SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT BELYAKOV, B. P. - BELYAKOV, M.

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December 31, 1967
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BELYAKOV, BORIS NIKOIAYEVICH. N15 756-1 .B4 OBSLUZHIVANIYE PASSAZHIROV NA RWHNOM TRANSPORTE (PASSENGER .I ACCOMODATIONS ON RIVER TRANSPORTS) MOSKVAp --RECHNOY TRANSPORTE'l) 1956. 70 P. ILLUS., DIAGRS. BELYAKOVp B. P, Centra:Lizecl production of.low-pereentage iron-oilicon-mgmaium foundry alloy6, Hashinostroanis nq..52112 S4 162s - (MM 3.6 -- 1) (maltang) BELYAKOVJI B.P., inn. Binder based on vat reFidues of paraffin oy-idatto,.. 1,11as'd.noaLruenja no.! 53-55 Ja-F 164. (MULt, 117:7~ USSR/Cultivated Plants - P)totoes. Vegetables. Melons. M Abs Jour : Ref Zhur Diol., No 12, 1958, 536o8 Author ; Delyakov, E.V., Kut'in, G.G. Inst : Zhitoi-,iir 41,3ricultural Institute Title : The Effect of Azotobacter on Eye Sprouting and the Yield of Potato Tubers. (With ReGard ta the Question of the .,Mechanism of Azptobacter Action) Ori,r, Pub : Nauchn. tr. Zhitomirsk. s.-kh. in-t. 1957, 4, 145-152 Abstract : This article Gives the results of a laboratory experiment with potatoes showing that the treatment of the tubers with azotobacterin liar, Bone stimulating effect on t',,.e awakeiiing )f the eyes and the initial Gr,3wth of the sprouts. However, this effect is very sliLht and is weaker than the cuttinL, 3f tubers. In the field experi- ment, the treatment of whole tubers with az.)tobacterin Card:21/2 - 34 - BILYAKOT, Y.P, triiiirl'"'l workbouchei uso*d-in s* no. i: 84-88 chooli Politekh, obuch. Ji 157. Om 10:4) (Workshops-lquipwnt and XWPlies) tjosUw; BABIN, B.N.; BALI, V.; BOROYKOV, P.N.; VOYYVODIN, I.N.; BELYAKjY ICH, G.M.; GORBUNOVA, P.I.; XONNOY, A.$.; KALANTAROVA, M.V.; KASHIRSKIY, A.7a.; XAZANCHEYBV, Ye.N.; LEKSMKIN, A.F.; LETI- CEWSKIY, M.A.; LOPATIN, S.2.; HIRSKIY, V.N.; PODS3VALOV, V.N.; SUBBOTINA, V.P.; TAXASIYCMX, N.P.; PEDOTOV, S.D.; PISMO, K.N.; ELIKIND, I.G.; BOVIN, S.S.; VASILIYXV, L.T.; DRINKOV, V.D.; DALE- CHIN, N.I.; DADAGOV, I.A.; IMMOSHINA, V.I.; EMOT, I.V.; ZIMIN, D.A.; IVANNIKOV, A.Ya.; KOVALXV, M.K.; LUGAKOVSKIY, N.L.; NAMSKIY, A.P.; S=ZHNIKOV, V.K.; SZHI(ff-ASOV, M.D.; SOKOLOV, A.V.; SWANOV. V.I.; SAKHARIN, G.S.; SAVINKO, P.A.; SOLODOV, V.P.; UHRROV, Sh.Kh.; CHIKINDAS, G.S.; SHCHMMINA, S.N.; DYNKIN, G.Z.; LYSOV, V.S.; OSHEROVICH, A.N.; ROKITSINSKIY, E.V.; BRASLAVSKIY, H.S.; RULMO, I.A.; 2HUKOBORSKIY. H.S.; ZHDANOV, I.Ye.; SUSLIN, V.A.; BRUS. A.Ye.; VOLYNSKIY, S.A.; KLYUM, V.A.; ISTRATOV, A.G.; TIKHOMIROV, I.F.; BLaYRIN, la.H.; VOLYNSKIY, S.A.; MINEYEV, M.F.; MALITSEV, V.I.; VIDETSKIY, A.F., kand.tokhn.nauk, glavnyy red.; DEMIDOV, A.N., red.; KRAVETS, A.L., red.; KLIMOVA, Z.I., tekhn.red. LIndustrial Astrakhan] Promyshlennnia Astrakhan'. Astrakhan', Izd-va gazety "Volga," 1939. 