SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT YUROVA, L.N. - YUSFIN, YU.S.

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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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V USSR YUROVA, L. N., et al., Fiz. 'Yadern. Reaktorov,:No 2, Moscow, Atomizdat Press 1970, pp 3-10-(from,Re.ferativnyy z6urtial- Yadernyye Reaktory, No 3, 1971, Abstract No 3:.5.0.76) teristics (introduction of.absorbers or scattering agents in homo-reneous or discrete form, etc.).. In the etitperiinent discussed, the additional possibility is demohstrated ofahangfng the decay constant by changing the position oflheteroyen~p-ities in tine moderator with constant volume ratio.' This provides a method foe studying the diffusion charzcteristics of,heterogeneous systems or systems with Xocal heterogo-neities,-sinoe a new experimental dependence appears-and,- consequed tly,:it can be -compared..with various calculdtion methods'. 8figures, 7 biblio. :refs. 2/2 USSR UDC 621.039.51 NAMOV, V. I., and YTJROVA, 1~.. N. "Corrections to the Effective Resonance Integral With Large Steps in a fletero- genous Lattice" Fiz. Yadern.Reaktorov [Nuclear Reactor Physics Collection of works], No 2, Moscow, Atomizdat Press 1970, pp 133-142,(translated1rom Referativnyy Zhurnal- Yadernyye Reaktory, No 3, 1971, Abstract No 3.50.66) Translation: In analyzing heterogeneous thermal neutron nuclear reactors it is usually assumed that resonant capture in:the,block can be described using the effective resonance integral in the Fermi moderation spectrum, this integral being a function only of the composition and size of the block containing the res- =s p1. c m nt of blocks onent absorber, In actual lattices, due tathe.heterogene I e e wh-tch are sources of fission neutrons,.the distribution of fast and resonant neutrons may be heterogeneous across each cell, whil& the ,rpectrum in the block in the high-energy area may differ.significantly from the Vermi spectrum. The necessity of special analysis of the areIa of large lattice:steps in the analysis of a resonant capture has been mentioned repeatedly in the literature; however, the approximate estimates of the effect made for heavy water lattices have resulte-Z in relatively slight correctiom in'the.area of actual lattice steps. Later data 1/2 USSR NATMOV, V. I., and YUROVA iz. Yad-er Reaktorov, No 2, 970, Moscow, Atomizdat Press, 1 pp'133_142~ for uranium-graphite lattices have indicated that,there is a considerable effect related to the difference between the neu- tron spectra and the Ferm-~spectra for this class of nuclear reactors. In connection with-modern trends toward increasing lattice step in uranium-graphite nuclear rea6tors and the nec- essity of correct consideration of the number,of captures in the_.uranium, this effect is quite important:and requires serious S -nce of the spectrum -study. Results of calculation on the influe of fast neutrons on the reaponanee approximatLan;are presented in this article. 3 figures; 2 tab le*s.,4biblio. refs. 2/2 USSR UDC 621.315.592 SOLMOYLVA, Y-13. V., KISTOVA, YE. M., WYMWIZOV, L. I., IGLITSYN, M. I., KEVORKOV, It. N. "Autocompensation of Donors in Gallium Arsenide and the GaAs P Solid Solution" I-x x Leningrad, Fizika i Tekhnika PoluproyodnLkov, Vol 6, No 3, 1972, pp 498-501 Abstract: A study was made of the autocampensation phenomonon (constancy of the degree of compensation in a broad alloying range) detected in films of GaAs P alloyed with Te and Se and GaAs alloyed witli Se. The dependence of I-x x the degree of compensation and the concentration of the compensating centers in the neutral state was obtained as a function of the composition of the solid salution. A deep level connected with compensating centers was detected, and the dependence of its activation.onergy on the co position of the solid solution wms determined. The study was made in the entire composition of the solid soJution and also in films of gallium a senide allo'yed with Se.r The temperature range was expanded to 800' K. The degree of compensation in the GaAs 11 close with I-x x -ltermine by the respact to Compoilitioll Lo Cap uras (IL d cur-;e for tho temperature dependence of the charge carrier concentration by thel aam,~ procedure as used 113 USSR YUROVA, YU. S., et at., Fizi~-a i Tekhnika Poluprovodnikoy, Vol 6, No 3, 1972, pp 498-501 earlier [H. 1. Iglitsyn, et al., M, No 4, 230, 19701. Graphs are presented shcuing the degree of compensntion-and the concentration of the compensating defects in the neutral state as functions of the COMP sition of Galks P I-X X crystals, the concentration of the ionized detectors is a function of the elec- tron concentration in the Mrrs: of GaAs. alloyed with Iiie, the temperature depen- dence of, the charge carrier concentration in' the compi~nsated 5amplea of GaAs I-N and the dependence of the approximate activation energy of :the D' level on the composition of the GaAsi P crystals. The diver4gence between the degree --X X of compensation observed in the GaAs crystals (K Pi 0.-5) and the value of K ob- tained by extrapolating the function K(x) for the solid solution to x = 0 is explained by the difference-between the gr(rith temperatures of these crystals 0 -K inM the previously ob- --200*. The calculation of It from the value of L&S 1) v tained formula N F, -r, lier '~A v a K c 2/3 YUROVA, YE. S., et al., Fizika i Tekhnika Poluprovokikov, Vol 6, No 3, 1972, pp 498-501 leads, to a value of the same order as the value of N in GaAs P determined v I-x x an leeat treatment of the crystals at a temperature cIdse to the growth teml)era- ture of the GaAs films (1113 is -the concentration of thin compensating defects in v the neutral state, N is the effective density of the.states of the conduction C b anct., and E is the width of the f orbidd en band) 9 3/3 POCE~S-S[Nt :DATE--18SEP70 028 UNCLASSf VlED, 4"ll-Ttl" OMPENSATION OF DONORS IN A GAAS SUBO TIMES2 P SUBO TIMESB SOLID SOLUTION -u- ~"AUTHOR-,(04)-IGLITSYN, M.I.-I KISTOVA-, YE.M.#':RYTOVA, N.Str YUROVAt YEoS. OUNTRY OF INFO--USSP CE---FI7-. TEKH. POLUPROV. 1970, 4(.l) 230 "'GATE PUBL IS HED ------- 70 :~:~UPJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS- ,TOPIC TAGS--SOLID SOLUTION, ACTIVATION:ENERGY', CRYSTAL LATTICE VACANCY, ZINCi TELLURIUMt SELENIUM, PHOSPHURUSt GALL[t)M ARSENIDE -CU.N.TROL '4ARKING--Nn, kESTkICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIE!) WOXY REEL/FPAME--1989/0579 STEP NO--UR/0449/-17CJIOOtt/001/0230/0230 CIRC ACCrSSION N 0- A P 0 10 5 5 62 UNCLASSIFIED 21Z~ 028 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--IOSEP70 :CIRC'A0:ESSION NO--AP0105562 ACT/ EX TRACT-- (U I GP-0- A8STRACT. THE DEGREE OF COMPENSATION OF A K SUBA-N SUSD) IN thl-TYPE GAAS SUBI NEGATIVEX P DONOI 114PURITY (K EQUALS N SUBX SOLID SOLNS. `.S CONST. FOR K EQUALS 0.7-0.9 AND Nt SUBO EQUALS 10 PRIME17 MINUS 10 PRIME19-CM PRIME3, AND DOES NOT DFP.END ON -POSSIBLE SMALL SCALE DOPING BY TE# SEt ITE PLUS ZN)t OR.(SEIPLUS ZN). THE COMPENSATING ,-CENTERS~ARE SUPPOSED TO BE SINGLY C.HARGED LATTICE DE ECTS. THE 'ANNEALING OF-BOTH N TYPE AND P TYPE SAMPLES::.AT VARIOUS TEMPS. AND AT ~`ARIOUS PARTIAL PRESSURES OF AS SHOWED THAT THE;' cONCN. OF THESE OEFECTS 0,EPENDS EXPONENT IALLY ON TEMP.. WITH -AN 40T(VATION Eftl7ERGY OF 1.5 PLUS OR -3 -WITH ~INCRE ASING A .S PARTIAL PRESSURE KUS~ 04 __-EV AND THAT IT DECREASES, CENTERS ARE PROBABLY ASSOCD* W:ITH:AS VACANCIESs LIZ 023 UNCLASSIFIE0 PROCESSING 0ATE-3001CY70 TITLE--LATALL;LlTE REPRf.SSION OF Jt:NZYME SY14THESIS M MUTA14TS OF ESCHERICHIA WITH A DEFECT IN THE CARBQHYDRIATE~IRANSPDRT SYSTEM -U- .~-..AUTHOR-(04)-GERSHA,'iGVICK, V.N., YUROVITSKAYA N.V.. SAPRYKINA, T.P.v I_~'.-CGUNTRY CF IM~C-USSR WKCE-L-Ue%L. AKAD. NAUK SS5k 1970s, 190(5) 1-1232-,4 -~OATE- FUbLISHED----TO ..1'~-SUBJECi AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES TAGS-BACTERIA MUTATIONs ESCHERICHIA COLIP CULTURE MEDIUMI ENZYME1 '-.CARBOHYDRATE, BIOLOGIC TRANSPORT: MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED WOXY REEL/FRAME-1999/0705 ~STEP N(,'--UR/0020/70/190/005/1232/1234 CIRC ACCESSIL114 ND--AT0122791 UNIL L A S S I f- I E o .212 023 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-30OCT70 -CIRC ACCESSICN NG--AT0122791 .:Ac3STPACT/EXTJRACT--iU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. SYNTHESIS OF BETA GALACTOSIDASE BY FAJtANT P-34 GRCJW-,,i IN A MEDIUM CONTG. ME THIOGALACrUSIGE WAS E. COCI TU 6E-33PERCENT UF NORMAL BY GLUCOSE. THI 5 1NDICATE-S THAT GLUCGiE DIRECTLY REPRESSES THEENZYME OF THE LAC'OPERON AND THAT ITS COMPETITIVE BLOCKING OF GALACTOSE,:TRAN,SPORr IS A SIECONDARY EFFECT, SINCE ,-THE P~C~Rk.AL GALACTOSE TRANSPORT SYSTEM 1S LACKING I-N P-34. GLUCOSE -:~SLIGHTLY STIMULATE$ THE SYNTHESIS OF*TRYPTOPHANIASE AND SERINE DEAMINASE 'P~34- GROWN'IN MELIIA CONTG. TRYPTOPHAWAND SERI NE, RESP., ALTHOUGH IT ~'REPRESSES.,THE SYNTHE Sl S UF THESE ENLYMES. BY UNMUTATED E. COL I THUSv THESE k.NZYMES ARE LESS SENSITIVE'TO GLUCOSE REPRESSION-THAN 15 DETA GALAC TOSIDA SE FACILITY: INST.. ~EPIGEMIOL. 111KROBIOL. IM. GAMALEI, U1411CLA SS I f I E D 4 USSR &NDZIiAPARINE, 0. G., LOTTE, V. D", and YUROVSE".j...B. "The Leukosis-Like Virus in Cell Cultures Transformed by Alood From Leukotic Patients" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 1906, No 1 ,1971, pp 217-219 Abstract: The viral etiology of human leukemia is postulated on the basis of indirect data and analogy with leukemia in mammals and birds. Cultures of human diploid cells (hdc), strain.WI-38, were Irioculated with blood and blood elements from patients with acute hemocytablastosis and from healthy donors. 