscow) "Applicability of the Quasi-Equilibrium Two-Phase Zone Theory to the Description of Ingot Crystallization!! Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii nauk SSSR' Hetally, no 6,. Nov-Dec 71, pp,104-109 Abstract: Increasing the require0ents on metal quality aecessitates more intimate knowledge and in-depth analysis of the finr; points of alloy crystallization phenomena. Noteworthy, in this case, is the study of the quasi-equilibrium two-phase zone of an alloy --!- a.mgion in which thermal, diffusion,and other processes accompanying the formaVion of the ingot's structure take place. This atudy is ati attempt to test tile applicability of the theory to computer analysis of~the-crystallization:of a metal ingot. Described is a crystallizer designed for the study of thermal conditions in the two-phase zone of an ingot for crystallization at both low and high cooling rates. A mathematical arrangement. is proposed characterizing a crystallizing ingot in terms of the now theory, The~corralation of the theoretical results with the experimental data indicates that the proposed 1/2 VS; S R. UDC.- 621.3ig-4 KOVAL-EV, K. S., ZHIK--1TARE1-V,, Yu. V., VOOGRADOV, V. V., Y'--7S-VY'-PVA, I. A., ne. BOMNOVA, P. PAVIX-E-MA, G. "Some*Singularities of Heat Treatment in the Production of Capacitor Foil Fxom TantaluxP Nauchn. tr. N.-i. i proyektn. in-t redk6met. -Drom-sti. (Scientific Works of the Scientific Research and Design Institute of the.Rar-- Metals Industry), 1971, 32 May 71, Abstract No 5V320N p 71-76 (from RZh-Radiotekhnika, No 53 'J.'ranslation: An investigation is made into the heat treatarent of thin foils in connection with sol&.ion of the problem of malking j,dC:n-qua1i-ty cnc:pacitor foij, from t=talurl. Three illustratioa's., one table, biblio:graphy of three es- Res ume. . .11 1. t a !, ~ 11 ` - :'. .. I .~ :~ ~l;--___' .112 027 Ut.-CLASSiFIED PqdCtSSIt4G DIATE-230C170 .JITLE-Mi-CHOLINUREACTIVE STRUCTURES:OFTHE Bil A I N: A NO CONDITIUNED ACTIVITY _u_ AUTHOR-.(04)-KRYL0Vr S-S.? VINOGRADOVy:~V#V-i KALAI[Nrv S.A.j SNEGIREV, YE.A. .rCU';,jTRY of I-NF'3--USSR SOU.RCE--ZHURNAL VYSSHEY NERW40Y DEYA TEONOSTI, 1970, VCL 20v NR 3t PP .541-546 ~:_DATE PUBLISHED ---- -- 70 S UBJ ECT AREAS-510LOGICAL ANO-MEDICAL 'SCIENCES .,JOPIC "TAGS-CONDITIONED REFLEXv WERVOUS SYSTEM 0RUG4 ELECTROEINC EPHAL OGR A PHY tCHOUNOLYTICt NOREP IN EP iir4 I NE ~-'CDNTROL RARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS ;AOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIE0 '~AOXY, REEL/ FRAKE-1 997/19 24 STEP NO--UR/0247/7i,)10201003/0541/0546 _t IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120573 UNCLASS, IF LEO, 027 UNCLASSI FIED PROCESSING DATE-230CT70 -CIPC Acc-ESSION NO-AP0120573 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-W! G-P-0- ABSTRACT A~INGLE ADMIliqlSTRATION UF AIMYZIL i5 ANK) 40 MG-KG) PREVENTED ARECOLYNE,TREMOUR M RATS AND ARECOLYNE AND GALANTOMINE EEG DESYNCHRONIZATION IN CATSt AND EVOKED UlN'MOTIV4'TED MOTOR MPLETE OISAPPEAKANCt OF CO. DITI" NED RIEFLEXES ANO A EXCITATIONv A COc I N 0 E D11MINISPED NOPADRENALINE CONTENT IN THE RATS BRAIN. WITH REPEATED 11 T OR EXtITATION, DISTURBANCES OF DAILY INJECT[PNS OF CHOLI'-O.LYTICS, IHE MOT COIND IT I ONED REFLEXES AND THE DECREASE IN NGRADRENALrNE LEVEL IN THE SRAIN GRADUALLY WEAKENED, AND WERE NOT MANIFEST~ AT ;-ILL CN THE 9TH TO 10TH DAYt ALTHOUGH EACH SUCCESSIVE AMYZIL INJECTION EXERTED THE USUAL ACTION OF THE CATS' EEG AND CLlPLETELY.PF%EVE,N'TE0 DESYPiCNRONIZATION REACTION IN.CATS AND TREIMOUR IN RATS. AT THE SAME TIME, IN THE CASE OF A FULL BLOCKADE OF THE M-CHOLINORFCEPTORS OF THC BRAIN INEW CONDITIONED REFLEXES COULO NOT BE ELABORATE[)'** TLHE DATA'OBrA-~,NED SHOW T'TA'T THE ACETYLCHOLINE.TRANSMITTER SYSTEM IN THE BRAIN UNITS IS OF A CONSIDERABLE SIGNIFICANCE FOR MEMORY FORINAT[ON't BUVIS NOT NECESSARY FOR THE PERFORMANCE OF CONDITIONED REACTION5 ALREADY FORMED&'~. FACILITY: INSTITUTE OF TOXICOLOGYr USSR MINIS~TRY OP HEALTHP LENINGRAD. UNCLASSIFIED 212 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCES SING DATE--090CT70 G-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0109170 .-ABSTRAC T/EXTRAG I- (U) GP-0 ABSTRACT. 1 N SURGERY ON BILE: PASSAGES IN 15 ;PATIENTS -THE AUTHOR HAS EMPLUYED~AN EX'TERNAL TRAN$HEPATIC: DRAINAGE OF THE-COMMON 61LE DUCT. SUCH TECHNIC OF, DRAINAGE OF BILE PASSAGES u4AaLEI) TO PERFORM EXTERNAL ,HUt,,TljNG OF 61LE AF'TEq CHOLEDOCHOT01,4Y WITH A BURIED SUTURE, TO CONSTRUCT BILE OUTFLOW ANASTOMOSES'ANDTO INCISE THE VATFRIS PAP I LLA. THE TECH441C OF EXTERNAL. DRAINAGE, OF THE COMMON BILE DUCT AND USE f-UR :61LE SHUNTING IS DESCRIBE).: F.AC I L I TY,: KAFEDAY I-'- .~:KHIRURGII.UNIVERSETETA DRUZHdY NARODOV IM. PATRISAILUMUMBY, MOSCOW. li NG Lt, 551 F I r; 0 ------- 7*C6NTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS CL AS S--Uf,*,CLA SS IF I ED -PROXY REEL/FRAME--1983/1230 STEP NO--UP/O!*131/70/000/00410OT9/0085 .-CIRC. ACCESSION NO--AP0054125 UNC L A 5 s I F I E 0 2/2 019 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 CJRC ACCESSION NO--AP0054125 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. IN THE SURGICAL TREATMENT OF BENIGN DISEASES OF THE BILIARY TRACT CHOLEDUCHODUODENOSTOMY DURING THE LAST YEARS FIND EVER GREATER ATTENTIONs: THIS TECHN[QUE WAS EMPLOYED IN 150 PATIENTS OURING 410 OPERATIONS-ON,THE COI-IMIDN.61LE DUCT OUT OF THE TOTAL 1300-SURGICAL INTERVENTIONS FOR CHOLECYSTITIS AND ITS COMPLICATIONS,CHOLEOOCHOLITHIAS~IS,,PANCREATITIS. STENOSIS OF THE PAPILLA OF.VATERv STENOSIS,OF THE CHOLEDOCHUS-SERVEO AS INDICATIONS TO THIS OPERATIONS. IN 141.PATfENTS SUPRADUODENAL AND IN 9 PATIENTS JRANSDU ODENAL CHOLEDOCHODUODENOSTOMY~'4AS.PERFORMr--[). COROANCE CHOLEDUCHODUODENOSTOMY SHOULD BE CARRIED OUT IN AC' WITH STRICT INDICATIONS DEPENDING ON THE,CHARACTER OF PATHOLOGICAL CHANGES AND ON .