318 p. (MIRA 12:11) 1. Astrakhan (Province) Skonomicheakiy administrativnyv rayon. (Astrakhan Province-Economid conditions) BELYAKOV. G.- MMH.. N. [Er=sa,, )Q; DIMINISH, A. (Kainins., A.] Possibilities for the util.i7ation of hydrophobic san&-4ftAted with wood tar. Vestis Latv ak:no,3:85-90 161o 1. Institat lesokhozyaystvemykh problem i kbivnii drevesiny AN Latviyskoy SSR. Car. Pana.-ia Ganal Pana-,,a. '4711an. sila 22 no. 8, 1952 -BEgOOVI 0. (Riga)i(EWSH, N.Cirmusa, N J(Riga'$ KALNINISH, A. Mining, A. _Rip) Possibilities of utilizing pitch-bydrophobized sand. Vestis Latv ak no.305-90 161. Mai 1089) 1. Akademiya nauk Latviyokoy SSR, Inatitut Ieg;okhoza3rBtvennykh problem i khimii drevesiny. (concrete) (Sand) 31MOKIDOT, Ir.K.; ROWOVICH, B.S.; BUSIMAMS, Yu.S..- BBLYAKOT.- G.D. - ~ - Geology of the Novaya Zeiaya islands and of Vaygach Island, Trudy Rhuch.-Isal. inste' geol. Arkta* 81t23-25 157. (xiu n-:5) 1. Sotrudniki Nauchno-issledovatel'skogo instituta, geologli Arktik:L,, Novap Zem3,va.-Geoloo) (Vargach Island-Geology) i BZLYAKOV~ G..Gl MULLER., O.Z. Practice in the construction of Up enclosure of.high-temperature drying chambers. Der,prom. 3-1 no,,6-.25-26 Je '62. WIRA 15.6) (Riga-Woo4working industries-Design apd. construction) (Wood-Drying) BORSHCHEVSKIY, I.Ya.1 BMAKOV,_G.M.; GUROVSKIY,, N.N.1 KUZNFTSOV, V.S.; YUGA.NOv, Ye.M. Studying the quality of the reception and transmission of speech in veightlessness. Probl.kosm.biol. 2s215-219 162. (MIRA. 16:4) (WEIGHTLESSNESS) (AEROSPACE TELFMTRY) SADOVSKIYj, M.A.; TA101., 1,I.j, kand.tekhnonauk; 1RIII-VA OV,Gr*V.., inzh. Detendning safe distances for detonation transmission. Bezop.truda v prom. 6 no.8:5-9 Ag 162. (MIRA 164) I* Institut, khimicheakoy fizW AN SSSR. 29 GUen-korrespondent AN SSSR (for �jadovakiy). (Blasting-Safety measures) BELYAKOV, 11 For communist labor.-- Obsbabestv. pit. no.7:40-41 Ti 162. (MIM 15: 10) 1. Predsedatell Moskovskogo gorodskogo komiteta professionallnogo soyuza, rabotnikov gosudarstvennoy torgovli i potrebitellskay kooperatail. (Moscow--Restaumts.. lunchrooms.. etc.) BELYAKOV, 1. (goroaKopeyok. Chelyabinskaya oblust' ). Mruitful work. Kinomekhanik no.5:8-9 My '33# (mm 6:6) (Romov. Pavel Vasillevich) Z/- v1qKO v VA BILTAKOVII. The miner's day. Mast.ugl.5 no*?t2q Jl 136. (Kuu 9:9) l.Sekretarl 13artiynoy organizatsii shakhty "Babanakovskaya" kombinsta, lusbassugoll. (Kuznetsk Basin-Coal miners) BELTANDV, I. It iIa for the plant to decide. Mast. U91. 