'In five cases out of nine, inoculations from acutely ill patients transformed the culture; its cells acquired an epitheliol..character and lost their capacity for contact growth inhibition. The altered hdc cultures differed from normal ones in higher metabolic activity and higher growth poteintial. The altered cells lost their former karyotype and changed into heteroplaid cells. Karyo- logical analysis showed that cells of all~altered lines.:had two anomalous marker chromosomes: a large submetacentered one, larger than Group A chromo- somas; and a large acrocentric, larger than the acrocenP,ic chromosomes of Group D. Trzulis plant a tion of altered cells into a hamster chc~ek Douch produced, 1.9 n~. USSR X-10ZHAPARIDZE, 0. G., et a!, Doklady Akademii;Nau.k SSSR, V61 196~, No 1, 1971, pp 217-219 ia 45 cases out of 89, neoplasina of the epidermoid car,,Jnomia type, mixed. The altered cultures consistently showed v~ycopla:sma, which, wheri introduced into a fresh hdc culture, did not alter the new culture New culturesvere frequently transformed by acellular homogenates and ultrafiltrates df:the altered cells. Under electron microscopy, cytoplasm,of a~ ItOred.cells showe,d.the presence of membrane bodies of complex contour,. cotitainitig.virtia-like:i3trqctures- T~e bodies tended to localize inthe perinucl"ar~area near, or, amons, the Golgi complex. The bodies resembled mitochondria:or lysosome calls, but had one, two, or three double contour sheaths,, of: which one or two~~formvd :internal spiral structures. . The%. also cantained formitions of one doubIL- contour sheath with-homogeneaus filament material,containing virAts-like particles, which are described.in detail. At a.later stage in,the e.1ciperiments (40 min), the membrane bodies and virus-like particles.wexe replaced by a small number of immature, still-evolving forms and mature forms of leuLosis-like virus in the extracellular space.and cell surface. The immature:call particles cor- responded to type A vit-ja particles; while themature particles corresponded to type C virus particles. The A-type particles formed oq the cell surface, 2/3 -_U SSR ANDZHAYARIDZE, 0. G., et al, Doklady Akademif Nauk SSSR,.Vol 196 No 1, 1971, pp 217 219 and often later formed two virus particles in.an identical :area. Type C virus particles are mature virus particles formed from~type,A particles through inner structural charges. Type C virus particles were found in the extracellular j space and often had an irregular form,. with an eccentric nucleotide, of varying electron-optical density. Examination of controls and experimental cultures -revealed no structures of the membranous type. Both cultures showed t1he presence of many mature and dividing i~ycoplasmic bodies, as well as elementary bodies 100 mij in,diameter forming an mycoplasmic surface. It was concluded that hdc transformation seems to be associated with inoculation of this cul- ture with formed elements and blood from patients with acute hemocytoblastomia. 'The nature of membrane bodies and the1r role in the alteration process remains unclear, despite previous research.. The possibility!that~membrane bodies with virus-like particles could be mycoplasma with elementary bodies is not ruled ut.. The 1'eukosis-like virus isolated herein Altered cel.1s is similar mor- 0 we hologically to those already isolated from -mice and birds, as ill as those from humans, catst dogs, and caws.~,. It is possible that oi~ie or more agents isolated in transformed cells is responsible for alterad 'V_Vltu~.,ea of human diploid cells. 3/3 20 USSR LOC ~47-1.)1821 KCZT, A. N. , YUROVSKAZ&,Ji,--II-,-,_ NONWRIKOVA, T. V., and tPOTANINA, 0. 1., Moscow &'-E-Fy~enl M. V. Lomonosov Stale UnIve "Chemistry of Indole, XXXIII. Pyridylethylatition of tbe,.N'H Group of Indole Compounds" Rigap KhWya Geterotsiklicbeskikh Soyedineniy, No 2j Fab 73, pp 207-212 Abstracti Direct pyridylethylation of pyrrole, of a serles of indole compounds, of carbazole and catrboline was carrIed out taking advant-,tge of the abiliLy of highly polar aprotonic solvents -- such as dimethylau-Ifoxicle fbilio-7- to activate the ardon forming on the IIH grOUPAD Such an extent that evor:~n the relatively poorly polarized bond in 3-vinylpyridine vas adequaitely activated for the reaction to take place. The activation by DRSO is based on the fact 'that in absence of protonic solvents) when no,hydrogen bonds can form, the anions being formed are solvated to a lesser degree andAherefore are more reactive. The reaction goes especially well itben excesn 2-meth.61-5-vinyl- pyridine is used, and the reaction mixture is heated tol:100-200 . hetallic sodium or sodium ethoxide can be uzed as thebdlkaline r6agents. .-W cting erv Ref Code: Acc. stra N A :S AM049826 CHEMICAL ABST. /70 93943j RecrystallizatIOU, Of PIDWdered- grap~te from': the Botogol deposit. Yurkovskii. i Psholkhkin. - 11. A. (U, 'SL , 1. Khi 77U~Tl I'N~-31 (Russ).' Tre process of recrystil. bf powd-'native graphite, 7-10% ash co-iag. oxides of Si? Fe, Ca. Mg, etc._Was studi-ed ai 2200-3000' by x-ray and microscopic analyses. At'2210-24009 ctystals p'row by absorption oi highly di-spersed pitides. ';The cryst.11i. are siugle crystals. Above 2W crysLals.gfow by coalc'scence~lwid condensation from the gas' pha,,e. Me6. growing.togeth~r of sitnil~rly oriented crystallographic lanes also occurs. 'rile! (lis- p perston inereaSed above 2700'. j GDfR 13vt< REEL/FR M: E 19f301148 0 USSR UDC: 536.581 ,YURSHEVICH, V. V., GUrOVSKIY, 0. K., RANKIS, G. Zh. "Laboratory Thermostat for the 68-6700 K Range. Methods of 'Measurement and Stabilization of Temperature" Vopr. Elektrodinamiki i Teorii Tsepey. Vyp. 6 [Problems of Electrodynamics and the Theory of Circuits. 6th Edition -- Collection;6f Woi-ks), Riga, 1972, pp 103-112 (Translated.from Referativnyy Zhurnal:Metrologiya i lzmeritellnaya Tekhnika, No 3, 19.73, Abstract No 3.32.840), 1)), V. S. K. Translation; Structural diagrams are presented for tb'~rmostat for tem- peratures below -196' C; from +10' to -1196* C; from +30 to -1000 C, as well as structural diagrams of their parts (evaporator voltage regulator, mano- stat). A platinum resistance thermometer made in the form of a spiral placed in a capillary of Pyrex.gIass is~used to measure temperatures from -1960 C to +4000 C. The thermal inertial of the thermometer is not over 0.5-0.8 s. The calibration of the. thermometer after aging is based on the melting point of ice and the boiling point of water. The temperature measure- merit error is not over :W.02' C. Stabilization of temperature in the -180 C to +10* C interval is achieved by positional regulation and depends on the intensity of the flow of liquid nitrogen,vapor, detern.iined by the power dissipated by tho evaporator in a rtandard metal Dewar vessel Temperatures 1/2 ." -. 2/2 - 101 - USSR UDc.- 621.317.411.2 yuau~~ RANKIS G. Zh., GUTOVISKIY, 0. K. "Investigation of the MaLmetic Spectra 'of Ferrites Over aW~Ide Range of Frequencies and Temperatures" Dokl. Vses. nauchno-tekhn. konferentsii 'no radiotekhn. izmtrreniY=- T.- 1 CEe- ports of the All-Ulnian Scilezitific~ and Tecbunical Conference on Radio Engineer- ing MIL-asurements. Vol. 1), Novosibirsk, 1970,. pp 153-154 (from RZh-,Radiotekh- mllka, No 1, jan 71,_ Abstract No IA365) Translation: A procedure and installation are develop6d for taking the mmgaetic spectra of ferrites Ln the freauency range fror- 0.1 to 10,CQO 191z and at -te=eratures f rcm -200 to +4001C. Measurements. were msde on toroidal specimens for 50 Q coa~~dal line. A system is described for maintainirg _e=eratur-, with a precision of �O-53C. On frequencies abo~n! `50 _%Mz, Der- r_-ability -was measured vith respect to the input impedance ofa short- -circuited section of coaxial line, while a Q-reter was! tised on frequencies below 50 Miz. It vas found that the behipior of the npectru.1i Vor rdickel- -zinc ferrit,ou chap.F", ratureo bol -1009 C: tl~e dia~pen;ion at trum changes to a triple dispersion spectrum., S. L -f. Code; Re erv ce Abst W4980 CHUnCAL. ABST 10 10IS95q Effect of degmdation'c6nditions on the structure, Plastoelastic, and physic6chem"i :~ TFO ,itiq -of ~ xftlaimbd rubber. Vtomzdoqv~Aiit. F.-, Yurtsev 'a' ;._UNauch. Rid- lr~t. 4% HAF.carbbn black) were, ad~jkted tb im"h.. dis, llirt6). astoe astic, at mech., and aq. degradationi and the;strucpire, pUir" U d 'physicomech. propezfles o.f the: reclaiinidiubber were ~t'wldied. 1r -spectra of-the Sol. frutionslito-m the tetWhned i.ubbe'riMicatid that the most intensive breakdown of &o6links iesulud! from 64. degradation; The physiOni" h * ' rti of.th~ chal ad rub- ac )r Wk ber dev6fided 0 ilia of e ra; dion of 'gftv cra, 1 prlo~' Fe 1~tsee RicilLimed rub er vin '3 An K th d by lowe a degr A ori te' ring lont I t ;e- bt 'ne ~d '3 t was 0 4' in le leptokj ty d gr dati n time,~and:b w ge. tille ft ducing e a 0 in. I CL a proq'erSoften r. CKJR: nd e 9 i dot REEL/FRAME, 19801726 U DC 621-31-7-757 al:r MMMEEV, Yu. T. YUR Voronezh.Polytechnic n*-,V~tute "A Device for Automatic Detezmination of Integral Evaluations of Graphs" 1105 Cov, Otkr~rttiya. Izobreteniya, Proqvshlewn3rye Obraztsy,r Tovarnyye Zraki, No 10, Apr 72, Author's Certificate No 332464,:Division G, fil-d 2 14"tr 70, published Ih Mar 72, pp 196-197 Translation: '111is Author's Certificate.introduces. 1. Adevice for auto- mattic deter m-n-ation of integral evaluations~ of graphs.Tbe device contains a calibrated Valse frequency. generator, a pulse counter,:a Unit for step- -by--step transport.of the record-Ing medium., and a progran block. Ule input of the pulse countcr Is connected to the output of a diode circuit. One ofthe inputs of the diode circuit is.connected to the output of a unit.for input of the graph ordinates. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the -de-Ace is simplified and it-s functional "possibilities axe extended by adding a block of digit: decoders, a digit-by-digit division ca =-ter., ez-d a time delV circuit. The fir t group of itiputs of the block of d1eit.decod-ers is cc=nected to the outputs of the prcsgram block. The second grour, of inputs ic co=ecterl to the outputs of the di-;t-by-digit )MriMV, Yu. T. R RMOIN, B. N. USSR Author's Certificate No 332464 division counter whose innut _i_- connecte-1 to the outnut of the callibrated pulse frequency generator. The controlling output of the bloex of digit decoders is connected to the input of the. unit for s.tep-by-step transport of the recording medium. The digit-by-digit frequency oLitput is connected to the second input of the diode circuit, and the set terminal is connected 4. %o the outDut of the ti-ine delay circuit, which is connected to one of the outputs of the unit for input of the graph ordinates, 2. A madification ofthis device distinguished by the fact that the digit decoder contains a flirp-flop urith separate inputs, an inverter, and it coincidence circuit. n of the digit One input of the flip-flop is con ected to the first inpjzt deccoder, and the zecond input is connected to the output: of t1he coinci- denc-e circuit. . One of the in-outs of the coincidence circuit Is connected to the set line, and the second input is conriected~ to th-1 shifft input of the decoder and to one of the inputs of a:three-input coincidence circuit. The second inDut of this coincidence circuit is connected to the output of the flip-flop and to the input of the inverter. Tlie third inbut is con- nected to 41-h- eser-c-nd input. teminal, and the output of. the coincidence -h ency line. eircuit is conne.ct-ed to s dlgit-by-digit frequ 2/2 79 024 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 FITLE--CO.4PLEX EQUIPMENT FOR LABORATORY~TESTS OF PNEUMATIC AND SOLID TYRES _U_ AUTHOR-(04)-PETKOV-. B.r VALCEVYK iGALABOYv Jap VURUKOV# Vo COUNTRY OF INFO--BULGARIA, USSR '~Y .SOURCC--MASHINOSTROENE# 1970t VOL 19, NR~4#~ 1567158 DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS--MECH., IND., CIVIL AND MARINE ENGRt METHOOS AND EQUIPMENT TOPIC TAGS--MOTOR VEHICLE TIREy TEST.METHODr STATIC TEST C ON TR OL AARXING-NO RESTRICTIONS. DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO PROXY REEL/FRAME--1999/IT43 STEP NO--BU/9002170/019/0041015610158 1-61IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0123544 Z~ 2 IL 024 -UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0123544 AOSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT9 THE COMPLEX EOUIPMENT OESCRIBED W141CH IS USED IN THE TESTING OF. COMPACE AND PNEUMATIC TYRES PROVIDES FOR CARRYING OUT CONPLETE INVESTIGATI.OWOF AUTOMOBILE AND ELECTRIC TRUCK TYRES, BOTH UNDER LABORATORY AN FIELD CONDITIONS* THE RESULTS ARI-- GIVEN OF STATIC AND D'VINAMIC TESTS OFTYRES DF,BULGARIAIN AND SOVIET MANUFACTURE. UNCLASSIFIEO USSR UDC 621.