-CONDITIONS OF THE GPERATION, THE MAIN OF WHICH SHOULD BE THE FEASIBILITY OF FORMING A WIDE ANASTOMOSIS. THIS IS ACHIEVED-BY A SPECIAL OPERATIVE TECHNIQUE PROPOSED BY THE AUTHORS. IN,150 PATIENTS THE LETHALITY A40UNTED TO 7-3 PER CENT OF CA SES. AIGOOD REMOTE RESULT WAS OBSERVED IN 76~ PER CENT, ; SATISFACTORY, IN 2L PER CENT AND UNSATISFACTORY IN 3 PER CENT OF CASESo IN RESPECTIVE INDICATioNs AND, PROOFP OPFRATIVE TECHNIOUE CifOLF-D,'.ICHOOU(.(JE-,-iOSrO~MY Yl ELDS G0110 IMAE01 ATE AND kr-mofE RE SOLTS, ANO SHOULD c3E CONSIDEREU AS A NORMAL M l' I I- jCk. INtl::PVENtlOAJ ON ME 100 op SURG BILIARY TRACT. UNC LAS S. I F, L-0, USSR UDC:,&53.082.5 VODOP YA11OV, L. K. KOPAITEV, V. D.? and VDT0rG11 e. A- "Automation of Optical Measurements.from Points in the Far Infrared Region" Vloscow, P-ri-bor-v i tekhnika eksperimenta,.-No 1, 1973, pp 206-208 Abstract: Although the method of, optical measua7ements in tile far infrared region involving point-b2f-point spectrum recording is the -most accurate, it is also the most tedious. ~The authors of this -paper therefore present a system for makine quch zea2urements auto- matuically. As the simplified draiiing shows, the equipment consista of a diffraction grating that in.tuxned preciaeiy~to a given angle, a cryostat.that periodically enters the lightlbeam for a time --nd carries the srecinen, and a,slide; which interxiipts, the be,:,_ia for Zero si&nal measurements. A dotailed explanation, of the equipMent ',.:z ope- ration is gliven. It u-9ed periods'.of 1.2, M~ 7.0-, and 14.0 mix, for perforai-ng its recording cycle.p. Two factorc vere considered in Setting these periods: the measurement accu.r cy, which improves with increasLia spectral recording, 4;~-*e b1i each phn5e, and the total. time for recording the whole.speatrUM.. V1 13( UDC 621.3.087.5 USSR Abstract: A receiving and recording system for operation of high-resistance photoreceivers is described. The system is constructea completely from tran- sistors, and in order to reduce the noise level the imput stage executed from a field-effect transistor is placed in a cryostat. The noise reduced to the input is 10-7 volts/hertzI12 with a resisrance of the bolometric. element of 5.106 ohms at 5* K. The threshold sensitivity attained ~is 10-12 watts/hertzl/2 for S = 105 volts/watt and c - 1. The circuit diagram'of the amplifying channel, a 'requ cy the block diagram of t1,-,, receiving-and recording devIce nd the J. en - amplitude characteristic of the narrow band amplifier are pTesented and analyzed. Synchronous detection of the~signal is realize&by a-Lechanical breaker using the RP-5 polarized relay; to decrease the delay time of the relay, its winding is fed rectangular pulses. The reference voltage for the synchronous detector is taken from the photoresistor.with subsequeht amplification and shaping. The switching time for the contacts does not:exceed 1-2 milliseconds. The signal from the svnchronous detector goes to two Rr. integrators with step regulation of the effective pass band of the amplifier fron I to 7.10-3 hertz. 1/2 0( ~ USSR "RADOV, V DIOG Ye. A.; IRISOVAY N. A.; KOZLOVA G. V. (Lebedcrv Physics Institute, USSR Academy "rx Sciances MOSCOW) "Birefringence of Crystalline QuarL -z in the Millimeter R~~ge of the Spectrum" Leningrad, Solid State Physics; November, 1970s- pp 3155-9~ ABST A method of measuring the birefripgonce of aniscbroDic media in the subni '13dr-ter range of the apectrvin which takes into nceyant intcTferenco phenomena ip*ide the sa=le is described, An equation is nbtiJ ned w uch de- terranes the relation of the phase shift A+ between ordinary unusu.-J. wavc an(j passing through a plane-parallel plate of an aniootrapic dielectric. A quasi- optical apparatus for moasuring birefringence:in the 110-1150 U3_lion-cycio range was devised. MleasLrament of the phase shift A+ wash 6,-=ied out with the &W of a compensator consisting of two one-diiionsional reticular elc~nwnts ii-bh fine, mutually perpendicular Twires. The birefringewe of ~niataral. -.v1stal-line quartz was n easured on t1he apperatusO and the fonm;ing value.-.- Alor the refrac- .,tive Indi6es no and ne were obtained; no 2 -10+0-03, ne 2-14+0-03, 6n a ne-no 0.0477;L0.0003 Z/Z 031 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0106691 -fA8STRACT/EXTRAC,T--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A, METHOD 1,S DESCRIBEU FOR INVESTIGATION OF THE ELECTROOPTICAL EFFECT IN THP SU6 Mli RANGE. FORMULAS WERE OBTAINEL) WHICH OESr_FIBk THE VARIAT 'TON OF THE AMPLITUDE AND THE, PAH.SE OF THE WAVE AT THE EXPENSE, OF JHE ELECTROUPTICAL EFFECT IN A PLANE PARALLEL PLATE. THE REFRACTIVE.INDEX (IN 5Va0) ANO DIELEC. LOSS TANGENT (TAN DELTA) WERE MEASUREOFOR THEICONVEINTIONAL.WAVEr AND THE NONLINEAR:COEFF. R SUB22 FOR LINBO SuB3a :TiiE FOCLOwING VALUES WERE OBTAINED FOR.THESE PARAMFTERS.' 'N, SUB.0 EQUALS. 7.Z. ~PLUS OR MINUS 0.2, TAN -ATIVE3, AND,R DELTA-EQUALS (?.5 PLUS OR MINUS 0.5) TIMES 10 PRIME NEU SUB22 EQUALS (10 PLUS OR MINUS,Z) TIMES 10 PRIME NEGATIVElU CM-V. -ALL THE MEASUR.EMENTS WERE CARRIED~bUT-A`T~12_6-132 GHZ*;~T. FACILETY: F 1 Z I NST. IM, LEBEDEVAp MOSCOMf~USSRO:: p ------------- UNCLASSIFIE0 MUM mom 7 USSR ux.- 62i.317.7T KRAVCH.E!NKO, S. A. VINOGRADOV Ye. V. Precision Installation'for Checking Extra Low Frequency Phase 14eters" Moscow, Otkrytjya, Izobreteniya, Pramyshlennyye Obraztsy, Tovaxnyye Znaki, 'No 6, Feb 72, Author's Certificate No, 328399, Division G, filed 24 Aug 70, published 2 Feb 72 p 14o Translation. This Authorls Certificatbe introduces a precision instal- lation for checking extra low -frequency phase meters~. The unit contains a.stable voltage source which feeds two identivil channels, made up of series-connected circular phase shifters,. a frequen&I divider (with a scaling factor of, say, 36), and a mixer with lov-f~requency filter. The device also contains switches connected to an electronic coun-ting fre- quency meter. As a distinguishing feature of the pat ent, In order to improve precision in phase setting, the installation J.i equipped vith a single-channel vernier digital phase-measuring device,,,made up of an elec- trcuic counting frequency meter whose higb-frequency I..