7 no.9:24 S '58. (14IRA 11:10) 1. Otdol rabnchikq kadrov tresta. Kopeyskugoll. (Boring Machinery) MTAXOV9 I., In a nov war. Mast. ugl. 7 no.11:8 N 058. (MIYU 11:12) 1.1nispektor otdola rabochikh, kadrov tresta Kepsyskugoll. (Chelyabinsk Basin*-Ceal mines and mining) I. BILYAKOV I Now houses for s~insra. Hast.ugl.8 no.1:25 Ja 159. (MIRA 12:3) (Chelyabinsk Basin-Apartment houses) SMMOV, V., PODGAYEVSKIY, Yu.; IYENSED, V., rabochiy;-BELYAKOV, I.; FETROV,, V.., mashinist elektrovoza Readers5letters. 'Sov.,shakht. 10 no.6:27,28,29 Je '61. (MIRA 14:9) 1. Shakhta "Baydayevskiye uklonyn Kemerovskogo sovnarkhoza'(for Iyensen). 2. Shakhta'No.1 tresta Cherep*ettugoll Tul'skoy oblasti (for Petrov), (Coal mines and Tninin BELYAKOV, I. Without a night shift. Sov.shaRht. 11 no.4;35 Ap '62. (MIRA 15:3) 1. Trest Kopeyskugoll. (Chelyabinsk Basin--Coal mines and mining) BELYAKOV, I. , Reliable aso4otancee Obohchooty.pit. no.2:3-6 F 163. (MIRA 16:4) I* Predsedatell YooWvbkogo prodskogo komiteta profeosionallnogo aoyuza rabotnikov gostorgov3-i i potrebkooperataii, (Restaurants., lunebrooms etc.-Auditing and inspection) . '(Trade unional BELYAKOV, I. $hoppers' council suggests. Sov. profsoiuzy 19 no.lltl6-17 is #63.. OMA 16 18.) 1. Predsedatell gorodskogo komitsta. professionallnogo soyuza rabotnikov gostorgovli i potrebkooperatsii, Moskva. (Moscow-Retail trade) (Trade unions) BaYAWV, I.A., inzhener; ZIMV, N.V., inshener. Light borehole filter pump (LIU-5). Torf.prom-33 no.4:35-36 156* (K6PA 9:9) I.Giprotorf (for Belyakov)-2 Mosgidep (for Zenkov) ipamping machinery) I SERGOVANTSEV, V.T., khnd. takhri. nauk; BELYAKOV J.G.0 i h. for locating short-circuits to ground in distributio- networks W-Uh Insulated neutral lines. Energetik. '13 no.9t9-11 S 165* (MIRA 181g) ,f I r- 0 C~ / J-- I. ,)r~& IY MITIZVICH, S.F.; PAVLYUKEVICK, B.L.; BILZA-ZO-VII Electric pulse technique for the surface hardening of cast-iron machine parts. Sbor.nauch.trud. ]Piz,-tskh.inBt.AN BSSR no.2:221- 229 0550* (MTRA 10:1) (Hard facing) (Blectrie spark) 5(2) 'BOY/78-4-!8-39/43 AUTHORS: Tronsvp V. TITLE: Compounds by- Ozidkt*on of salon 4 ii m -,br~ Q.Tqpn- Uil die r - PXannuze-in the Presence of Liquid Ammonia (Opyty eiintese, salinaminavykh soyedineniy oklslaad4-Aa~ sele A,~ kAn"xad&m--. paA,dam-laniyewv- pri sutetvii zhi.dkoge-ammlak,a) PERIODICAL: :1hurn 1--naGX4aniA11&skaY.,khJ-=J 1, -1959, Val- 4, -Nr ... 8,- pp-1 9 3 2-r 193 5,-, (USSR),. ABSTRACT: in a . pro-vions.. publiaat ion (Raf. I) il was.-pLaIntad.-to the possibillij of ckUtaijang sulphamlin aomkoi~nda.,by-axldation,of element ary--sa~.phur- by.. ogann ~Of oXygan -und z -pxa&s=e in the p.razane.e.