~78.5, BASSMIJ-141, A.S., 1-13RUSHEV, N.N. flOutput Pareiratuerfi C-p C32 02 01hemical Lisor" Kvantovava elel.-tronil"a (Quantlum El actrord.00) Al p Abstr-ct.: A. n inveetia.L3ULm wao made of the operution or a C. .1),+ 0,%. 11 o i 1 lasar with the objec'k of he Cau:jes -laser -,t 60 co rimi ~i emrL_y charactorstics. The tube with a lenf?~th o 0' 1-5 had !!-' O~Arut win-lo-r of Ca7P The resonitcr waF7, Vomiz~d Lrr t1,10 m-,fl mirrors w-Ah a radius o1' cur-val,ijre of m. Chi t ru L c) r t h:~ -f %i ~i c n !-.,f acrcirtn- lished sn 5 (_im, -in dllanleluor in om~ of' the ud,rror:~,, A er coolrdby liqai-I wau uned ti-c, palre. Initlaluit-,-.1 of th,:: reaction iwq by tin cl(.,ctric,~l wl.th a dural-lon on tha ~~)%Jler of 1 mricronecond. CTJhr.. factors on the c-..itput of tla~. larjar wci~j n r-; r: Overall rati.0 rj:' C92 wid 02t alid degri.~p oC hallu, -it io n of It Y t, ut it mu) oP It liqu o a j. n!, d. ,I, Qrayuvbp-iy Por itll.urt~ot in Lho work nti-_4 uoeful T )-L Received by editore, 22 ;V!~y 1972'. u7 ._wlqo 3 X-12a AU'foh),LOY IfC 174 TME PROCESS OF EPITMIAL GPOWM OF SILICON C4% SLISSTRATES UITH 1=13W LAYER ALLOYEU WITH ARrrNIC [Article by A. 1. Stdorav~ R 1. Ytirur~~tns o". trtstmll- I i-11 Junt 1y I Thin pApar wag lievot-1 to~- a-jrt%kj~ at the rr"*A3 at epitilXtaf. Sr-th of silicon '04 sUbstrat- Ith a hidden I-Ver illl~r" -1:1. arsenic. It In Jemlonztrated Clint the -tranoport of arsenic fro-3 tilt hidZcn laver introducem a n1rmEffennt contrilliltion In't-n he jayej.pr. t1t, q,,ItaI, InI layer, (tV 101 atnm/cn3). The tran-irort. of the 44nixtu* rV Z,lItft rlace -no Mont Intel. ely in the :.direction of flow of the vdpar.goo mi.t Sv. t 9 cmultn are premeated re%,a,,mtu4V of. th dt tributi~ft.of the *rlecifit replatfince wit)l reapret to the surface of the,cricaital laver rtown CA pLatto located n 41rect proxiihity-ju the 014te with a cositinueLw diffus,jon,laTer of the Xtypm elloyed with mrstnic~~ The possible mchaniou,or sutualloying of the apitAX1,41, laver in d%%- cuosad. ;Up"s of lialting trenapa rx a IE.the adaIXturq In tne technotojeel ~pr*a***:wjth ep(taxial growth of silicon are pv0poeid. "t r4~" 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 ,'TITLE-SEMICONOUCTOR PROPERTIES OF COGEAS SUB2-CDSNAS,,SUBZ SYSTEM GLASSES -4UT~H'0~R-(04)-AKSEN0V, V.V.t PETROVt V*M.t XHARAKHORINs F-F-v YURIJSHKINt ..CCUNTRY OF INFO-USSR U'RICE-IZV4 AKAD* NAUK SSSR, NEORG. METER. .1970,/141t 826-7 E PUBLA SHED---- 7 0 --D- T :-SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS, PHYSICS _10PIC TAGS-SEMICCNOUCTOR PROPERTY, A R S EN I DEs CADMIUA Col'WUNL), TIN _'..'~'COMPGUND,, GERMANIUM COMPOUNDY PHOTOCCNOUCTIVITYv FORBIDDEN BAW, GLASS; GOLD, 0PTiC PROPERTYt ELECTRIC PROPERTYi POLYCRYSTAL '~OIJGNTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS .06CUMENT CLAISS-UNCLASSIFTED STEP NO--UR/0363/'10/006/00410826/0827 ,PROXY REEL/FRAME-2000/1453 CIRC ACCESSICN NG-tW125084 UNCt.ASSIf IEV '~2/2 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 :-C:IRC ACCESSICN NO-4P0125084 ~ASSTRACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. ANIATTEMPY WAS MADE TO PREP. CRYST. AND VITRCOUS MATERIALS Of THE COMPN. CIISN SUBX GE SUBI-X AS SU32. ~_':_THE CRYST.'SAMPLES WERE PREPD* BY THE BRIDG14AN METHOD. rHE SAMPLES WERE POLYCRYST. -':OR THE GIVEN GLASSES. VITRIFICATLON OCCURS ONLY AT 0 SMALLERITHAN G-R E CUAL TO X SMALLER THAN,OR EQUAL TO '0.5. THE TEMP, UEPENDENCE-OF THE ELEC. COND. OF SEVERAL SAMPLES AND THE RESP. WIDTH OF -THE FORBIDDEN BAND WERE DETD. GLASSES OF THE COMPN. X LARGER THAN OR -90UAL TO 0.20 WERE.MEASURED ONLY TO 500DEGREESK, INASMUCH AS AT HIGHER -TE14PS. THEY CRYSTO. DURING THE HEASUREMENTSr WHICH RESULTED IN A SHARP DECREASE IN THEIR ELEC. RESISTIVITY. SPECTRAL DISTi.1,1BUTION OF THE ASSGRPTIGN CCEFF. FOR SAMPLES OF THICKNESS 15(~-300 141) WAS MEASURED AT TEMP. WITHIN )'HE PHOTON ENERGY RANGE 0.2-0.75:EV. THE SPECTRAL DISTRIBUT1014 DUkVES FOR THE PHOTUCONDo AT.R00M TEMP..WEILE VETO. ANO -FOUND TO BE RATHER OIFFUSE AT 0.5-2,5 MUb NO'DIFFERENCE WAS OBSO. FOR SPECTRAL DISTRIBUTION OF PHOTGCOND. OF SAMPLES!UNDOPED AND DOPED WITH 5 AT. PERCENT AU. A SLIGHT ADONL. MAX. OF PHOTOCONO,,~,AT SIMILAR TO 0.8 MU WAS OBSDal-WHICH OBVIOUSLY MUST BE ATTRIBUTED TO THE PEbULIARITIES IN 'THE 'EAND STRUCTURE OF THE MATERIAL. THE WIDTH OF~THE FORBIDDEN BAND OF Thr-:VI.TRE0US MATERIAL CDSN SUBX GE SUSL-X AS SUB2 ION THE BASIS OF '-~~:_r-LEC.T_OPTICAL, AND PHOTOLLEC. MEASUREMENTSJ CONSIDERABLY EXCEEDS THE r-ORRESPGNDING VALUE FOR THE CRYSTALp:WHICKAPPARENTLY ATTESTS TO A CHANGE IN THE SHORT RANGE ORDER. THEICOMPN. DEPENDENCEOF THE WIDTH Of JHE-FORBIDDEIN BAND HAS A MIN. NEAR X EQuALS0.30. UNCLASSIFIED d 4 11- U 3 IS, R UDC 661-1:537-311-33 V. V., PLETROV, V. I.I.I. KHARAKHORI.J, F., and YURUSUIN, B. "Semiconductor Properties of CdGeA52 -CdSnAs 2 Syst em Glasses" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR I~ieor'ganicheskiye 111aterialy, Vol .6, No 4, Apr 70, pp 826-827 rbstract: The authors attempted to obtain crystalline and vitreous materials of the composition CdSnxGel-;e:'Is2- The crystalline specimens Only ternar were prepared by the Brid&man method y compounds them- selves could be obtained as single crystals. Specimens of mixed com- position were polycrystalline. Vitrification takes place only in the interval 0 -- x < 0.5. The vitreousness, and hom6geneity of the speci- mens underwent metallographic and x-ray* phase analyses. The tempera- ture dependence of the electrical conductance of several vitreous spe- al-Tens: Was determined, and the *spectral distribution of the absorption coefficient of specimens 150-300 microns in wjdth was measured at 1/2 USSR AKSENICIV, V. V., et al., Izvestiya kkademii Nauk S"SR Neorganiches- kiye Materialy, Vol 0', No 4, Apr 70, pp 826-827 room temperature in the photon energy range of 0.2-0.75 ev. Trie width of rhe forbidden zone of rhe vitreous maLerial (according Lo electrical, optical and photoelectric measurement data) s-".gnificantly exceeds the corl-esponding value for:the crystal which apparent.1y in- dicates a change of short-range order. The wid th of. the forbidden zone obtained from electrical measurement data exceeds the correspond- ~ing values obtained from optical and-,photoelectric measurements* 2 RUMP" 91WRIPM-6. -- MR; I I ff I I I - ffi- I H IMI. MR MI, I M-11 - F MANY -M WN 77~ USSR uDc: 669.295:620.1 PROKHODTSEVA$ L. V., DROZDOVSYIY, B. A* and I ~Ul M~U No. V. $#Anisotropy of Failure Characteristics Of Sheets From OT4 and OT4-1 Alloys" Moscow, Tsvetny3re_jq~~all , No 3, Mar 72, ppj2-73 Abstract: This study concerns the presence of considerable "reverse" anisotropy in sheets from OT4 and OT4-1 titanium allovs on the basis of mechanical properties and failure characteristics. All failure character- istics of lateral specimens from the experimental alloys appear to be much higher than those of longitudinal, specimens-I Lateral:specimens of steel, Al alloysand a number of Ti (a+13)- and B-alloys generally have lower failure characteriatica than those exhibited by lox4gitudinal specimens. This regularity, termed "reverse" anisotropy, for GTh and OIT4-1 alloys, was.also found to be.typical of other Ti alloys (VT5-1, VT20, VT14, VT3-1) as annealed. Annealing OT4-1 alloy above polymorphous; transformation temperatures to obtain a large uniaxial grain eliminates the "reverself anisotropy. The anisotropy of OT4 and Wh-l.allrxy sheets on the basis of failure (impact bending) ia to a large extent related to thiL rubttantial ,difference in deformation values between lon,~Iltudinal 4ind transverse 1/2 M - 49 , Radar USSR uDc; 621-396,677-001.5 YUR'YEV, A. N. "Synthesis of Artennas WTith I'llinimum Average Level of the Side Lobes in the Polar Diagram" Moscow, Radioteklinika i Elektronika, Vol. 17, No 11, Nov 72, 1,~p'2-21.,9-226o Abstract: A method is proposed for synthesizing antenn:ris N-Ahich ensure minim-um energy reception on the side ldbes.of the polarTattern from spatially distributed intcrf-~7rer.Le for fixed valucs of Certain paraneters of the systerm whoich determine its operating qi~ality. The micthod is base," on principles of varl-ationt-2 calcullus louding to nonhor"~;;.,-,eneouni inLegral eqwxt-ions relati"re to the function.whic:h describer the distribut-1-m of thf- field in the antlenna- aperture, The polar diagrpan, reo-IJI-4,3,111" tri-I-ni the syll- thesis have a m-InJi.-i-omi average side lobe level, and in a: cert-,Lin st:,w~e ensure the best mear-square approximatioz the of t I in o n a delta 'Junction. (additive -Dolar dlagrams) or. to -,ts de~rivnt-II'ves (dif- ference polar. dliagrF=z) ,t-he degree of approximation being reg,,Ilated by -ron I requirements for reactivity of the system. F ~. t.-ie sianelpoint of the stt:.