=ut is connected to~ an output of the stable voltage source with frequen.cy te-ji times that of the pow-or snpply for the phase. shiftdrs One-siggal input of the fre- 112 KRAVCHENKO, S. A., VINOGRADOV, Ye. V., USSR Author's Certificate No 328399 quency --eter iss connected througha switch to the other outputs of the stable volt-age source with frequencies vbich 4we multiples of 360-10n. The second signal input is connected'through another switch to the output terminals, to the outputs of the fre4uency divider, end through a mixer to the outputs of the phase -shifters.t k digital frequency synthesizer is used as the stable voltage source., 2/2 159 USSR UDC 661.665.1:621.313.538.4 ZELIKSON, YU. If., RESIIETOV, YE. P., FLID, B. D., VINOG%kDOV. YU. A. '!Study of Silicon Carbide Electrodes for an Open-Cycle Magnetohydrodynamic Generator" V sb. 'Magnitogidrodinam. metod polucheniya elektroeneigii (Magnetohydrodynamic Method of Obtaining Electric Power-call6ction of works), %Typ. 3, Moscow, Energiya, 1972, pp 98-110 (from RZh-Ayiatsionnyye i rLketnyy dvigateli otdel'- nyy vypusk, No 11, Nov 72, Abstract No 11-34.149) Translation: ResultS are prenented from a study of silicon carbide electrodes in a dtwice simulating the Conditions in na open cycle magnet0h)-drodynamic generator channe-1. Dan are preoented on the affeeL. Of: the. plat:,wa composiLion on the nature of the electrode proresseti. A study wrin madc- of the effect of the potassium additive concentration on.tbe shape of the volt-ampere and sound- ing,characteristics. The relation is presented.for t1je cathode drop as a func- tion.of current at different potassium concen.trations:in the flow. It:was established that vitn a potassium concenfta .tion of 0.3% andmore there are in practice no cathode drops on the siliconicarbide~elecmdes,at T el > 1,3500 C. A relation was found for the limiting distributed discharge currents as a func- tion of the electrode temperatures. The experimental values of these currents 1/2 USSR ZELIKSON, YU. M., et al., Magnitogidrod,inam. matod polucheniya elektroenergii, vyp. 3, Moscow, Energiya, 1972,,pp'98-110 ir. the electrode temperature range of.1,350-1,500* C coincide satisfactorily with the ones cal.,.ulated by the Richardson,formula for A-120 amps/(cm2,deg2) and Oeff = 2.7 electron volts, The dependence of thr:t mean erosion rate of the electrodes on the temperature and current density wads defined. It was demon- strated that at an electrode temperature of 1,5000 ~C,the erosion does not in practice depend on the current-density.. There are 10 i1lustrations and a 13-entry bibliography. 2/2: 87 USSR UDC: 8. T4 VINOGRAWV, Yu. A.. IORDANSKIY M. A. "Machine Analysis of Computer Circuits" -bernetics-collect ion of works), V sb. Pi~obl. kibernetiki (Problems of Cy 24j moscow, "Nauka", 1971, pp 147-16o (from~RZh-Kibernetika, No 4, Apr 72, Abstract No 4V520) Translation: An attempt is madeto bring the engineering and mathematical approaches to synthesis of large discretely.functionin' systems closer to- gether. Taking finithed engineering,structures as an.exam-ple (four com- puter circuits), light is shed on the -peculiarities of~.engineering models, and an evalvation is made of the success'of engineering,methods of syn- thesis, trends in synthesis, etc. Authors' abstract. U55R V Yu. A. Mau 'TinIte-dimensional Models of Circuits wfth~ biscrete Fu~ctioningll Probl. Kibernetiki [Problems of Cybernetics- --.;-Collection of Works], No. 23, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1970, pp 59-o7l (Traiislated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika,.No. 4, April, 1971, Abstract. No.,4 V485)., Translation: The problem of modeling of arbitrary functions with k--valued ftmctions is studied. Necessary and~sufficient conditioni; are deterni'dned for existence of models for limited, continuous functions o variable. It wam is demonstrated that if a function has 4 model.- at least one model functioh is contained either in P2 or in P3(pi is thes6t Qf.alllfunctions ofi-valued logic). 12 2t ULC 047) BASIC SUPS IN T1W DENT-LOMUZI W-11YDROLOGY Q;1? hZ-TEMVLOGY 11; LV-Aicesr= Zi- 1,~ [Article by itead of the Administration of tho 1;ydrometecrolorical Sexvilcz~ of the.Kazak65S."..,~. T. 11 zuys~nov. 1;octor of Technical Sciences T Meadow, Netcor~~i a 0 i7r Russian. No 12, 1972, ivrtatLta -,I~, 1972, pp"94-9 ThIq-o;t;1-21c conta .ins a discuraitin. of the. growth, dcvmlqj)nLz-.t 41114 thn.mo4Acn. level of research and *perativa work of Kazakh meteorologists. nrid hydrorwiteorologictil &cfenca Its%V de-welene'l intansel:f,itw FixaMetan sin%:e the 1930's with tha,organizatioix of th-e.L74rv-- meteorological conatittom and the Uydrovatearolegical-inatitute, ~ V~.flrrt chairman of the hydromotoorologLcal conmitttso,waa professor V. V. Kelletv.=. At present tho,admIni"tratI*n of the,hydrometeorologicat*$6i~%*ice of the r to c 7t- KoxiAh SSR is One of the lax;fisk USSRr n3ja the Kajakh $ i t, , in the I se arch Ins titutejs,the~tAntor,of hyd rove taorolog]. cal aciazcv~ in Lazaklistall lutd the head sci"tifit researth Instituto.in the %;aion with Tespact.to pr--,b- loma,of mud flows wd hydromttorological servicing of saittal Uni~m ~ its vux-; hvXjnnjaj,: J%Xdrology and. rwto6rolosy havo 4evU1*ji-,d I= the RepublieAu-nocordarita with,the proltl*m of'hydrovat;1orointcal altrvic'n; of the national ecou*v *f the Republic, The scientific raseatch ol --cat ttrd wit-1 mainl3t of na applied nature. Li 1926-1927. the Main "hysics Observatory find ommilzed ~,,itiloon obsorvctiona'In Almw-Ata, Gwr'yev. Kzyl-Ord, and Samipalatinpk. t1wse obsurvatiana becatea widespruad. In 1936 regular baso obsorvaticran ;;ere started In Alc-.4-Ars which were.p4rformed for 15 years and pumtte4 a torce-dz *, of the intensity of atmospheric turbulence and vertical excItittips to be obtainee. At the end of the saw yearv the first' radiosonde was 141WACILC(i In AIC.1-AZO b7 P, A. Holthanov. Radiooondc observations which provided a poverfull mitans of SnAlydilt Of atmospheric conditions for the