-of lAqni-& am-43lia-, 1t.jzould-..bs-,&ssumad.th&t selenium wauld,raaei. im-al-i Ier jmy.. 2b&~.azi AancLe and Ahs aompolition Of beau. explaizad. slemm'"FY- Sol antio. mr&& hsat&Ain an. amtoalava with. 1i quid amm - or. an - w8an Pr*AA"* fzam 100 Lt Ao 50. to .!i 000 during 5 to 6.hours* After the removal of the gases wh:Loh had not entered the rqaotion the mixture of selenium and oxidation Card 1/2 products was extracted by means of an ammonia solution, liquid SOT/78-4-8-39/43 Selenium by'-.0xyg&.a:Zikder! Pressure the:.-Pre a ease-. of maz. rawderail __difX_tcii,1t,b4~ the-z.-sa-4 zLitrat.s...which had formed- Fxom. the- anAlysets.LaA tho.th6rmograms (Zig 1) 1 con- dltLbi6ns' are' clia'lrh td tli-e f6tmitibil I of a -cdmpound'df the form NH(S60 -NH )2' xo~reov6rj a rod explosive formed, probably 3 4 aaleniuw. niAzids.- 'There are 2. figures and 6. referanafts, .3 of., whiah are sovlwt. 'ASSOCIATION: Inst1tut obah" y,.i..veoTgaz)ichsskoy. khimii im._N. S# Nurnakova Akademii nauk S;SR (Institute of General and iporganio Chemist'ry-,im~nI.H., S*~Xurnalcav,of the Aaadsmy..of Sciences, VSBR) SUBMITTED: March 10, 1959 Card 2/2 -'~ACC- Hit, AP6003373: 'ands. 1000C An ~~the Meft. ~8_ - C_~O`ft talti In a B203 and N420 -in a ratio- of f v*011s, :181 to 17tl* This rogioin~of4ompiiitlons was selected as practically the - so s t' important. f Rome the.'viewpoint :-o fglass formation, It was no to d that the behavior of. Nd203~-and.ceoljn those malts differed. .-,.The solubility of..Nd2Oj`vas_, significantly higher-than that OU10002 z -because Of. t'h4__formatLon...of -iiaodymium borates, NdBO3 and Nd(BO2)3& rysta lize and 1072 ran reep C~- which. C An -17, B 203/Na2O go a t tl4oly. CaO 7 . apparent 1y.. doe #,-not f or* any compound and its solubil, 19,-Only slightly depandent.on-.1ho ,composition of 'malts. The great of Nd203 In, thil-.Ni2 t8 made it possible to grow .0-B203 201 Ingle*-.c,rys tale up, to -:Go a Ise veral-millimet.,ers. In -vore:grown- -'the-bikax me I t- :saturated .".'Such. crysta 9 1 -coo S. by S ow, Un of idids -curves 'of t'IOOOC* djO3 section' wlth.'U203 qu. .the N&24407-M ind M42B sect n 40. to of:tke phase diagrams were established for 7-P*02 both~ systems. studied. The' l1qui-dus branch: of the %B407-Nd2_03 An 690-!--IOOOC range$'- and branch of the N&2B407 CaO - system ~i 2 4' the -.740!--IIOOC- range , coirrespon o4'. to: OdB03 and- C*02, crystallizatiout, both without 'any polymorphic c'onvirs Lou* Lou Points on" the ..,liquidus curves at 910C.1orfNe 3 07-Nd20t.''And 30C f -C402 2 'it Or MA23407 .-Gone_@ rue yetaus were attributed 'to- t taial- change to the polymeri -- -------- r N42 T S; X324f Yu.Kh.; LUKIYANOVp I.A.1 YAZMHANp I.N.0 sadovod; SULIMEMAj Ye.M.9 "I starighiyttekhnik; ZIIILITSOVf MI,Ip atornhiy masterl KUZNETSOVA, F.G., inzh.