- tistical theory of detect~lon, the synthesized systems ure in the 1/2 -77 USSR YUR'"YEV, A. 11. , Radiot'ekbn E:Iektroji. Nlo 11, T",vv, 72, r)-- 22Ii9,-226o case of operation against a backgrowid of a mixture of .0,,'Lterntil ntorrma,'- interference distributed in the regior. of the. sj.di~ lob-s, auri thermal noised. Examples are given of sypthesis of lin~-ar ayd,evniias Ea~d. ure which form :addi'-ive Lmid sitbtractive rolar antennas with a circular apert diagrams. USSR UDC 621.396.67.061 YUR__ "Problem of Synthesis of Realizable Antennas" Moscow, Radiotekhnika I Elektronika, Vol XV1, No 5, May 1971, pp 718-725 Abstract: The relation between statistical and detetministic approaches to the problem of synthesizing an antenna system is established, and the varia- tion method of synthesizing realizable antennas the characteristics of which are close to statistically optimal is investigated. The equivalence oi statis- tical synthesis of optimal antenna systems desioned for oT)eration under noise conditions and the variation method of s~,nthesis insuriLig ninii,,iun noise inten- sity with given signal gain is demonstrated. The conditions imposed on the statistical noise properties for which optimal antenna system'. are realizable .are obtained. For cases where the optimal systems are unrealizable, a method Is proposed for synthesizing realizable antennas Insuring the best signal/ ./noise ratio fcr the adnissible-level of reactive power. An,ezample calcula- tion of such a system Is presented. optimal against a background of correlated Antenna systems which are noise have, as a rule, high reactivity. Such systems are related to the time 1/2 YUR'YEV, A. N., Radiotekhnika i Elektronika, Vol XMI, No 5, May 1971, pp 718-725 filters which are well-known in radar and are oDtimal against a background of passive noise. Just as these filters, reactive antenna systens are e-x- tremely unstable with respect to uncorrelated noise of the type of internal receiver interference. It is especially important to consider this in dis- crete systems (phased arrays). A second-type Fredholm integral equation is presented for synthesis of realizable antenna systems. In addition to the solution of this equation presented in the article:with.'an e_xponential correla- tion.function, tabulated values of the equation are available for a correlation function of the sin x/x type [Slepian, Pollak,.Bell System Techn. J., Vol lu, No-1, 1961, page 43]. 2/2 -20~_ 'USSR UDC 621..396.677.001.5 KV1- A. N. "Minimizing the Level of'Side Emission of Antennas With a Circular Aperture" Moscow, Radiotekhnika i Elektronika, Vol 16, No 7. Jul:71, pp 1144-1151 Abstract: Methods of variational calculus proposed by.the author in a previ- ous.paper (Radiotekhnika i Elektronika, Vol:12, Yo 12, 1967, p 2108) for synthesis of linear antennas are applie&to minimizing the pm,,er of side emission from antennas with a circular aperture. Side emission power is understood to mean the sum of thepower radiated in the side lobes of the radiation pattern and the reactive power~.t Antennas are considerdd which minimize side emission power when one of the, following characteristics is fi;.ed: input power, antenna gain in the direction of the maximum of the radiation pattern, or slope of the directio 'a-finding characteristic of the system. It was found that a system with minimum side emission power having a given input power also satisfies the criterion of mbiimum side emission power.with 'Fixed gain along the antenna axial directimi. Uhea the parameter c is greater than 4 (where c1z,R, z. is the projection of the space frequercy vector on the plane of the antenna, R is the radius of the anrenna aperture), the syqtem dso i-aftofter, the criterion of mtnimtun aide emiasion power for W USSR YUR'YEV, A. N., Radiotekhnika i Elektronika, Vol 16, No 7, Jul 71, pp 1144- Ml a given slope of the direction-finding characteristic. The relative level of the side emission power for a.system. which is.opthnum in the sense of these criteria at values of the parameter c:greater-than 4.5 is at least an order of magnitude lower than the level-of side emission pcrwer of a system wi.+-h a uniformly distributed field in the aperture.; A comparison with analogous results for linear antennas found.in the previous paper cited above shows that systems with a circular aperture have a higher relative level of side emission power. On the other hand, the degree of dif f erence between the basic parameters of systems'satisfying the:given criteria is 4igher in.the case of linear antennas:than for antennas with a circular aperture. 2/2 &C040497 Ikef Code: T P rZ S S-bz ~L 9 UJDC 621.396.67:70001.5 ..USSR EV. Li N. "S"thests of. Antennas with Minlmum,.Side. Lobes" Mosiv37AN &SSR, Radiotekhnika;i,Ele~tro'-~ika Vol:JS, Jan 70, No I Pp: Calculus of variations is-iused for synthes-47s of alinear antenna system, which minimizes~both-th'e,lateral~i-ad.,.ation and.the reactive power at a given value,of one.of-the following character- istics: input power; field intensity in-a givemdirection, and the of the DF characteristic. :This makes it possible to -the a erture for a determine the,optimal field distribution in. -,series of criteria. The results obtained at a given inpnt power -and field intensity in the given direct-ion are Ipractically ideati- cal, and the field intensity in the aperture is do-scribed by tKe elongated wave spheroidal functions of the zero order-.: At the given DF characteristic sharpness forthe qase:of small' values of the J- USSR UDC 621-396.677.001.5 "Synthesis of Antennas with Miriimu4i Side Lobest' Mos AN SSSR, Radiotekhnika i Elektronika V61 15, Jan 70, No 1 PP 55!37 Abstract; Calculus of variations is used tor qynthesis of a littear antenna system,'which minimizes both the lateral radiation and tile reactive power at a given value of:one~of the folloiArig character- istics: input power; ficId intensity in a given direction, and the Istic This rnakes~ it possible to shaproess of the DF character.L determine the optimal field distribution in the. aperture for a series of criteria. The results obta-~n d at a given input power and field intensity in the given direction are Practically identi- cal, and the field intensity in the"aperture Js described by the elongated wave spheroidal functions of the zero,order. At the given DF characteristic sharpness for the case-- of smaLl values of the angular sector beyond whose limits the'antenna ~)ower is minimized, the system has substantial differences. At a giveninput power the DF characteristic of such a system is 34 percent sharper than the DF characteristic of a system with a uniform field distribution fti the ipert,tirip. or,,r. L 7 USSR uDo 6zi.596.67-005.1 viin IvL,,tr A ur aConnection Between Synthesis Of Antennas On The BaeaIW k Given Directivity Diagram And The Statistical Synthesis Of Syetema Of Spatial Processing Of A Signal' Radiotekhnika i elektronika, Vol XVII, No 6, June 1972, pp 1177-1182 Abutraott, An analogy is established between the problit'u" ef synthesis of an antenna according t;j a opecified directional diagram and the problem of syn- thesis of a system, optimum on a backgro-und.Iof noise, 6-x special processing of a signal. Tt 4 a shown that with very co=on, conditions of signal detection, ayntheBis of a statistically optimm system leads to eu perdirective antennan. A method is proposed for correction of optix= systems by applying limitations either on the power input or on the -reactive power of the eystem. The f indings 'presented in the puper for the linear apartura of anantenna, can easily be ex- tended to 'the case of an aperture of an arbitrary farm.'~~5 ref. Received by editors, 13 April 1971. . .... ... ......... USSR' UDC 621.762.27 YURIYEV B. P,t PRIVALOVA, A. M-t and ZABBLIN, I*' V-, 1enin,,c,,-rad Polytechnic Institute "The Production of Cobalt-Tungsten Powder by:Electrol.yoj3 of Aquegus Solutions" Kievy Poroshkovaya Metallurlpi at jTo 11(131),~Nov 73, pp 1-5 y Abstract: A study vias nade of the process of electrolytic pro- duction of W-CO alloys in -Dowderlike form from citrate solutions containing Na2V'oa and COSOt with (NH 4)2SOA -md Na2SO4 additiois by means of 'd an Co, coreduction on the c6thode widor conditiono of diffusion kinatieff. The effects of the current density, tho ow-mary concentrationt and of the relationahip of C0804. ~Lnd Na2',704 concentrations in the solution, of plit citrate airid ammonium siil- --he chen~ cal fate aoncentrates, and of the current,efficiency and composition of Co-1,11 povider *are investir- ated. The current efficiency increases with increasing total concentration'of W and Co Salts and decreasing content of citrate in,the solution.The correlation of 7Y and Co salt concentrations in the solution influences primarily 1/2 USSR YUR'YEV, B. F., et al., Poroshkovaya MetaUurgiya, No 11(131), NOV 73, PP 1-5 the chemical composition of the~powder. By changmg this correla- tion, the W-content in the alloy can bo'changed from 0-20 mass~*- The optimum conditions of the electropre,::ip.itation of W-Co-Dowders are determined. According to the X-ray structural analysis, they represent solid solutions of W in hexagonal and cubic Co. Five figures, one bibliographic referenc-ea Z/Z 34 USSR UDC 621.762,274 GGLUBKOV, L. A., YUR-YEV B. P. VIElectrolytic Method of Producing lrone-Nickel-Molybdenum Alloy in Dispersed Form" Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya, No 8, Aug, 1972, pp 1-7. Abstract: This work studies the conditions of production of a three com- ponent Fe-Ni-Mo powder alloy. The design of the.electrolyzer and electri- -W cal circuits are the same in principle,as described iii earlier works. One difference is that the use of a solublemolybdenum anode was found to be less suitable than the introductionlof hexavalent molybdenum to the solution as the salt (NH 4)2 MOO 4' The method developed can produce povider alloys with various contents of the components (molylbdenum concentratiop can vary from 0 to 15%, iron and nickel concentration, can var; without limit) . The elec- trolyte developed is stable in operation and contains no organic complex- forming agent; this allows electrolysis to be performed using several soluble and insoluble anodes with separate regulation of current passing through them. The influence of the electrolysis cond itions (D k) temperature, pH, solution composition) on cathode current efficiency, chemical composition and alloy structure is studied. It is established that under certain elec- trolysis conditions, when the process of electrodeposition of all metals 1/2 USSR UDC 621.762.274~1 GOLUBKOV, L. A., YURIYEV, B. P., Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallijrgiya, No 8, Aug, 1972, pp 1-7. occurs according to diffusion kinetics, the.composition of.the alloy pro- duced depends on the composition of the solution. Th,e following optimal electrolysis conditions were established for the production of a permalloy powder alloy: electrolyte (in mol/l):~ FeSO -- 0,030, NiSO __ 0,160, 4 4 (NH4)2 MoO4-- 0.005-0,008, (NH 4 ) 2S+04 0.15, K2SO4 Na 2 so 4 __ 0.1-0.2. 2 Fe In this case Dc = 2,000-3,000 a/m , temperature,20-2S% pil 2.5-2.7; D a 100-200 a/m 2 : DNi 100-200 a/M 2;D Pb 1,000-2,000 a/m 2; Dgri a c 2 Fe Ni 50-7S a/m :1 5:27. The concentration of Mo(VI) is maintained by a a periodic addition of a solution of (NH MoO with pH 6-7. ~4~2. 