mynapticians and acroloftlats tegar. to develop broadly in the Kazakhstan network :In the second half of tht 1930's. Tito rapid development of various branches of the national ecouu--y wnd transportation urgently required aervicing vith.synoptic forecasts alcz; WWI 110 USSR UDC:629.7.024.14 VIUMADOL Yu -1 KLYUYEV, Yu. I., f1stress-Strain State of a Cylindrical Envelope Under Concentrated Loading" Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedeniy, Mashinostroyeniye, No 11, Nov 73, pp 5-9 Abstract: The problem mentioned in the tile is studied on the basis of moment theory. The purpose of the numerical solution is to produce the desired quantities with satisfactory accuracy, foi- which purpose a maltrix method of successive approximations is used. Using the angular coordinate in the plane of transverse cross sections, the solution is constructed in the forn of trigonometric series. A system of ordinary differential equa- tions is pToduced with respect to length of the onveAoIje, and is solved numerically. The external concentrated forces and moments axe expanded into trigonometric series with respect to the angular coordinate and then considered under the conditions of contact o' the sections of the envelope. During the numerical solution, the length of th-~! envelope -is divided into several sections, for each of which a system of equations is written in matrix form. VDC:1532.526 USSR VINOMADOV, Yu. M. "Friction and Wear of 1,16dified.Metal Treniye i Iznos Modifitsire-vannykh Metallov (Englisk'Version Above], Moscow, NauKa Press, 1972, 151 pages. Translation of Annotation: This book is dedicated to methods of combating the wear of parts of machines in friction by chemicallmodification of their surfaces, enrichment of tile surface layers with sulfides, selenides, tellu- rides and chlorides. Thernlogra-phic analysis -is used to determine the most effective chemi- cal compounds and processing temperatures and it is determined that in order to achieve a positive effect it is necessary to lichieve a chemical interaction between the modifying elements and the metal treated. Formulas aTe. developed for salt baths for sulfiding, sulfocyani(ling, seleniding and telluriding. The structure of the modified surfaces is studied using.chemical, 'h d pci- x-ray-structural, electronographic-and metallographic aialysi.s. 1 0 e I dence is illustrated between various str~uctural compono,~nts of the modified layorand its wear resistance. Radioactive isotopes are,used to study the kinetics of wear of modi fied surfaces in the process of friction.~ The.existence,of "regeneration" of the modified layer into the depth of the.metal as the surface wears is 1/4 USSR UDC 532.526 -VINOGRADOV, Yu. M., Treniye i I znos Modif-itsirova~inykh::iNictallov, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, 151 pages. established. The influepce of surface modification of metals on friction and wear is studied under laboratory conditions on machines and.under.production conditions on various parts of nachines. The boundari6s of applicability of the method of modification and its effectiveness as 'functions of friction conditions are established. The experience gained in the application of methods of modification of metal surfaces in domestic and foreign practice in various branches of industry is described. Instructive naterials are:pre5ented on the techno-- logy of modification of metal surfaces and the application of these pro- cessing methods. a The book is designed for scientific and enginecring-Lechnicil workers at scientific research institutes and machino-building plants, involved in problems-of wear control and machine durability. 19 Tables;.38 Figures; 246 Biblio. Refs. TABLE or, CONTENTS Introduction 3 The Roll of Chemical Compounds in, Metal Friction 4 Technology of Modification of Metal: Surfaces 13 2/4 USSR UDC S32.526 VINOGRADOV,-Yu. M., Treniye i- Izncs Modifitsirovannykh Metallov, Mos cow, Nauka Press, 1972, 151 pages. Selection of Active Chemical Cor mpounds and Determination -of ~the Temperature of Their Interaction~with Metals 13 the .,Influence of Various Matters Recipes for Salt Baths and on their Effectiveness 18 Determination of the Probable~Course of R6actions 26 Morphology of1lodified Layers 30 Chemical Co osition of Modified Layers 30 Structural Components of Modffied.,Laym a d Their Significance n in. Friction 35 Firieti or Regeneration of Modified Layers.During 42 Methods of Testing Modified Wtal Sutfaces-.for Frictiori and Wear 51 -on Friction and Ifear Influence of Modification of Xetal:Surfw~es 61 8u ~ 11* Anti-scratching Proporfies:-4f,Modfi6di r ces: Influence of.-Modification Of S, 6c":, t I ur a es,on Coefficient- of Friction 69 Study of Fear Resistance of Modified S fates ur 77 'Study of Modified Surfaces Duri.ng'uFriction~,in Corros.i~,e Media 83 Use of.-Methods of Modificatim of Surfaces Abroad, 88 Experience in the Application of.Chemical4lodification in the:USSR 106 3/4 USSR 532.526 VINOGRADOV, Yu. M., Treniye i Iznos ModifitSiTovannykh Metallov, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, 151 pages. Practical Recommendations on the Application of Methods of Chemical Modification 123 Basic Salt Baths for Chemical Modification 123 Technology of Chemical and:,Heat.Treatment 124 ~Testing the Composition of Sait -Baths 128 ent of.the,Compositi*iv-Of Salt'Baths 130 Ad j us Ln quality Control of Modified Surfaces~. 132 132 Safety Rules Aica of ADPlication of Selection of Modification Niethods 134 Cost'Ok Piocessing w-ith.Various Methods of Modification 13S Conclusions 137 Bibliography 138 4/4 68 USSR UDC 629.78.533.1 VIYOGRADOV, YU. V., GRAUZDr_V, V.,N.,,TALANTOV,, A. V. "Effect Iof the Turbulence Intensity on.,the )-fixing Processes of Wake for Different:VelociLy Ratios" V sb. Teoriya i praktikaszhiganiya gata (Theory and Practice of Gas Combustion -collection of works), No 5, Leningrad' Nedra, 1972,,pp 28-33 (from RZh-Rake- tostroyeniye,otdel'ly lo 12.41.114) y vyyusl,, No 12, Dec 72, Abstrac~. N Translation: Studies were made of the eff ect of the initial. turbulence in- y ra- tensity on the mixing of isothermal.wakes.-An.a.closed flow with velocit tios from It - 0 to M = 5. Descriptions of the experiM6.nt and the experimental equipveat are presented. There~are 2 illustrations an& a 5-.entry biblio~ graphy. 14 USSR 4. UDC 621.372.837.3 vl~~~V, YU. V., GRISIIMOOVSKIY,~ V. A. "Electrically Controlled Superhigh-Frequency Comutator" Hoscow, QP r IzobretLniya,.PromvshlennXye Obrazt9y_, TovarnyXe Znaki, No 16, K_ytiya 8 May 70, atent No 27 le&17--Feb 67 Translation: This Author's Certificateintroduces a two-position, two-dir6ction electrically controlled superhigh-frequency comutator.containinf, slot bridges, circulators and a mutual phase converter-, It:is distinguished by the fact that in order to improve reliability, decrease~the Magnitudi'~ of the consumed: current and aimplify tha control circuit,'the phase--converter(O-180) is connected to four slot bridges via circulators. q USSR ZELICHENOK, B. Ym. Candid-te of Technical Sciences; VAMIAVSKIY, 1. M., and VI4QWa=U_jA."OI Orsko-Khalilov Metallurgical Combine "Shock Resistance of 17GlS Sheet Steel. at Low Temper lature s! ~Ioscow, Stal', No 2, Feb 71, pp 171-173 Abstract: This article is a-continuation of an earlier article written by the same authors anti published-inithe journal named above (Ho 6, 1966, pp 5,43-545) in which dicey examined the effect of the chemical composition of IMS steel, designed for manufacturing gas,piping ofJarge diameter, on its strength under shock at temperatures~of front -40 to;,-600C. Curves plotted for the freq,~iency distribution ofthe metal's s~tock resistance show them to follow the normal law*, The steel alloyed-J.si a 400-ton furnace had a slightly lesser shock resistance than the steel manufactured in a furnace of lower capacity due, probably, tothe 0.002-0.003% higher con- tent of sulfur. The effect of this factor was investigated. Alt3o investi- ~of the steel; it gated was the effect o~ manWese.on,th.e shock,riesistan e,- was found that at -40*C the effect.was negative, whereas mt--60* it was positive. 49 MUCellahems USSR UDC 621.771.23 ZELICHENOK, B. Yu., VINOGRADOVA, A& ME DEV, V. V., 1,IIUL'KO, G. N., DVF and KATRICRENIKO, 11. P. "Factors Affectinit the Expenditure of Metal in'Sheet~ Rolling" Moscow, Stal', No 2, Feb 71, pp 139-142 Abstract: This article reports on mathematical and atatistical analyses made at the Orsko-Khalilov Metallurgical Combine of the factors determin- ing variations in sheet steel.lengths. Personnel of the plant have also computed the probability of obtaining'ardered sheet 1~'ngths so that they can make an optimal choice of alab-weights fortheir type-2800 thick-sheet mill. The finished sheets of IIGIS steel are 11.5 mm-thicL-~, 1.88 meters wide, and 12.1 meters long. To suit the welding proceidures at the Chelyabinsk Tube-Rolling Plant to which,they~are sent to be:welded into tubes of 1220-mm diameter for cartying-g",'however, ~Jie Ie4thS of these sheets may be 11.9, 11.5 or 11.3 t~eters.~ 1 The article coffers, formulas and statistical data fox, campurin&the, prope-r.00'et length4' aad,other produc- tion,parameters. a II I USSR UDC 333-gas621-039-01 YINOGFAMVA. A. Ka, VI-NOGRADOV, V. P., and MOROZOV, A.J"~ ."Neutron Radiation in a. Magnetic Plasma Compressov, Leningradq Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoy Fisiki, Vol 431 q N o8, Aug 73, pp 1637 16,40 lbstract: A magnetic plasma compressor is a quasi-equllibrium,co-axial plasma accelerator. Previous compression system experiments had reported a neutron yield of 0.5 - I times 109 at an initial dis-chaxre voltage of 24kv and a discharge current of 650 ka. The experiments~reporteei inthis article used significantly lower values and lonaer process times. It ims found that a yield of up to 4 tineo 105 neutrons was observed over.a wide ran~re of deuterium gas pressures and condenser voltages. The temperature and denalty of the Plasma In the zone of focus was not high enough. to permit a notiveable'. Intensity of D-D "temperature". reactions, indicating that, the, neutrons: were produced most probably by some unstable DrocesSes. The eNperimental device contains a central electrode and ten peripheral electrodes. When the central electrode was-negative, both the neutron and-X-ray emission showed a series.of:unequal peaks; when'the central electrode was positive, both forms off radiation had a, single sharp peak, The radiation AntensIty also varied a1orkgr the axis of.the'electrodes. 19841310 1112 022 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 ...T:JTLF--EFFECT OF HIGH PRESSURE ON THE CRYSTALLIZAT.[ON OF ARSENIC AND SULFUR GLASSES -U-' '.AUTH0R-r(05).-TlM0Fr=YEVA, N.V. VINOGRADOVAj,~ G.Z., FEkLi0iEV, YE.M., V, D E M B 0 V S K I Y iS.Aoy KALASHNIKO --USSR ..~,COUNTRY.; OF INFO -~SOURCE--OOKL. AKAD. NALIK SSSSR 1970 190(4),, 902-4 IPHYS CHEM) DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 AREAS--I-IATERIALS TOP I CTAGS--HIGH PRESSURE EFFECT, GLASS CHYSTALLUATION, ARSEIN [C COMPOUNDi SULFUR COMPOUND, X RAY ANALYSISv GLASS STRUCTURE MAPKIN(j--NO :RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UtICLASSIFIED :PROIXY REEL/FRAME-198411575 STEP NO--UR/0020/70/190/004/090210904 :CI _Rc ACrESSION NO--AT0100193 UNCLASS- -7/2 022 UNCLASSIFtE,0 PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 ACCESSION NO--AT0100193 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT.. THE CRYSTNI OF AS SUBZ S SU83 GLASSES WAS DETD. AT 30-70 KILORARS AND UP.TQ 5000EGREES, AS SUB2 S SUB.3 CRYSTD., AT 2500EGREES AND 40-70 KILoBARS. X,~RAY PHASE ANAL. PROVED --:'-.'THAT THE OBTAINING CRYST. AS SUB2 S.SUD3.HAS THE SAME STRUCTURE AS THE NATURALLY OCCURRING CIRPIMENT (I.).' BETIA AS SUBZ S SUB3 FORMED AT .400DEGREES. If HAS A STRUCTURE DI FFER'ENT.. THAN I. AS SUB2 S SU135 GLASS CRYSTD. AT-GREATEk~~THAtl,:~:250DEGREE:5 :ANDi50-70 KILOBARS. :tAS- SUB2~_S, SUB5- HAS AN URE WITH;TIA C014GRUENT T STRUCT 0 10.37, CONGRUENT.