4 2/2 TECHNICAL TRANSLATION' FSTCAIT-23-i!)70-12 ENCLISH TITLE: PIASTICS IN TECIRMIDGI FOREIGN ?IT1,Zr,VJAZTM55Y V TW--M AUTWI; MORID YURIMICIT "VIYEV SOURCES 11=170 PubI1xIdt=g, lt=.39, Mciecono 19'ro, P0 1-6f Traftalated.for SM by Leo rttn",r IzzwVateal Redwood c1tY, ca. te, NOTICE The concemi of this publicstion fisve bet" tranjUted as ftcsenzcd~ in the origitkj i text Na stucenlic his hten m4jc to ytrity the &c~4ty or any statement containva Zvi, Thi, 116flAition is p,;blll%td With a minimum or CM editing And graphics Pr4parblia" in order to expedite the dilsernination of informstio". Kequests for AdjItionAl topits of this flocument should be juldleeftJ to Deparim-st. A. NsfkwW TethAkil Ittl6virnallon Servies. Spok4lieW. V4stla 32151. Approved (at VoWw ralassal distribution tjnllmt"d~ The %romendisua growth in p1tirtieis o,A-p%it to one h4illm;wk of o,kr ..ALrw%dt Owijite tire pi-Iduairg Grr!rttpr qi~antiti;-- 2' of plootIcs; thssn metnl- lurgloul. warkera are omalting nonferrous matpxiala. Parallmling the greater output. of plaoticvj tb-! atti.-tado or opeclfilietit only " witirkla'n6i a'11*,Pilly xaluahle, a--.roploc~aisntv for natural nhor~~;i auvply.. With ixprovisranta In the quali It boenn to be realized that they nrc is-it intpr1or to vach nwe later an their flold Or toOnOMiO(L11Y Bound A;Lpii-,Mtir1%R GVMtl:;. brcularle-1. Plitfitlen brg= "to ~QIJM6 to the L6P isti6l",ioxot OnIy ithand of vulter, uvr~Ccr- rous and precicuo metals, and so orx, but also atrrutg:y displacod cast ttrcxx and Itcolt g1liall"Wood, mid clay. For bealdes low coart.mid high qual,,ity. the utso *Lplanticu partially tech-vo boazu aquipment pr~cldc-tiir,,.ty. Millions of plastic cupe, lRnpohades,. scapdIctisio, pena, telqphoae. zeta, and. Coton of machines, - television zeta, "mid radld' iicil~ir% Mve =01 Wooden and metal articlea. But this is noi ;xhat ovr t,,7ok in ab.-ut. The author set out to recount misir04L about those uoea or plnotlcz' viliete, they terve 'not merely ats watistitutts, even i! or -:14 In quii2ityj but,wittire they Pxe the enly -.~stqrxal- with unique Cc~mbinati-.-;s Phyntento oh-rrtirsil, and.,iftechrusti-al rrerertirs on which nprlunt,--n ..d"Onds entirely. The tendency to domantatritte the moat ujjolupkl~ thr wat Px.!t1.c of placticti'applieutJona hae'Motint a a=e.h3t frag-nentary, ci4triloetn,; t7,~e of lir,coantatiori. It uppeara that thiu lo liuvilable lit a WLA n1=1,ng twt at rrobing.into detailed dq9triptionis of chrrAcal atru.-Wre atiA prorar*les of~ plastio materialn, into specialized juestions of their uavu itt vacu a;vz- Me tioldt but only at dtmonoLrotli-4 *1w i=tnvo iscuro of Wivir p~;4.en-tlal. t 5 0 .he author deliberiptely 40e4 not exazine traditional flOldsk Of ;~183tisla so# avinj thougb vxtrei*914. izpurtonto since he asomurses theae uzos to be qu~lta fully co.'vqrod in thO Apgoimlice'd popular-ocien"fic litarst-4re. ."'od and Control (tmc) and R~air Servicts Lt. Call. 14. V.,Iy.,, impt ... ring Toclult-l '~rov-nt of wthols or contral ona plarMnr. i. provid" for in tha rt f III, firective of the 21,th Coow~-a of ".o C-~;Lq for the . t five 7"Ar plan of 11avelopment of the nattcnol econ-Y of the tSSR f~ 1971.1y,15 vill eon k~ibllt. to th~ --l1 .! and ul", r-it, pna,,"~tt-n ~rriet~ney. M-y of the o1W, that -rha.l laillt-y :.-i~e equimeant he- al-dy -d. rAirly bro,d n,- of !P-?C T" crill - bility of Introducing euch nothq,,s in dictatod k-y tne feet tr4t the total n-ba, or -~rnti=a or. cor-a-to -d.ls or In 116-MISme, o,e-617, lend m, I. aey..,l th.--1. W.J-d dLt,.-t ;,iaW or -it, ome -rdnd In aa ... r,-~ ~f tell, 101- -11-.rdi-t6d .,.t!.na It .11 pl.nt H.--' it," introd-tion of rrrc ; I a 1~horiou. ,W rather --vl- h-. a-C.Ln evettit-Lom miat ftrat be ~t at the pt' '- of it It. crz-lla- A z~ I.1 tu;!Z "'ira IIni- -- = :=. %= out aa, trA el~a letn'lly Introd9Ctle the z1vtom. A-Ilsrr ct,n~ltion cuxlslst~ - Le-~iz-tbs va't.ri.l and fACMICA2 b.-I r-17' C"~Jtorm' Comwic'Iti-ma e:l;ip-ott and it.. IIk.. Alal, flWly, -Ih~r I- I, train -,*. r-n-l in th- principles %no -t"olm Prd In drawing, up dL^.rra". I*- ~iln-t -,J~g Ill.% '.1,1 in the of we hZil, t. a. a a broad -t,i-nelia . so.d -Lo..t-tIoP the -1-- or the aulln pha~an of work in each Ilutlanit, They =zt 4110 knew the or the *.rvj... fnd oa(L-, .. -11 the prineIPIrv of . Liao- prorrarleD.g. and -th-ti-I ... lyi. III ad~.tion' tilay ri-110 -t- thft w-thods of drawlto, ~~Tr diarr- ar.,f it-Ar pl-to In ."I tl-, Uee-f.lIyc." r- 11, tr"'I aa.e.t-d it!-. Indies- tt". .1 tht. I. th. ~nt-d-tnr. tm% in rIhn r, P.Ir f.cilLti... Fint, th" oryant-oll trriol- f. 11 p--ml In It. %i,-17 and practice of ln.it-l tn tk-o,l Ihi. tletoilg ~-- .111 ILM I- I dadnjstraltl~o and cn-nd p-.r.oLntj of rd,it.l7 ti-A Fro-3-tim rpcrtv# tcc~Vol-jvtm, d1bj,mtrhn-, and wnr'-re or the vintrol : culp.rt~t, Vlm~d V-h-r t-mina, s-lon Ill. em- du~riw. workthp houre for 15 day,. At ... reLe- t7 the p-'I~Jjtta ~f on, f t- aei~ntlfjl, ~.q-ftj' j"mttt.te' th-" -in r-lure"or the daarr-tlc mthol f pl,rmti- and conlir"I, "0 tho n re ad,., ta,end rriri-.,-y or ohi. yata..,. T,. t2*'jnj'l.. "a'j'n ... er'n':1.6,d itn an --InWo. 11 -MIr, each trolln1mlo drew up P ltat of Operations for one or the prod,~rtlm Soctimi, dre. . WWC end -d. liffe-lit emileul..tto.. fr~. It. thor, we. -1. p at the p-livilt a ho,-ary-,-1t IKFC Ikn. lop of two teel-I.gLetr. SnI t- Whniclats. Thl- II-TIACO, lethat eharg*d with orgmizinr, all the prnparatory woril C11 Ihtmdq9Inff 0 a tjointly with the .1",cialista fron Vle inotit-Ate. ."I'lleld"th. ut-t-ding xPeri.nc.cl In thi. Area and, taking 4nt4 Acdount tile *.cLfIC feature alf thoir own pImt, drew a iWPC (Jingram or the tachnoloricill prm.... aQ 'j-919 1-1 )A A%. the bogil.nW, of t4A proPVt in. vo.~Wtt-- that 0".11 -' prvdue.t was bolrq! -;,.Ilod a', the plant. ra, special Co.. - hv7 IMA, Cat.d an the dl.gr- tho -n- labo,1~ OvIrs-tono I. dUmantlins t.'w PrO4-~%, th, or the d.mar.' -1 .. _U - AA' tbw finishing aparatione carried out after the r.;s-To had boomm made. V--d 40 - bttia in tp 17r-C dl.Fr- wu~ tha h-stL-C, '.7dr-La%4, air, cartral. mvi -th" vyft.-. ~-t t= ." 'o-Y C.itil d.%. U. -S Vol~' of . rp-41.11y dol.-~psd rare (List of wrk - 0. rsit-) tu which. apart from Indicating the name of th. t-r:_1oAI*a1 poratton and the ramVP Of it'# "&to*, %K* *tape and d~rm%Aco% of Ulm work ~ ladicato4. The Ing of thL9 list was toned .79C to tho pr--=-'- vaa~ and who warm "clsll.t. 1. -rtic.l.r r1rat they dov"lopod %h6 W' C dla,,ras for a mail Wtt aaah a. a Cu*, emotive, or 14boratur7, uhlrb was wu~jhr.- w~. ~u a d~txi)oo mo~laj a' walk p4rrorzed t"rt. Tnaso alaqrcu v.re in* or~_Ztz~! 6~v~va f-r A di*FrOA. C-1,JnUr, ond c-rd~..tt~g tho ~f~C dl.- of t." -11 -1-m 1. - of th. _0 _q~jas '~ ... of %h. rca f-t U-L '.A dlswt=-4 co.p".1tv Ivin di.,,r..' 1h, %Ia;.tMz: Mf f- a-dJOIBIN7, or co.tlr~.. o".121 ~.t& V- thm 4r tl'~ en-tra wn yet-. It h.M.14 b, wonti-d t"t -a drA'iar :'KC dtA~_ ao. or ",y Lrq-rtni, tMings is W .,I-,It -4t I-* ..Ao. At Una pla,l' in q...%,jou -ch #)stc, of p.~Qdj Is ~-tg u- rt-.- _4FLt.r or it. no-. 7~'q =It -,o wniz-11 Iho .0i. )ovl~tr'A IV de3ip-t~d I.,. ... -rm- priate -0* rimt--. T1w -Wo af tto ~rk is tv~tw-' xi~ o'-'.t"I V~hvp in *I"% of w-rk for it- o7skae-" for vt-vtl' Itso on th. w.rX Its%, WC.Im'd III the, #".tt~h 'Mel 87st.m. As a "-It of' the -1yeig f t. C..r-t.s. CI.C.. t% -as that It. erittCal root. sq,,,what --6, t,,% ~'.--.d sn~ fRr an. 114~, Honro t1ho diserso hsd to,tot art!.%itod wttt rv"~dt 4,o trio erit.ria. Of *ttam,' For thIl V,.i*~ M - d,- r po=-r I'M . -41# of I c. - I hu,r. Fma, it a- to-_i -v',y the -.I- that tht 'k one mh- It 1. c.-M, a- %ht ~ .. reav"ev, Aoj let* baAj-jv!, Ord Ill jot-. of ~,k n_..17vV. Froot the diu-- it " to -Aly- '.r. -p ~.4 0-4~' If 't-C.-ary. the -.I- for th. t.mp1't'.'j r Cv'*rp%'-,x the -Sl4bl. ltx;t. of tt- aue' z-h-k on -..he -,-.at Of ~h. --v rrunt. ". t,,W~vtt. Jt.- -,.ad .t 1. -1%d vLty tZ rwpatrr are *.J~ at only ova kt~,t at 1. . pl-t, . _ or_"'.3 ~.% h. _k to t.dh~jo,j"4t or _1". .r' 1, tor-4 -t mul vo*embly It- ~,tro.j oz ~01.raj ~jndm cr ;-tucjs. M-'.' it -.It ho 10 -,.k -'t v.e- .in; th. .,I lorl-I p,-', of r~p.!r s,.3 1,k!7K t~t, ~c. r1.- of Inc-Lrr. pr.A.-t. to 12-.. ?~~ t~.'t r_"~ i~~ t7- or certain Usetc ~.Ls "d c-,," -r% d.t.-Ine, _,t ~t-d In L%, t~-arr". Tbb neoifting lobo, th-rv!oru, vam rtstricled t~ the v&thbIjah#tt t4canojorj~41 v,q~m,* t:wy we,, dj6,.Old o, S dstAmifted soatian at the Mt dtarrax. In tk1a f.?,ey tcO~ J*-o the UnifOrmitY of ths load cf the prrd,~tt~m tt-s. Thwy .1 nat forgot W take into &CCO-nt the rtsd~,oo wttb.- -nlteh It I., prOcit.-.11y twap. *ibis t4 sust.111 In. Pch.'1.1) -t 31-t. 1h. _"~' or t~'. vro4uctl- usams. As-tng thA% each warX tam daily shnIt "rk ce, several articles, c~ J_99~41 Y, k-"Ilp V_ -.t. lf _'l, t, ." d"n. on *ell r",t.d v,7 th, ;-trotti- It --4 in t- D,'PC dt.~" . - th, Or 'r "T.-1 I-, "I"Jil -p~l .-taty ar -1 It r. XP --at th. --0.4 1. ...' f., -p.l- -'! lh~ q'f -.v ~~ r" 4.6-b17. 44U -r' la.1 *I the b.11. fit etr:;'~ ~tze dt.r,- IMI-tIni, ~f "11' w.11f 1. b-tro. -pstred. A ;K'G ".'t ir", - . -.rv~ -- P',.%ti,, p-plr ml I-Irlzmp . rr"t MdAf W~ dil-IA11br, -4 fln'"Ir,g vp#rstIons In ~-if %iI! vLa fqd " tba C-tr-I .".4-1 i.114saw;1Y Ow. Ti- -p.;r In d~y.. lka- A~- --4 - , It- t- 41W."t of kh. i"., ii Vltl_~ ~~t of t-r* 0 1- _~-xttlrj -e tm -.ro~,r--.mcat, l.t. - fIll t= J-"t~ =uwtril -~- -4 Or-1.0, V-7 C...4 V4. r.. thl UTC ~V'7~- ItA i.0 "-t=V.tv1 t. -at el- ot ml, or 11, fr,. 1,,,i IAlm 'l.~l 7, 'It a "'I~ "'f '14 44 rr t1int 1-0 J.Olr~l k~ l1l 11~t pmrTls. t~A ev_w"".tiln lio 'jl,"Am r'j vbetj~_*. N4 th. 9-4~oktlrl -q1t,l -It. F71t-n ~&P -A -4-1 O-f*t7 -t th* -r4 f~-- Tr.~ jt~. N, t.-, f4r tr.-~ l.;Ird 0." 10 WAIJ In th* 1~4t tho C'.tj f~r ..'w' r. 1~nl :~ ~r . h :"., . r . ., ~' _"J' ny v-wtima r~,, d 11,,' .f .a ar.4 part., (). th. 111.414 or "It r'~ l4 1 .11V it.- 0..4 1 il't PINAntlig #I y" ALI* it$-rrom PM P"Pire Inrvr~tlllh Ar tf~ pt"t. Th* iptrotooti, ot tn't t.j:,q4 f,,r -.%* dw.41t, , "ni ,f % Iwo of vloto~nta~t m .1. 1 . ,WO aaj~qor **q "dq on * pvCjbI for%; *1 W*Aj of it r-arrol-rv detamiot U~A tSm to sslAf.1 irortsilt joij pr~."- e#" w J-9964 LO The docvneut namd to v#t do~ the d-14- Of 4-01VWany of 9 t..k to th7 c p4rf rear and the data the pr.j.et -9 wMlsied i2 a -11 XL%,A4 4 M tote t"It. 31me all jolo. are jjv4,.d in a certain ardor in the notebook, t~v 41 foraman Can, ~Ilhovt uming t" DC~ diagram, nant=3 a task to a pe~fo-' and C. "t"l t T e V.- *r hlfillvwt of Us pl-nnad Otb4p ck,.,,- h f..t.th mw~ta I tote,ol :Mabliax fOr 4Lfr-4 wtvi-aw. In tnsx. -Irt* ttj blare notA, the 4ate the .-tablits m-e tumed In fox "Imir -d t~* rvprlrs are toapl,Ie4. Th. reperts of foreman and the 6eciviona of I tna _11 -it C.-P,el I lt are 0M.M4 In . special lofowk. 7h. --P t: : a , r 2p dt r notes the repirt -I adj the" are sixii.alumni.17 need : the progrop. of .,rk -,I. tha "rk sth.d.4it. r..d Ln Int"duti o of I" IMPC yet*. C.utrlb. .1 q".tly tov.rd ; ~ O"enis.tfon . proluction At Un plant. n plmt eanAtire vers ml.sa-d 5F .Ili n' -.1, f,-tt.*% INt" iMtlf"t4l D"blAUX. "th ir. t "r ly by the cf.grom go:: the proeuctjoh f9raxam know* about III* tctcl =I~ Or ..P,. 1. hf~ 81=2.tzo t2--- dL4-- a,.-,),. %Pe gate Or 4.1 J,jjT .1 As-bILe. ..4 ph~k. for It is = 'Y to ooa mns In ath*r stop&. The f0"- Can - d.l.t. ;,Jor I ..~~ ettitlon o c I.o c%-jsl do.ra p proc-tt~ tLee. There ... noe r ... a of or *A:h porfomar for th-P wwtt~ =trwt&d to h1a. A. a ros~Ajt of,L-. gmat --t of ~k-_ b7 the collective 14 lsit- fteing the n"c vy2%,o., timy 0" .! the 1-,Cr%AAI, tAb*4 "0 P~pod to the pL"t. Tr.* total bawb4r of arliqlas boirw proc"~*'! 1 -,7 me t,'- - r.d~lced by one-nalf. :a additloo, d..Vita 0 marb.all Pdr omd' ct -1.A, piaAt w r Ion zl-a, th* tk-. of sta7:zf xrticloa at by 30 Percent. - - - - - - - - - - - - - i i 14 ly"!CLAS S I F I E T I T LE - - I A -? IT I n' Al- EVALUAT IONS F 11 Cl ~ IA 6 0 V EAN:l BFU.--ii FOR LA:A SHil'T ENIERGY ~WTHOR 0 21 - Wl I Tq I Y EV YU -YU. YURYEV,::M.S. 'COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR SOURC---OPT. SPEKTROSK. 1970v all(:3) 159.1R ~:D AT EPUKISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS TOPIC TAGS--PHASE SHIFT, INTEGRAL! EQUATION, 0,11TRGL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS o'DOCUMEN1 CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED REELYFRANIE ~-3002/0120 ~S T L- PNO--k]R/00~it/70/0~iii/003105')1/05c)2 CIRC AC-CESSION NO--AP0127746 .11154 v Inrat guinn ,Rompfm UNCL'ASSIFTEO 'PROCESSING DATE-11SEP70 lFT-JTLE--THE TREATMENT OF OPEN ASSOCIATED,INJURIES OF,:THEMAND AND FINGERS _U_ zl::AUTROR--YERETSKAYA, M.F.9 KHARITONOV, R.O.p RY --USSR -COUNTRY OF INFO KHIRURGII IMENI T, To GREKOVAt 1970'v VOL 104, NR 3, PP -PUBLISHED ------- 70 -DATE' ICAL %,UBJECT, AREAS AND MED SCIENCES ,T,QPTC TAGS-PLASTIC SURGERY, nRTHOPEDIC SUPGERY* MEDICAL CAST, PLASTER, ~,,-_,PLASTIC C ONTR 9L Mk-7KING--!N0 RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REFL/FRAME-1986/0636 STEP NO--I,)R/O~)89/TO/104/003/00rj'-~/G-ri6~ rlIpc ACCESSION -"40--AP0102622 _5_.U_ELF_D_ 212 015 UNCLASSIFIED PAOCESSINS DATP--IISEP70 IRC ACCESSIO% NO--AP0102622 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT~--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. IN THE PAPER THE STAGES OF TREATMENTt FREQUENCY OF COMPUICATIONS AND PESTORATION' OF A DATIENITIS CAPACITY FOR WORK IN 125 PATIENTS WITH 0,PFN ASSOCIATED I!qJlJR!ES ARE AN4LYSFD. THE FREOUENCY nF COMPLICATIONS AFTER PRIMA.RY TQE::AT'4SNT Or- SUCH rNJURIES MADE 46.4PERCENT.: THE,,R.ESULTS,OF, TREATMENT rIERE STU-JiEo IN 55 PATIENTS. THE CONCLUSION.TS DRAWN ON THE NECESSITY FIF REVEALING PATIENTS THAT NEFD PECONSTROCTIVE SURGERY'ON THE HANCYIN DUE COURSE. I N' DESCRIBING THE TECHNIC AND OPTIMUM TE.R.MS OF PHYSICAL THERAPY IN ASSOCIATED -HAND INJI"UP'l-ES THE IOEA'.0F RAtIONALITY TO SIJBSTITUTE AT 'S OF TREATMENT BULKY PLASTER SPLINTS.IN SUCH PATIE, CERTAIN STAGE NTS BY SMALL-PLAST.IC SPLINTS IS EMPH&SHED. ALSO GIREAT,NECESSITY OF PHYSICAL LABOUR THERAPY IS STRESSED THAT.RENDERS IT PDSSIBIE To RESTORE USSR UDC.669,293:541.943:669-977 SOKOLOVA, G. S., YUR'YEV, S. F. "Interaction of Niobium with Gases at High. Temperatures and La.4 Pressures" Metallovedenive --- V sb. (Physical Metallurgy -- collection of works) , No 14, Leningrad, Sudoscroyeniye Press,-1970, pp 204-2222 (1fro,m Rzh-Metallurgiya, No 4, Apr 71, Abstract No 41781) The results of studying the interaction of niobium with actiue Translation- gases are systematized. Me equilibrium conditions. in Nib-O, No-IN, Nb-C, and Nb-11 systems are investigated. Problems emmectQd with th~~ kinatics ancl mechanifn of Q-.~idaztion of niobium at high temperatixre.,~ ancl I-ov pressures ar-e diocussed. Mere are 9 illustrations, .3 tablez,~.and a 116-enti-f biblioboxaphy. UDC 621.391.2 USSR -iWK!M, -A. H. Accuracy.of Joint Estimation of the Carrier Frequency aind Direction of Arrival of a Radio Signal" Moscow, Radlotekhnika, i elek-tronika, Vol XVII, No 2, 1972, pp, 301-306 Abstract: The method of maximuza probability of the carrier frequency and di- rection of arrival of a signal received against a backeround of norual noise exponentially correlated in time and with respect to the antenna aperture was used to investigate the- problemsof:accuracy of the estimation. The dif- fe~-ence in error dispersions of joint and disjoint estimates is cspecially noticeable whenrx using antennas with a large aperture in.the case of significant 'difference in the direction of arrival of the signal fron, the nornial to the aperture. This situation can occur when using systems, with a synthesized aperture when the observed target is located,at-a small angle ~o the synthesis trajectory. USSR UDC: 537.525.5 MUMS TJ.P,'Y-!--V, V. G. 'V, G. A. KAPLAN, V. B., MOMES, B ..,Ya. and. 11"Ire Discharge With a Strongly Ionized Cesium Plasma" Leningrad, Zhurna-l Tekhniches~2y Fizikj, vol. 4.1, No. 2, 1971, PP 453-456 Abstract: A description is !7iven of;1experimentatien involving an are dischargle in cesium vapor at a presoure of 0.1 ~o 2 mm HG, with a potential difference between electrodes of from: to 100 volts, and at high current densities of from 10 to 100 a/cm~. The purl)ose of th,;: experimentat ion wa,- to at,udy the characteri-tics of plasmas of short, low-voltua-rf,~e arcs wit-h high currenit densiti~--s and, to invi3stli- gate the possibili-111-y o-11* E;etting high disch-aa,,n*--:, cu'rrent donsities with distributed thermoc-lect-onic emission from ~, c-athodt: ,%7ithout transition .-o d-J;_sch,-arg;-;e with a cathode :~;Pot, vU1t-ar!1P(1-r(.! chrtr- acterlotics ol' th(~ arc are plotti~~d, t1nd thO CUrr',:!11t they evince are discusseci. T'h,.;. aut'hors of thic orief e., orlmuni cat icn expr~~ss their ff---titL1dc- to B. 1. Teirkoll fr,,r devirlopin-, tht., trio. circuit, to V. i,. .1achkov, for preparing thir e.~.p..--rifflentai ment, to 6. M. 'S-hkollnik, for ",the meas-Ureaen-It-'s, and to -e. G. for his cowii~!nts. Th,.,y are tao L ingrad Semiconductor !nstJ.1;u-te. 1/ 2 040 U-14CL As S IF ED Pkf)CESSING DATE--13NOV70 TITLE--;~ACIAL DISTRIBUT19N GF THE PARAMETERS OF THE PLASMA 4N A ~PLANE -VERTER -U THERMIUMIC ENERGY CON AUTHQ~'-(G3)-0YUlHEVr G.A.v STARTSEVp YE.A** YURYEVI~ V.G. couNTRY OF INFO--USSR /276-42- -,SOURCE-ZHURNAL TEKHNICHESKOI F1711KI, VOL ft0p ~FEB P 26-423 'DATE PUBLISHED---FE570 '.-SUBJECT A ON (NON--PROPULSfVE) REAS-PHYSICS, ENERGY CONVERSI: TOPIC TAC-S--DISTRIBUTION THEORY, THER14IONIC ENERGY ;CONtV.ERS TruN, RADICAL -FLOW, PLASMA DYNAMICS, ELECTRONIC SHIELDING, iCUR.RENT DENSITY, CATHODE, CE PLASIMA lum MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS N D.OCUME, T GLASS--UNCLASSfFIED -.~.-PROXY REEL/FRAME--1979/1555 STEP NO--UR/0057/-~'Ll/04,')?000/0426/04,-8 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0047883 UNCLASSIFIED ----------- 2/2 040 UNCLAS~SIFTED PROCESSING DATE-13NOV70 -AP0047883 CIRC ACCESS UON NO -.,ABStRACT/EXTPACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. INVESTIGATIGN FjF THE RADIAL DISTRIBUTION OF PLASMA PARAMETERS FOR THERMIONIC CONIVERTERS WITH AND WITHOUT ELECTRODE (CATHODE ANDIANODE)l SHI EL DJNG BY PLANE SAPPHIRE RINGS. IT IS SHOWN THAT FOR CURRENTS R A NG I NG. FROM 2T015 A--SQ CM, THE BOLTZMANN FORMULA HOLDS FOR LOW BAND HIGH CESIUM P-RESSURES. ELECTRODE SHIELDING DOES NOT EFFECT THE, RADIAL OISTRIBUTIL14. OF THE PLASMA "DGE EFFECT ASSC PARAMETERSt , AND,~ DOES NCT 0.1MINISH THE, ,.rIATED WITH THE RADIAL DIFFUSION OF CARRIERS FROIN, THE GAP.- HOWEV~-R, SHIELDING HAS THE THE INFLUENCE 'OF THEE LATERAL SURFACE OF EFFECT OF APPRECIABLY REDUC ING THE CATHODEll-WHICH OTHERWISE: WOULD EMIT ELECTR0NS,:I-NTG THE PLASMA. THIS IMEANS THAT THE TRUE ELECTRON CURRENT b.EN!;:,lTY CANNOT BF~ RELIABLY -L TERMINED WITHOUT ELECTRODE SHIELOING. UNCLASSIFIED USSR uDc: 621.385.633.1-001.5 V. I. DOBRYTICMNIKO, V. N., SIESTIPEROV, V~ A., NI=TULLIN, U. A. YUR'YEV.- Experimental Study of the Interaction Between S3mchrc-no-as Wa,;-es of an Electron Stream and the 'Traveling Wave of an Electrodynamic Structure Moscow, Radioteklmika i Elektronika, Vol 17"~No It, Apr 72, pp 830-634 Abstract: The paper presents the results of ail experimental study of 0-type interaction between the synchronous waves of an electron stream and the field of a special electrodynamic structure. An actual gain of 13 dB is attained as well as an electron amplification factor of more than 20 dB. Quanti- tative agreement is established teWeen the experimental ana tbeoretica3 curves for linear gain as a function of beamcurrent and nagnetic field stren&.h. :zr .USSR 'UDC 632.954:633-17 -4UZA, V. S., Ukrainian Scientific Research Institute of Plant Growing, Selection and Genetics imeni'Y,,,,&, IYUROPEV "Experiment With sym-Triazine Derivatives on Ifillet Planti-n~,Tsll Moscow, MUmiya v sellsicom khoaaystve, Ho ll~ 1971, -pp 45-46 Abstract: A study of the effect of some sym."triazine deri7a- tives on the weeds and the croD is described. The soil of the experimental lot Was weal.'17 leached, deeD chernozem with a humus content of 6.2 Dercent. The -oredecossors to nillet in the area 'la; n h e were corn for s1 -e (1967) a d.sunmer barley ~(1968-19610) millet was so-,.-n. in wide .