-TO 9.9, AND C CONGRUENT TO. 8-.66 ANGSTROM.o UIN C UA -SII r- PRO"C'ESS'liNG, DATE--- 13NOV70 1020 L)NC L AS S I F I .'_T_lTLE--H I STONES FROM TH~ SPERM ANIJ 0:,4BRYC'S" Jf' [HE G'M0J-'4DLlt4lG AIIS~C.U`MJS -FOSS IL I S-U- -~AUTHt'jF,-(O'~tI.-V~-jROB.YEVi V-1-i VINGGRAUCIVAtIAiGINEITLS, A-, i"11VINSKASo G. ,COUPITRY 1) FINFO--USSR '7~SDUm"CE--TSITQLCjG4'YA 1970, 12(2), 198-203 :,.'D AT EP U8 L I S I i E D------- 70 ..SUBJECT AREAS-33, lr_lLGGIC*(. AND MEO [CAL SC I ENCE S. -SYSTEM, PROTEINt AQUEOUS SOLUTIOP,11 pT.C.P.1C TG 5 t ELECT ROPHDRE S IS rPoLYA(,RYLAMl0V-.,.RES,lN,y CAPOON I SOTOPE CHEMI CAL qq. 1ABELLING CONTkOL MARK I NG-140 R E STP: I r C T 1 ON S DOCUMENT ~PROXY REEL/F~A.'01,1:--3002/0380 STEP 70/W2/002/0198/0203 C-IRC ACCESSION ND--AP012790l ~-7212 020 U'NCLASSMED PkICESSING DATE--13NOV70 c C I RC ACCESSION NO-AP0127961 ~ABSTR~ACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- 1,3STRACT.. HISTONES ISI-31-4TED Fk0l') THE SPERM :AJND EMBkYOS OF THE LOACH Fl. FOSSILI.S AT DIFF'REiNT 1 1. - STAG'S Of- IDEVELOPi-ENT WERE INVESTD~ATED US[P.~~ E:LECTkJPHu-qESlS I N LY ' XRYLA-'il;DE IGE L FrRACTION -L A -STRULA CGM.PN. OF E;-113RYON'IC HISTONES D[FFERED AT THE bLAST(r A P'l 0 GA iN STAGESt AND THE HISTCNE COMPNI. CHANGES WE-kE FIPST UBSO., AT TRANSITION FROM PLASTULA TO GAST~',.,,)LA, THE FPLACT10,N S-.OF AR'l-11111it-l"E RECH HISTONE F ~-SUB3 DECREASED - I It,4 rt)NT~AST TO THE A,"IT. .:!-F THE LYSINE RICH FkACTICiii WHICH VNC~,EASED- I'IVEST IGAT I ON OF PR IME1 4: C I NCOt~PDRA T I ON I NTO d I STONE5 -LATIVE 114TENIS[TY GF HI;S'Tu,'llE SYNDi'SiS ikT -3LASTULA AND NOICATE0 THAT RE f LYSINE Ri'cH FRicr[DN, THE 3ASTRULA WAS DIFFEPENT. THE SYiNTHESIS Q F j RELATIVE GGNTE~ T OF ~e~"HICH l,%lCRF/%SLD AT LATER STAGES: CF %, DEVELoi-IEN'T, ~'iAs 0;:TECTF:) EVEN' IN b-ASTJLA. THE P9J(;RESSIVE- DECREASE RICH :'~~.-FRACTI-:JIINS OVING DEVELOPMENT WAS INTERP;ZETEL) AS EVI~DE'%)u F,"lk .PART IC PA-rle.,N UF HISTCW.-S 1N Ri-G t GULA'rio,v cr- GENETIC i,',,CTlyJTY .jl:: -r iz P H, KETIC ANAL. HAS SHOWN [HAT HLSiONES IN L:J,.,(:H SP~RN c'-INTAINED E LE: C k! THAN THQ!*C F~'014 L-t-l-BIRY0 TISSUES, THE:LYSINE ~IC li FRACTION F-SUBl' AS rOMPLEJELY At~S-,NT. AlINO ACCID ANAL. IN,'JICATED TijAT TliE LYS I N.E-ARG I.N111E RATIC rt-j spt,.wA msroINIES',volS 1.5 CU.MINREO 'ri[TH 1.8 12-N E M B',-" Y ~*"!'4 1 CH I S T ON E S A L. S J T I i E A L'A N. I N E C(Gt:%T,-:NT WAS Q ToAN THAT OF 1E ARE k4'SPONS"IdLE FOR 'A R G I NI i'4E A.Q.~;ININE R[CH FkACTIO"IS113F.-HIST0114 ~:'-~,,STR-UCTOAkAL- CHANGES OF CH-~OMATJN COMPLEXES'. F~:AC I L IT Y LAB. B IOCHE-M. CELL R-E-PROD., INST. CYTOL* t LENINGRAD,: US S 0, s if j E /Pe~troleum Rr::oicessing, Technology USSR UDC: 66 -095 132:66.022-38 YOZIENMIYMIA, N IVINCGRADON'A, I. E. and P ETYAMiA, YZ. I. "A Study of Phosphorus-Based Adic Esters as Additives _-Co zLubricatin- Oils" Moscow, KhLn,_Jya I Tekhnologiya Topliv i Masel No 1970, !,P 31-36 Abstrac,t: The value o ~osphorus-containing compomds V.15 an-11-1wear pn and ambi- seim rits was thoro-ugghly demmon ing the na age atrated in.- studies dur' fifties. Me present study was undertaken to place research~in this f_f:eld on a more systematic basisq; &-periments were run with 16 eriters';of phosphorua -contiair L-ify acids, with w". the follotring results:; 1 ) The addition of sulfur to the esters does not secure any perceptible advantage in antiwear or anti-seizing properties- 2" of the es- ters studied, -the acid esters and trial~--jltri-'Vhio-cliosph-*--te were superior anti- seizing agents; full esters are good anti-wear additives bu-, poor anti-seizing agents; 4) during oxica-i~ion of oils, full esters of phospbDrourJ, and phosphoric h and t osphorous acids are atriti-oxidizers, but theLr acid esters, and ~lSo the full esuers of phosphinic acids, are strong,ox-il ers of phospho- 'dizers; 5) acid est rous and ditkiophosphicric acids, and also the phosphinic esters, are gooc .L anti- corro.-;ion agents for light-.metal alloya; ard 6) in zelecting phoSphoru.-contain-JuIg additives for oils, anti-wear and anti-seizing proportios, thermocheidcal stability, miti-oxidant properties, and corrosion activity with respact to metals, should all be taken into account. Petroleum'pr6e ~nolcgy USSR UDC 665.7.038:665.765-404 KOZREMYA%CINA, N. N., and VI14OGMRQV VNIINP (All-Union Scientific Research Institute of the Petroleum Industry "Examinatlon and Selection of Sulfur- and Phosphorus-Cqataining Additives to Oil for Itypoid Gears in Automobiles" Moscow, Neftepererabotka i Neftekhimiya, No 1, 1973, pp 19-22 Abstract: An investigation was made of the reaction of different types of phosphoric acid derivatives with dialkyl strithiocarbonate (BTC) . The stoichiometry and a number of physical aad:chemical properties germane to the intended use were determined. The order'of activity.for the different substitution groups on the phosphoric acid de:eivatives Tor anciscouring, L, antivearing,-and antj'oxidation properties:was.listed. Optimum two- and three-component additive systems were determined. USSR L 576.851.55.083.31 Z&HLY&NITSKAYA, Ye. P. , NOGRAL. Vi'~~'. and IVANOVA' L. G., Institute of 1'en F. Epidemiology and 111i c ro Gamaleya, AcaLmy of Medical ogy Sciences. USSR, 1-foscaw '$The Us ledia in the Diagnosi of Di Prodi'ced by Cl. oedematiens, e of Dry s seases I CL, septicum, Cl. histolyticum, and Cl. sordelliO Moscow, Laboratornoye! Delo, No 11, 1970, pp 681-633 Abstract: The effectiveness of bacteriological diagnosLs of anaerobic infec- tions is clearly dependent on the media used for culturing these microroganism-s. Dry media which ar:! suitable for transport and long-term storage and which are oufficiently simple to prepare appear to be most promisiq, fot this purpose. Dry acidic casein hydrolysate has been usdLd. for protein i;epardLion and for the preparation of anaerobic media. A nutrient broth of the.casein hydrolysate was prepared and sterilized and, with othe:r media, was uried for culturing various bacteria. T~e activity of clostudial toxins wa8 