-o-,,s to facilitate i-.reed elimination. The herbicides were apnlied during presQwing cultivation. ',he estimr-tes, have sbown Antralzin rnd Fronazin tD I'E) MOOt OffOCUVO whon anDlied in donan of 2-3 'Arg.ht) ana 2 '~g/hsq, respectively. Simazin ai)nlied at 1 and 2 1,g/ha appears to be;fairi effective Y only a Dredomirance or young dicotyledonwis %iced plants. The sodium salt of 2,4-D was effcctive~on dicotyledonous weed only. POOK107--dw USSR UDC 621.372.5 TOLKALIN, L. N., KUKOL'NITSKIY, A .F., YUk'.YEV, YU. N. Phase Filter with Corrected Characteristic!' Vopr. radibtekhniki --V sWroblems of Radio Engineering collection of works), Tula, Tula Polytechnical Institute, 1970, pp 98-105 (f.rora RZh-Radiotekhnika, No.4, Apr 71, Abstract No 4A146). Translation: The possibility of expanding the phase characteristic band of a phase filter is investigated, Ifethods of :practical ;reali2ation of the f il- ter with a corrected characteristic are~proposed, and ~the circuit elements are presented., LINC LASS I F I F1.0 ?KOCEESSING DATE--02'ICT70 'T.ITLF_--THkRPAL OECOMPOSITIUN OF PR30.UCTS OF THE REACTI-IN OF ~jZONE WITH CYC LOUL Er I N, s _U_ I iC, -7 - (.0 3) -A Z UMCI V SK I YS.D., YURYEVv -YU.Nvv TSYSKDVSKlY% V.K. -UNTRY OF INFo--USSR '5VURCE--lH* GRG. KPIM. 197r), 6(2i# :254-60 I)ATE PUF.L I SHE 0------- 70 I~$WJECT. AREAS--CHEMISTRY TOPI-_ TAGS--T4ERMAL OFCOMPOSITION, OZONE? DICARBUXYLIC ACID, ALDE-11YOEs HEXEN&, -CHEIIICAL REACTION MECHANISM- OX,TR.G1, MARK I W-NO RESTRICTIONS "DOCUMEN'T CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ,.;.PRCjXY RE-EL/fRAME--1993/0214 STEP NtJ~--UR/0366/70/(I-J6/002/0254/0?bI C IR C ACCLSSIGN NO-001131i3 UNCLASS IFIEO 212 0 IS UNCLA:SSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--0clJCT70 C-1 VIC ACCESSION NCI--AP0113153 ::ABSTRACT/ FXTP ACT- (11) GP-0- A3STRACT. THE REACTTION OF 0 SL)33 WITH CYCLUHEXENE (11 OR CYCLOOCTENE (11) GAVE POLYMER 1,G 0ZL)NIDES OF 1 0;: 1 1 UIA OF, I 11A, RESP. 1 1 N 95-6PEV.CEMT Y I ELDS AND 3-4PI:RCENT MO%V . ERIC OZONIOCS (If! OR 1111, RFSP.). IN THE OZONIZATION OF 1,5,CYCLO9~TA0IE%f_-, ONLY POLYMERIC OZONIOES WERE FORMED. ~rHERRAL DEC"MPIN. OF TFIF M ON 0 ki E .4 1 r Ok PULY~WRIC UZONIDES GAVE THE.SAME PRODUCTS 401CARROXYLIC ACIOS-). UIAL01HYDES, AND UIALDEHYDE CAPBOXYLIC ACIDS), WHECH DEMONSTRATED THC CA.'CLIL NATURE OF BOTH TYPES OF OZONIDES. , THE. DECOMPIN, O~ I tBUTENE OZONIDE GAVE ONLY AONDFUNCTIONAL PRODO CTS (HCH91, ACH, AND ACOH). THE ACTIVATION ENERGY OF IA AND-IS THERMAL-I)ECOMPN. WAS 34 PLUS OR MINUS 1.5 KcAL-VIULE, I E-,. CLOSE YU THAT OF 1,HEXENE.. CJZONIDE~ (32 PLUs OR MINUS 2 eAL-MOLE). THE THERMAL DECOMPN. OF IAI AND 18 INV OLVED THE FJ~MATIO-lq OF -.INTER"'EDIATE OLIGOMERM AND P0LYlJl'Ek'M PRODUCTS, SUCH AS OCHICH SUB2) CHMME100H AND OCH(CH SUB2),SO64 CH(0ME)00(Ciil0H)(C" SU02) SUB4 CHIOME)OO) SUBN. THE MECHANISM OF PRODUCT.FORMATION WAS DISCUSSED. UNCLASSIFIED .w. W~mm JPRS 59775 10 August 1973 i UDC 621.039.51 APPLrCATION OF A MODEL OF A POROUS. BODY VOR CALCULA71ON OP THE-FIELP OF VELOCT'-ArES AND TEMPERATURES IN A REACTOR Cc= jArtlCle by A.. P Inakov and 'Y obninak, Pabli- cation FEI-2 f Inc., pfiysics a titutf" Russian, 1971, 11 pages] 1. -thia-Wor?. m*iySiam-of differential oquationz of hydraulica~'and heat titinafer for a reactor core is considered, an a "porous body" with anisotropic properties, which is solved, in.a. linear approxi;nation for a c4se 16F small.devL- a ation f the geometry of the,channels. In tho~ calculation Of the. hydraulic and thermal charac- at e*chafigexi and core& of rea which are a teristics of he ctors, I system of rod -s,h aped,, TIM, 4 fuel elements) i~nd parallel chapels, - onnected between each other, it in 'inadequitli to c C onsider only on. or i feiw channels. The presence of regular and random davia- t of the. system and in the distribution of ions in the 96omatry , heat liberation leads to a redistribution of the flow rate.of the coolant throughout the crone-section of the core and to,an irregular preheating of tha.coolantjjjit2j. As a, conzaquenco of thry largo numbur of connected than- nals, the problem stated In a general forte turns out to be quite cunibersome, The M?,thodology.of statist1cal calculation of the effect of deviat ohm of tba geometry an the scattering of the ., flow rate and temperature of the coolant in a case of cnnnected channels gives characteristics of scattering that are connon. for the entire myitem, without local variations, without a considers- tion of the mixing of jets of the coolant and the spreading of heat from the "hot' point 13). this work, a system of differential equations of 1% hydr..1 in solved for the system ain a whole, which makes it possible to perform the analysis in a common form and to obtain USSR 4. USSR 610%':621 3 1 3.12 5 9 17 2 12 BOOL-SHOV, V. 1., DUBININ, A. A. OINITRIYEV, PC 11t TGS H V S. R., mvsmt~', V. A., IMATUSEVICHj YF. S.-, TOP11`0 , V. Ya RE GUSIHE VSKI Y V. STIM SSY. I Y Yu. Ya., and YURYEV, Yu. S. "Phy'sical Investigation of the Targ t in an Electronuclear e Neutron Flux Generator" Mos cow, Atomnaya Energiya, Vol 28, N, G51 4-~ay 70,,Pi) 3M-392 Abst ac"%,: Fluxes "of thermial neu"*rons on the ordar o1- 1017-1()18 n/cm -sec open nev; possibilities for Investigations in mpny areas of- science and tec;iholod-y.. There As great~ int-erest io 'Ube possibillt-Jor increasing neut the study o-1 4luxes by using~the process of riultiple meutron birth:upon i in la ra c t i o n th en , r hea%y of nuc)eons u1L. L gies in the hundreds of: Mlel.'~-witl nucsel- 151S artilcl.- nresents the results of experiments and Calculations concerning the neutron-physical characteristics USSR ZOL SHO V V~ 1 DUB ATN' .1 N A A DM,1TR ME V V M. K A P C H I G A S H E V f'. S . p KO IN ' S H I IN' V. A. , 1,1ATUSEV! CH Y . F . S TO L ' f 'S I Y V. P. TUP11110, V. Ya., REGUSHEVSKIY,~V. I . , STAVY55,1.',P.' , Yu. Ya . YUR'YEV,:Yu. S., Mloscow, Atoiiintaya Enerqiya, Vol ~2B, No 5, M a y M pp 383-392 b of the, target in an electronuclear device for tho goileratlion of neutron fluxes. The yield of neu,trons a. n ddi,stribution of the . n wm, b e r o reactions ir, a heavy t-arget a n dm ad e r a t o, are measured. The space-enern dis.tribution~. of neutron -Flux in Y II the- moderator is calculated azL unn- accbmulation. af transuranium Olemients in a systen, with high neutron -f I ux i s n-pitted. 1/2 034 TITLE--VAPOR PHASE RADIATION --QXYGEN DURING IRRADIATION ~4,WfiljR-(0~0 TIM13FEYEV, V.D.j Y E A ~.CCUNTRY OF INFO--USSR UNCLASSIFIED~-, PROCESSING THERMAL OXI-DATION OF' 8F_NzEtlE i3Y ONS, _U_,: BY PAST" ELECTP. DATE--30OCT70 MOLECULAR YUR 4t4v-ALAPISflEVSKAYAt Z.B., BORISOV* ly r7l 777 212 034 UNrLASSIFIE0 noCESSING DATE--30OCT70 -C*IRC ACCESS113N NO-AP0119492 _.AB-STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. TITLE nocc:ss wAs sruDiED UNDER DYNAMIC CONDITIONS OF L ATM AND 50-3000 MIL-HR AT, SMALLER THAN OR, EQUAL TO 800DEGREES USING -ELECTRON ACCELERATOR& RUP-4-00-AND 0-16 (1,5 TIMES 10 EV-Clkl PRI.ME3-SECv,. RESi FGLLO~ BY TO WEO PRIME15 AND 1.6 TIMES PR I MEI 7t THE CHROMATOGkAPHIC ANAL. OF THE~.PRODUCTS PHOHy PH SUB?i CRESOLSv CO AND CO SUB29 IN RADIATION THERMAL OXIDN.~.~ (RTO),~ THE J)EPE~JDENCE OF PHOH -YI.ELO 0 IN TEMP., C SUB6 H SU86: I-0-,SU62;RAT 10, TIME IOF CONTAC'I :I AND CONCIN. "....OF -,ADDED CYCLO14EXII.NE WAS STUDIED AND COMPARED WITH THERMAL OXION. (TO) UNDER THE SAME CONOITIONS. THE YIELD OF PHOH IN R~'O WAS ALWAYS HIGHER THAN IN TOt THE M4X. PHOH CGNCN* BEING:4 VfT.PFRCENTO THE QUANTUM YIELD WAS 40 MOLS.-100 EV AT MAX. CONCN.~ EFFECTIVE ACTIVATION ENERGY OF PHOH FORMATION WAS 70 AND 49 KCAL-MOLE.FOR R.To AND.TO,.RjESP..(MEASURED IN TEMP. INTERVAL 700-BOOEGREES), FACILITY:! NAUCH.-ISSLED. F1 Z.-KHIM. lNSl'.,IM. KARPOVAt MOSCOW.r 0SISR"o UNCLASSIFIED UDC 547.5-12-13: %2- - 91.~3.-66.085.5 TDT0FMYEVj V. D. IYUR IYEV, j KLAPtSITINVSKAYA, !9. B. and BORISOV, A tute imen! L. Ya. YR. ScientifiS71R h ysico-Chemioal Insti, 4stry V Moscow, State ComiLl.ttee f or: Chein- 11vapor Phase Radiation-Thermal Oxidation o1j. Benzene With Molecular Oxygen Under Fast Elec,*Cron Irradiation", Moscow, Neftekhimiya, Vol 10, No 1, Jan-Feb 70, pp 42-47 Abstract: The authors studied the radiation-thermal oxidation of -SEEZ-ne with molecular oxygen in terms of the effect of temDerature 011 the yield of -phenol -- the yield increases with toz-noerature increase; the effect of the ratio benzene:oxygen -- a trend towards higher yields with more o7,vgen was observed; offoot of the coatl~ct time -- inverse relationsh-J.D of the yield to ~ cont.Rat time. The yield of Dhenol in this reaction was found to ~ba always higher thaun in the thevmal ieaction, maximal yield being 4 weight-%,., The radiation- chemical yield of phenol at maxbial concentration was 40 molecules Der 100. ev of the absorbed radiation energy. ~ The' off ective one, gy -of a-"--4vaiAon for the fomation of phenol was fotind to be 70 Kcq-l/ Mole'for the thermal process- ahd 49 Kcal/mole fox, the:rsdiation- thermal i~roc es s at 700- 780o.. ?12 - 026 UNCLASSIFIED. ~`ROCESSING DATE--IlSeDTO C-IkC- ACCESSION- NO-AP0106105 Ga-0- ABSTRACT. .DISCUSSION OF T4 THERMAL STPESS CQN.CEINTRATION -I~N 'AN INFINITE PLATE OF CONSTANT T41CXNESS WaAKENED 8Y A HOLE WIT14 RGUNDED CORNERS. THE PLATE MATEPIAL is nqTH03TqODIC WITH RESPECT TO ITS ELASTIC AND THERMAL PROPERuEs. THE DI',lFf4c.I0%S OF THE~HDLE ARr- SMALL COMPARED TO THE AREA DF THE PLATE. THE PLATE IS FREE OP SURFACE AND BODY FORCES. THE STRESSES ARE, INDUCED BY HEATING THE FDGES OF THE HOLE. THE TEMPERATURE-IS CONSTA74T OVER THE- PLATE TqYCKNESS -UN - CCMPLEX VA A L S AND IS ZE90 AT INFINITY. ..THE A14ALYTIC r . C T I ONS: 0'r RT a E OEFINING THE TEMOER&AT(I.RE AND STRFSS DISTRIBUTIDNS ARE OBTAINED IN THE FORM OF~ A SERIES IN POWERS OF A SMALL P4RAMETER Cq.ARACTERIZI.NG THE .:DEVIATION FROM A CIRCULAR HOLE. &FORMULAFOR STRESSES AT POINTS ON TIE CONTOUR OF THE HOLE IS PROPOSED. THE RESULTS ARE TILLUSTR.ATF-0 BY A PRACTICAL.EX,A-MPLF-o 'w UNCLASSIFU0 T! 4L Ace. Nr* Abstracting Setvice: Ref. Code: A7*0049879 CHEMICAL ABST.6/10 too imms Metalation-.of dibenzenechromi'unt-lind ionle 6f its homologs. X ' P tevchenko A (Inst; Elem rmdi R). DON. M. ARWO .4 ka ';SSR 19'(O~ 190M,-118-'!I;jChernT (R%zssi. Treat- ing 4~3 g J3u!.: ~hr with, 0.67 g diben7imechromium'(1),' ht, and adding 16 in], MCI with ic-. coolint'jiVt'a,ilnall iint"isonil s, Mellh, and eric xy ene '~ t 12,4- taid 1,3,5-Me%C~Hj; '~~'46jlir reactiod! With aitoluene. chromium (11) - an(I di-iix-%~Itn ruitim * all) gave- similar ecilro results., The Ist LVaton enlemOnly ttie benzene ring and the M~ group is unaffectid in re&Won of II, 4he N4 Li atain enters 'the benzene ring 006winantlk alid,. bL soini U it dots attack the Me group, fielding 1j2,4-ahd 1,3,5-NI ejCgH;l as , well as isomeric methylethyli3enzenei. The Nit groups directs the Li atom to YtA- and ppositions of the~'ring. in Mieftion of Ill the 1.3,5-iwmtr is formed predominaitly alssso~ G: M. Koso~lapoff REELIFRAME VI-4d. COARACTERISTIC STILUCIVRAL DEFEMS IN DIAM-M jAr;3,tIv b7 To. V. ~'Obqjfv. 0. F, 44-tbtrwk. a a P61-,X. ~tdn~tk~~iLLr ~t~j i k, Rva.i.n.'U zl~71017V 74) A StMT wn!-.%&dS at OT role of tills - ~ I_ , ~ _ il _ _=t= the prrp*Cti6 or~~ .Lz is 4.=Mwtrat~d v at 4 vatz=y, In, 6,41&molld t?ve frectiventea. V- 10 th absorption In 20 times kkeatir than V9. I "at -the dio Iocationt JwLth the o1 a *AS* tozoo'Antl defing ?.he mtur*,ot tt.* st-ray A" of the dit--;M and the color Nioldt and at tha~~ olastIcAlAr deformed opectorna_ ~*-r the- dla-166wtfoo apactr4 In .,-treat to the point ceaterm. broad vtruttur*l%*% harAo *VJ "raCttristU. vhich are related to the trSusitSons ~Ctwvon the dtalocAt ioq Range. .. Ut tragen centers fami", tbo did' atilre Attloophore at Were ratar4ad (by resonance ott V41i:,4u,momiltrAted thAt:tlle ilpacifilmot, the laftrattion of V the Alelocattofto wt ,ih the 71ujja t", plastic., pro arttaw of Cho A iiWy -wAr, sAila 0: tLa Fo#*Iblo role of, the d0locations to the totastion-du the @pier levals determining the p"partUs of,type XU at 1"lloss Olas 5 a latelcul don4t ConcontritLons C32 to natural and it in synthetic 416mov:161. strocture) *to Pat*- A canca. v#xnatIc A r v 313k Cttv*, lot VUR 2.8 wy Under S. cam. 7414 Inactive Caftw4vto to V7 mod T on hoettog x 11 4200 end WSdiattoo (ultraviolet. Active dv 4V"~ + dV+. Cwpatity for tobigatIou d%,,Avao:.t318oOtCp* of erretal. EM YUR-YEVA, V L "One Problem in Longitudinal and Transverse Bending" Tr. Kazan. Aviats. In-ta. [Works of KazIan Aviation Ins titut6j, 1971, No 139, pp 3-15, (Translated from Referativilyy huTnal, Mokhanika, No 10, .1972, Abstract. No 10 V1123 by the author). Translation: The strenoth and rig of contact vires of a hyperboloidal electrical plus are calculated. The forces pressing on, the wire, stresses and strains in the cross sections of th-- -wire,: coil tact line length between -ixed geometric dimensions o" wire and plug, ,Lxial force in the wire with f the hyperboloidal plug are determined. k. nufferical exa~iple is presented. R119affil: Hn 11 UR 112 Oi7 U,.-?C L A S S I F VE D FOR EVALU4iTING F F, E C T IN --- S J -4 A F I C, A Z AS HEAT STABMDERS OF ETHYLENLP.:~CPYLEPIE C CK) L Y M M AUTH0P,-(01Z)-.KQiSAKGV, V.G., YURYEVSKAYA', I-,- CGU,NTRY OF- INFFj-_USS.R SCURCE--PLAST.-MASSY 19701 [2), 66-7 DATE P Ub L I S H E D-- ---- 70 UBJECT AREAS- S -MATERIALSt CHC-MISTRY LJHVLEN'a,~ KL P Y 1. [-,'IfpCOPLILYiAE" H M I C A L. o TA;l;S---AZ C D'A. P C. U N D ST A 6 1 L I ER t Tt PIZ.MAL ST`t~(LITY '4 A C CN TRO L ,K I NG--'I", P. E S T R, I CT I (A S -U0CU,,;ENT CLA S S-- 'PiC LA S S I F 1 0 S T 0 I. "a'; I 5MIRMILM mill ON :~NJV70 UNCLASSI F114P Z-fPC ACCESSION T GjP-0- 11-ilS T A A C rI HEEC, ];;IF- IZ A S i t-? zEi, s0 Fe T'll i Y y ~,L 14 L Ja, T ::-3 THE S TI!.i I L 11. T Lli A REVERSIOLE F, i-MIEZ POSITIV~: OVER FE Pi- 3 P,0SIJI VF REDTK SYS Ti I N H SU-332- Sk-) SkJFj4 Tj-E FitNAL VALUE OF THE~ PUTENNAU i"S .411"i OATA -:703TAIN~-'-D BYA?1; L L I iNG Mt i 0 DA~- PLI--I'r,(JF MAX, ' ILt. ING fl;l~ V-S. P01'EiNTIAL L .INDICATED THAT T ti ~'-!D S TF F F. G T I V EIii EE- ~FU U -NID I N:~ANARA":,' OF 50-20G '4V, E. G E'j7YL A~No. P~ 'IB E' 7ALE01YDE' P ANION DIMETHYL AM 1140 JANILI UNCLASSIFIED HIRWAINKM USSR S BASOV, H4 G., BASHIbY, A. S., IGOSHINp V. I.t ORAYEV UY, A. X., and YMYSHEV, N. N "Study of Vibrational Energy Transfer From OD to CO 2 Moscow, Pisma v Zhurnal -Eksperimenial'noy I Teoretichoskoy Flziki, vol A, No 10, 20,No Y 72t PP 551-555 Abstracts The article reports the first detection of effective energy trans- port from -the OD radical to C02 moleculesp.res'tilting in the laser effect in a mixture of 03, D2,and W2 at a ua-velength of 10.6 microns. A simple analytic reaction model and the results of measuring the time characteristics of the laser generation pulse are used to evaluate the rate constant for vibrational- vibrational energy exchange betvaen OID,and C02.,I,The authois used two measure- ment rethods -- according to the tima delays of generation il~ relative to the on- set of initiation, and according to attenuation~of, the chtl*6ical laser genera- tion zignal~ A laser tube 80 cm lon&,and 1.3 on,,in diamoter wa,.i used in the experinent. Fumping was effected by two IFT, 20000 I=ps. IN TEC"MMICAL TRANSLATION' TSTC-117-23- 1136-71 ENGLISH TITLE. Specifics of Interaction of Quasistable Laser Radiation with Rttals FOREIC!l TITLEt Ob 0sobermostyakh V~aizmdoy~stvjya.s yatalla;hi Rvazistisi*- nttrnogo Izlucheniya L;~ziera AL"MORt Zhiryalkve K; K. 'Fannibo Y- SouRdr: Zhurnal prilkladnoy makhaniki i taknicbeskoy fizzlki. No. 3 1958,-pp. i26-2118 TranslAted for FSTC by LEO KWiLik ASSOCIATES NOTICE The contents ofthis publication have been translated as presented in the aricinal text. No attempt hAs 6cen made to vcify the accuracy of any statement contained hocia. This translation is published with a minimum ofcopy edi:in~and graphics ~preparatian in order to expedite the Jimerninaiian of information. Rcqursts for additionAl copies of this document should be addres5Qd to Dcpar;meni A, National Technical WOM12tion Service, Sotinditid.Visizinia This translation was acc=pllsbed from a sterox =a~nicript. Tlio graph- ics were not reproducible, An atrefrpt , -.0 obtain the .oilrifisl graphics yialded.nega,tive resulro. Th". tbir docuftient vist published as Is, In order to make.it available on atimely basis. q I 71w radiation Of 2, Pulsed Can De zz:~IILJ to a solid undor free ~witlijut using q,modulation 4eviccs) in two Tncdcs. depcntlip~~_,,,n the p;ir;vnvters of the resena-zor. 11he first zadej the ;o-calla:! 'J" .2 peak modc,~ ... i~'bc~n described in detail -.-n the li-erit=r.-?,.- Th ~tri~.cnci nede tile quasist.142C (qua inLou, 0: bcon ~'gnirjcantly loss charjct~~crl:51,k~., oscillugra,- 'of this sort of radiation Fig. This article: presents, resultr, of =perimcnis on the effects of quasi- stable -radiazion on metals. Corparative arualysis of these rosuits with the r es it a! U 5 of the actions of peak-typo radiLtion of the same.-ener" zind tot pulse len;th but significantly different tisto conclude that thore.ia-a quolitative differencia An the:=achanis~ of these It As promisini.tb use quasistable, radiatic.k.n.,for.volding -and malting of 7 Fig. 1. Oscillopram of Q!_3si- stable (Peik List) (3diax-.-nn of a Pulsed Ruby Laser. Stanning Rate 10' 4 Sec/cn, 1. The radiation of a laser opcrating acording to the traditonal plan with u pinne-parallel Fibry.Fcrot resonator has a corplt'x strllc~U_e with a total lengta of about 10-1 sec, cons-isring of a large nMber (on the order of 102) of chaotically fomed short p-j!ses, so-called, 11 Their duration 1,~ on the order of S.10-7 see, the r6pexiv*'on frequency is about 106 liz, thorefore, the power carried by each such ;Oak is one to two orders higher thazi the moan powor of the entire pulse as a whole. PROCESSlNG DATE---160CT70 023 UNCLASSIFI~ :TI,TLE--P0LYi4ER IZAT ION OF VINYL MONQMERS~ irq LAYER -OMPUUNDS OF MONTMORILLON11TES .-U- ..,AUTHOR-(04)-ZAYTSC-V, NALYEVt V-D-t V~,RZHENko, A.I. YU,S.t KISELp N.G.j YE .-COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR lS0URCE--KOLLOIDNYY ZHURNALv 19701 VOL.32y'NR 29 PP 2L3-217 JDATE. PUBLISHED ------- 70 -CHEMISTRY ~~UBJECT AREAS --TOP,IC..TAGS--POLYMERIZATION, MONOMERt. V I NYL COMPOUNDt P E RO "'.3 0 E p M I Nl E RA L , "CHEMICAL STABILIZER ~CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ~-DOCUMENT.CLASS--UNGLASSIFIED -P,ROXY,REEL/FRAJ14E--1993/0402 STEP NO--.UR~/0069/70/0321OCt2/0213/0217 IRC, ACCESSION NO--AP0113320 UNCLASSIFIED .2/2 023 UNCLASSIFIED OnCESSING 0ATE--160CT70 ,CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0113320 ~,ABSTRACWEXTRACT---(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. AISTUDY HAS BEEN MADE OF THE -POLYMEPIZATLO(N OF VINYL MONOMERS IN LAYER COMPOUNDS OF MON T MUR I L L J,'-? I T E 'USED AS A STABILIZER OF MONOMER EMULSIONS. THE 0EPENDENCE OF THE CHANGE .,IN THE INTERPLANAR SPACES IN MOINTMORILLONITE DURING POLYMERIZATION OF VINYL MONOMERS BETiEEN ITS LAYERS ON THE POLARITY Of MONaMERS Ai,40 THE NATURE OF PEROXIDE INITIATORS HAS BEEN STUDIED BY ROENTGENOGRAPHY. APART FRGM STABILIZING MONGMER EMULSIONS9:8ENTONII'L- CLAYS SERVE AS SITES -ONWHICH POLYMERS ARE FORMED ON THE SURFACE.AND BETtliEEN LAYERS OF MONTMORILLONITE PARTICLES. UNCLASSIFIIED Ref coae: M 0069 Ace N 4e 36539,"" PRIMY, $0URCE Kolldidnyy' U a 1970' o1 32, Nr 1, 2h4rini lip 136, , K STUDY OF THE COLLOIDAL,4 ICHEMICAL~iFACTOI IS OF BEAD POLYMERIZATION Of VINYL MONOMERS EPPECT OF THE DISPERSING. AGENT (Pb~V1.kETHACIMLId A6'w) CEWRATION A" NEUTRALIZA710M PEOREE.:ON,THE STABILIZATION OF STYRENEMAM09MULSUP4 ry rzhenk6, 1.~A. Ando r Strmmary, The studv of stabilization of styrene macroemulsion undergoing polymerization in the presence of polymeffiacrylfc acid used asadispersing agent has shown that the de- pendence of the stabilizing properties on the neutralization degree and concentration of the polyacid is areadily accounted for by~ the conformation changed of the dispersing sgent macromolecules in the ~4ution and by ihe variation of the,hydroilynamic conditions under whkh bead polymerization is carried oul: REELYEMIE 387~ USSR UDC 547.26'118.07 BABYAK, A. G.2 I and BOBNAROHUK,~ N. Dq~, L'vov Polytechnical Institute and theQIRstitu"te Toq~miOrganic Chemistry of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR "Synthesis and Some Reactions of Substituted Pheny1ditext.-butylperoxy- phosphazoethylenes" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Kbimii, Vol 42(104), No 3,~bfar 72, pp 535-538 Abstract: Substituted phenylditert.-butylpero.%-yphosphazoethvlenes are synthesized by the reaction of the sodium salt of tert.-butyl hydroperoxide with substituted phenyldichlorophosphazoethylenes in an ether solution in the presence of anhydrous sodium sulfites call., R.>C-C-N=P; c1 + 2MaOOC(C113),3 2NaCl + Coll. OOC(Cl;3)3 W,. C-F,: R'= AMOCO; 110 = AMOCOl; CN. AMCO. 113 USSR ---BABYAK, A. G., et a-I., Zhurnal Obshchey.Khimii, Vol 42(104), No 3, Mar 72, pp 535-538 The resultant oils do not distill in a vacuum and are readily soluble in ether, benzene, acetone and chloroform, poorly solubli! in petroleum ether. When treated with an equimolar quantity of water in alneut-ral medium, substituted plienylditert.-butylpe-roxyphosphazoethylenes hydrolyze yielding tert.-buty! peresters of substituted ethenyl.aiiidopheii)llphosphonic acids and tert.-butyLhydroperoxides, cells C=G-N=P-0OC(CH3)3 +110H C1115 C=C-N11- + (Clla)'Coolf (2) RI=AIkOCO*,' R*=AlkOCO. CII.C0, CN: XCC4, C4 2/3 44 USSR BABYAK, A. G., et al., Zhurnal Obshchey. Khimii, Vol 0(104), No 3, Mar 72, '535 p. -338 p The peresters; are thick, colored oils which are readily soluble in acetone and chloroform, moderately soluble in ether-and benzene, and poorly soluble in water. Treatment of substituted phenylditert.-butylperoa-~yphosphazo- ethylenes with an equimolar quantity of glacial aceti6acid produces tert.- -butyl peresters of substituted ethenylamidophenylphosphonic acids and tert.-butylperacetate. Coll$ :.~~'\C=C-N-P-OOC(CfT'j)3 +CIISCOOII C113-C '\OoC(CII \0oc(CII.) R, cc 15 + C=C-NII-P