dete'mained, spe- cificity was monitored by neutralization.with antitoxic Vpecific standard sera. Comparative results of more than-200~tests are presented in tabular form, showing.the toxin activity of the different bacterial strains in the various dry media tested. i i IMEJ 195HEN 5; 1 LISSR uDc: :51 -55-~517-537 11-jLi)GRADDIIA, I. YU "A 1- ials with Integeral ion of Functions of Tgo Complex Variables by Po,';-ynond Mxirat pp Coefficients" q Mat. 10-y Nlauchno-Teor. Konf. Aspir. Ser. Yestcstv. i Tocim. N. [14lterials of 10th Scientific and Technical Conference of Post Grachiate Sttidents. nd P iences Series: f I"'o -53 , postov, Natural Science a -,- Collection o rk recise Se University Press, 1970, pp 71-75, (Ti~anslated,from Referativnyy Zhurnal Matematika No. 8, 1970, Abstract 98B179, by Yu,,Kazl min), er re~lated to t1je 1) -Uble, f Tnnslatlon: Some of tile Xnultr, of S. Ya. Allp x T15 0 of a caxplex vai-4:i1la by polynoA.a1r;. -w"-L-4 Intei,rral caef - approximation of functiorw set;j OwMit, 1965.~ - 5BI25)~ arej applied to ~,(j car,(-, of fiAlletiox1r, ficients in closed lex variables. The difficulties vhich urise &m~ diucuosed. of two compl 777 USSR UDC 614.777-078:614.3 __L_A__ Moscow Scientific Research Institute of Hygiene imeni F.- F. Erisman "Comparative Evaluation of Various Methods of Sanitary Bacteriological Investigatlon of Water Stored in. Open Reservoirs" Moscow, Gisiyena i Sanitariya, No 9, 1971, pp 117-118 Translation: During investigations of open water reservoirs (G. P. Kalina, 1966), it was found that after filtration,.of water through membrane filters, up to 30% of colrnies collected -from the;filters did not beiong to the E. coil group and chat only 31% consisted of fecal bacteria. The wa~---er sampled ftom open reservoirs wa,9 tested by various methods, including qualitative tests for E. coli (the membrana mathod, Lbo three-stage fermenta- tion method of Eykann, and the American standard preliminary method of Levin) and the Lwo-stage method of Kalina for enterococci. Levin's method was more effective since it yielded the highest coefficient of correlation -with the frequency of iSOlatiDn of pathogenic enterobacterin dur 'ing investigation of river water in the middle zone. During investigation of intestinal bacteria 1/3 56 USSR VINOGRADOVA, L. A., Gigiyena i Sanitariya- No 9, 1971, pp 117-118 present in water ~,anples Collected from northern river6, differential tests for -citrate--negative and positive fecal E. :coli were performed. By incans of the membrane filter method, 16% of typical fecal E. coli, 60% of E. coli giLv3.ng negative thermal tests, and 34.6% of citrate-positive were intestinal bacteria isolated. By means of Cykrmn's method, 43.3% of typical fecal E. - of E. coli yielding negative thermal tests,,:an-d 23.3% of citrate cali, 33.4& positive intestinal bacteria were isolated. By means of Levin's method, typical feeal bacteria were isolated in 8A-Z of cases. Approydr-ately 20 to 30% of colan:Les which grew on the membrane filters did not belong to the E. coli group and therefore the coli indexes *of water s=ples: obtained by this raethod were considerably higher than those obtained by other methods. On the basis of the results of these investigations, the follcuing con- clusions can be drawn: 1) in order to obtain the most ob*ective appraisal of the quality of water in open water bodies in the mo!,t northern regions, it is necessary to take into account all. intestinal bacteria which can be isolated by sanitary methods and which grcrr in carbohydrate media at 37'C; 2) under these circumstances, Levin'sfmethod and the mwribrane. filter method should not be uried, bpcause they, do not reveal- the. epidemiological situation 2/3 I ~ ~ i j 1, ~I;N.i 1 141 ! F il'~ 9 ; ~: fl!:". -,;] !I - ii ;I; .;.-i 1 p I ki j-rr I a j! i., ~ I, i ~l 1 1 v . 1. , I ... -.. - - - -- ---. .--. . I.- .. - .-- - - - - - .. . .. --- . .-. - -- --- PROCESSMG DATE--20NOV70 --I/ Z. 024 UNCLASSIF IEO T-I I TLE INFKARED SPECTRCSCOPIC, STUDYOF THE CHEM I SURPT: LON UF ORGANOSILICON -CGf4PCUNCS CN. AN AERUSIL SURFACE -U- UTHC!R-(05)-UF.GUN., E.V., KuROLEV, A YA., V:INOC-RADfjVA*~: L.M., ARTAMONOVA, iEtKf;VA T.V. ,~,_S-GUR,CE -Zl-, FIZ. M-11M. 1970t -14(3) 1 797-9' A*TE -PUBL I SHE 0----70 ,,-,UJ3J E C T AREAS-CHEIMISTRY C TLGS--Ik suEcTRUM, ChEm ISORPT IONt ORGANOS IL I CON,~ COMPOUND r SILIGAI -ri p I I C -SILANE, CARKINYL COt,',PG-UN.D,!l,,,:, vCCNT?GL RESTRIrrIONS DOCUMENT. CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED "-PROXY kFEL/k-KAME-3002/1191 5TC-P NO--UR/0076/10j'(14,'~/1-)tJ3iO797/('~,T99 :Cl-RC %10--.APO I 28b15 A' 212 024 NOV 0 UINCWSIHED, PUK"ESSING DAH-2-01 ACCES51CN NG--AP0123615 0-StRACTlEXlKACT--W) GP-0- ABSrRACT, THE INTERACT KIN 3 F JXYSILANE ( I TRI,'IF-Tl-!YLACETiJX~YSIL:AN'-P~ C f I) AK"D TRIMETH YLFTHf JR1 VE TKYLGHLERCS I LANE (III) W IT H AEACSIL OF SP. iURFACE 150 M PRIME2 P;-" G- WAS STUD IED. THE 51JRFACC- COMPO. OF TRIMETHYLSILANE &~OPMJS *WAS FOUNO, AND ITS UNC.N. DEPENCEiNCE ON rEMP- ANO 'TPME: WAS STUOIED~. I A.'410 III GAVE -H J GH 0 EG P EE OF. SUR F-;f- CE GC-Cl.' PA:r 10N AT *i ROOM T 6M PW V1 IL -E I I PROV I t-A-7: D AT :511,11LAR T13'.3G0D!;(-kFES. TREAT ING OCCUPIED PIGNULAYEK ONLY,. N AN AERGSIL`SURFA~ E CAUSEQ1~:THF f :OF I I C ORMATUON Gf* A 'i'MALL AMT. 0, 'CAP BG-NYL CCmPDS- :'.'.-PROXY REEL/FRAME-1969/0254 STEP NO--UR/0459l7Of3l2lOO2/034810354 ~CTRC ACCESSION NO--AP0106910 UNC-LASSIFIED 212 026 UNCL ASS IF I ED PROCESSING DATE--020CTTO C-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0106910 ABSTRACT/EXTR-ACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. ~THE ADHESIVE STRENGTH OF EPOXY RESIN ED-5 (1) (MODIFIED WITH DEG-1 AND HARDENED WITH POLYETHYLENEPOLYAMINEIrSTAINLES.S,STEEL'(11) PAIRS WAS STUDIED AS A FUNCTION OF. THE HARDENING TEMP. v) AND WITH REF. TO INTERNAL STRESSES ARISING DUE~_TO THE FORMATION OF-, ADHESIVE-:8ONDS. THE 'kDHES!VE STRENGTH WAS PROPORTIONAL TO T, REACHING A MAX4.OF 360 KG-CM PRJIME2, W-1EIN THE -RESSES BROUGHT ABOUT PRESSLIRE PERPENDICULAR TO THE 1-11 INTERNAL -ST T E I It!)[ SSOLVED-1 INTERFACE. A PLOT Of: ADHESIVE STRENGTH VS. TEMP. H IN- I I S,Y-STEM REVEALED THAT THE ADHESIVE ~TREUGTH DECLINEDr REACHING A MIN. AT, 100DEGREES AND THEN SUDDENLY -.INCREASED. ~ A P3SSIBLE EXPLANATION FOR THE ANOMALOUS BEHAVIOR WAS GIVEN.I.MEASUREMENTS OF INrERNAL-STRESSES JNDICATED T. SED Ww'TH T AT LARGER -HAT EFFECTIVE ADHESION MARKEDLY INCREAS THAN.. 100-7200DEGREE-S-t PkESUMAB'LV-; DU ~T &T0 ; HE,FORRATICIN OF-STRUNGER ADHES.IVEv,AND POSSISLYo CHEM. B&N,DS. AT LOWER- TEMPS. THE ADHEGION WAS INDEPENDENT OF T. ~THE COMPONENT:OF THE,ADHESIVE:STRENGTH RELATED TO -FRICTION I.,Eov THE NORMAL PRESSURE DUE, TO, -1 NTERNAC STRESSES IN THE POLYMER'*IAND THE STATIC FRICTIONCOEFF.. OF, THE., 1-11 PAIR WERE DETD. P-Mr NS l)ATE---0?UCT70 112 2 i U%CL AS Sl F I Fl %.. , TITLE-INTERNAL STPIESSES ANU D I rF US I UN OF WAT CR IN P,,)LYV.,E),S -j- VINOGRA!)CVA,, L. l., GAKANIINA, S.')., ZHtRDEV, All v A.YA. J-,TRY 'IF -C'C' J':~E--VYStjKf)MfJL. SCIEDIN. SER. A 1070, 12(2)s 336--!4Z T E PUbL I S HE 10 -CT zsu.-JE AREAS-.MATERIALS TbR I TAGS-INTERNAL STRESS, '.~ATERj EPOXY RES IN POLYErtiVLENE, POLYAMINE, FLUTJ :1) 1 FFUS I ON/ I U) E05 EPOXY RESI N, -'C CJ.POL .4AkKlt4G--NO RFSTRICTIGNIS ISS-UNCLASSIFIF0 P.~U!*NT CLA REEL/FRAME-199210319 STER Nr)--UR/0459/70/112/GD2/0336/024? t 1A C ACCESSIC-,,.V Nt')--AP0111513 UNCLASSLFIED f A2 21? 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--OZDCT70 ACCES-SION N0--AP0llL513 .:,..~A3ST;Z-ACT/ EXT R ACT--( U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE EFFECTS OF H SUB2 0 AND H SUB2 0 VAPOR Uxi INTERNAL STRESSES IN.EPOXY RESIN ED 5 CUATINGS itiA. i ENEO IT R D POLYETHYLL-NE POLYAMINE AND MODIFIED WITKOEG-1 WERE STUDIEff). SWELL 114G 114 H -SUB2 L) REDUCED, AND EVEN. CHANGED THE SING, OF INTERNAL STRESSES - C G PknDUCED DURING THE THERMAL HARDENING' AND SUBSEQUENT ~13OLIVV TO ROOM 7EMP. THE INTERNAL STIIESSES WERE INVERSELY PROPORTIONAL TO THE RELATIVE HU-1i 10 1 T Y. T~~;-. DIFFUSION COEFF. OF H SUb2 0 (D) ~ 'DETID. F:k(1#4 KINETIC DATA (2.4 TIMES 10 PRIME NEGATIVE9. C ti PRrMEZ-.SECI AGREED wzrH D MEASURE0 BY T HE H -SORPTION METHOD. AN EQUATION WAS~PRDPOSED~FaR TliE EVALUATION OF-T E MAX. EXPTL. ERROR IN THE DETN.7.[3F INT~RNAL STRESSFS-BY. THE CANriLEvER METH004A.T. SANZHA.RQVSKIii G. 1.~ E,P I.FA.NOY, 1961) OUE TO A NONUNIVORM ~.DISTRIBUTIDN OF H SUB2 0 ALONG THE COATMG. UNCLASSIFIED Acc. N Abscraclirl, 1,rvice: Ref Code: A~304GGZS_ ~76 CHEMICAL ABST~. ular 4Sa Teelmological production- and pro*pez n- Sraan refracto-it-a. Polubovarinov R-l"evirli \1 I d V. Inst; im.. 75~ V;rrmpry IWO, ~rtiT, il.,I; iKiO. I nt technol. og grinulai oxide refriciories ~is baked oa: Oe' use of coarse-disrmrsive. powders prepd.' from presintered or 4-kc. fu::~!d %fi4t coarse-granular paiv-dIcys oi axides, Ine ruling opinion Pute elec. fitsed oxides are iaert at sintering and that thpy do not Nso and solid ceramms is faulty. If high Jorm sufficiently de. I the r. ?ressFres,_(lCOO-2WG kg/cm') are used, and if nin'* tont. of nne-dispershre powders of an oxWe -is added to the.cerarnic mass or even no binder is used,wben the porosity proper for refractories (i.e. 15~::O%) is riached"at the anm-Alia~. tetnp~. ordinary for a givell oxide'., Tht: strength and d~*6*- 'awor operties of these products- are satisfictory. Th gir I ~ I ~ e temp~ol. Posy granular. refractories under Icad prcp~.' from ure ec fu oxides is 50-10017 than aat of houporous Inater"T . Refractories prepd. from elec. fused oxides'Ishow a sUbstantiaNy lower strength, however, 5ufficient for servicr at high temps. From the, powders of'elec,* fused oxides one can Pmp. high-dass products comparable in propcrties -,sith products mazufd. from powdus of'sirter-ed oxides. The main li,6nal. PararnAtus of the inanuf, ofpxide refractories are practical h Ny t e REELIPIWIE 19781939 LNCLASS F I FE IG 0 AT E-- I 7JU2.C JJLE--TECH~ICAL PVCCUCfICN ANC PPOPERTILS GP,5-%LIL 4~~ OX IF R EFR ~c r,,,4 f r- s -U- -;-!.N., U4LKEVICF, V.L., VINOCIL~~pqw L.V. VINKCV# L.E. ~-'~CUNTRV C,F INFC--LSSR SCLkC.E--CG,,%E U F~CR Y1~70, 35(l), 11- 1 I EFLE!L I SFEC----- 70 UBJECT 4REAS-PATERIALS TAr;-S,----tFFRACTCiY PRnl)LjC TREFkAC TCRYi VATERI.Al. MIFLUNLI VA,7NES IUM Cr-MPCzL-,,,NC ttNTRU YARKING-NIC REST;~ICTICJNS -DC-C UPENT CLASS-LNCLASSLFIEC. -.PRC-XY~RCEL/FRAV,c~--ICIE/IC)3S STC-P N-C--U-RI C L3 1 /7 0 /0 3 51'C;, L/ 00 1 t00 14 'CIRCIACCESSICN NC--tPC.C4fj628 S) If13 ACC. Abstracting'_Stb~viqe: Ref. Code: 46628 CHEMICAL AB $ T 411-70 01,31 r 82448a Tectnological production and. pf dporties of granular o4de refractories. Po!ubo nov, D. lqaflkevich, yari, LeMahev V ~7- Ki:no- L . - 1, 1~i M deleeva, XrGAftOP2-Va111_-_Xr. (MO '__4&b'~ nq'LlaA. Ir", M ow 1~~Pory he ~_i ozide refractories is based on tSe use of technoT.-OT gran or el~c. fused coa.-se-dispersive powders prepd.- frdm~ presinterOd oxides. The.'ruling Iopinion that Loarse-grafiular pokders of re elec. fused oxides are interifig and that the do not u mert at p form sufficiently, dense and solid ceramics is. faulty. ~ If high pre&sur~s~1000-2000 kg~cm7)'a6 lis~_-d, apd if t4e, min. arnt, of fine-dispersive powders of an''axide is added the cexamic mass or even no binder is used'N%i66-tbe por6~ity proper for L-- refractories (ie. 15-~20,%) is reached at.the annealink temps. ordinary for. 'a given. oxide. The~~str~ngth and'. defcxmation properties of these, products aide; satidtictotry. Tim deformation temp. oi porous r~nuW refea~toiiies under 1001 prepd. from ides,k 50-160% 1 wer than th"t of noniporous part! elec, fused oxi 0 a, materials. Refractories prepd. frpi?a elec, fused, oxides show a ...... substantially lower. strength, however, sufficitentJor service at temps. From he powders of elec fused 1xides one can high t prep. high-claw products comparable in properties wiai products from paviders of siniiied;oxides.' The:main iechool. manuld 'ct ac ories are prac parameters of the manuf. of ~dde retr t dcally the REELITRAM E