-t,6khnologj ANISKOV, A.T. p pirometrist; kl~oy-,- I. P. kalil'- ahobft; NAMWv M.D.il. kalilshchik Let us create winter gardens in indvetrial plants with high temperatures. Zdorov'e,6 no.10:32 0 160. (MM 13:9) 1, Moskovskiy zavod ohWovalInykh stankov. .2. Glavny7 metallurg Moskovskogo zavoda shlifovalInykh stankov (for Kim). 3. Zaveduyushchiy z&avpuiMmMoskovskogo savoda sh3.ifovallnykh itankov (for Luklyanav). (GREMOUSES) BZLYAKOV, 1. S., Nngineer "Investigation of Chronometers." Sub 16 May 47, Moscow Inst of Ingineers of Geodesy, Aerial PhotograpIV and Cartograpby Dissertations presented for degrees in science and engineering in Moscow in 1947 SO: Sum No. 457, 18 Apr 55 BBLULg" S. ; ROYANOV, V.A. - Structural materials used in the watch and clock Wustry abroad. Priborostroanie no.512O-22 Ky 156, (KM 9:8) - (Clockmeldng and watchmaking) BILTAXOY bAll"emenoviall; XUUYBVO I., lan(lilat tekhnichaskikh nauki rezeenz3W7-.-Wurlm0w, A.D., in'zhener, reteenzent; BOGDANOV, ru.x., kandidat tekhnicheskikh nauk, redaktor; MATVZYIVA, Te.N., tekhai- cheskiy redaktor; ILIKIND. V.D., takhnicbeakiy redaktor [ClockworIM3 Chasovyo makhsn'izmy. Moskva, Gos.nmuchno-tekhne izd-vo mashinostroit.lit-ry, 1957. 335 p. (HIBA 10:8) (Clockmaking and vatchmaking) S" - /V') vle /-/ 1115 . 8 ,~- 4 Y/-), r r-) i " -11 -/ t- 1)4~ 6 EELYAKOV, IVAN, 3FIT-2.7,10VICH Vih.5 - P4 Cha5ov-~-ye Mckhanizmy (Clock I-ITechanismi) rtoskva, k:ashriz, 1957. 113-r- D. Illus.) DjASrs, TaIlles. "Literaturall: r. BELyk KRZPS~ S.Ye.j SURIN, P.D.; B&RMVA.. 0.N., red-.) GORBATKIN, B,O,, tekhn. red.. [Clock and watch repairlng)Remont-chasov. Moskva, Goomdstprom- izdat, 1962. 240 (MIRA 16%3) (Clocks and wateboli-Repairing and adjusting) ALMOV, I.T., doteent, kand. takhn. t)auk Vlotting curves of actual stresses In sheet metals. Isv. vys. ucheb. zav.; mashinostr. no.10:79-86 158. (HIRA .12:32) 1.Moskovskly aviatsionny7 inetitut imeni Sergo Urdzhonikidus. kStrains and stresses--Graphio methods) ACCESSION NR: AP4043429 S/0147/64/000/003/0124/0127 AUTHOR: Belyakov, 1. T. TITLE: Toward a better understanding of the concept "technological effectiveness of design" SOURCE: IVUZ. Aviatsionnaya tekhnika, no. 3, 196-4, 0124-0127 TOPIC TAGS: design technique, technological effectiveness, design efficiency, nircrnft design ABSTRACT: On the basis of several examples drawn from the aircraft industry,. the author considers the problem of the development of a general methodology which will make it possible for the designer and the technologist to select, objectively, the design variant with the most advantageous (from the point of view of the economy of the country) level of "weighted perfection"; that is the optimal combination of weight and expenditure. In other words, the author calls attention to the need for a method for an overall evaluation of aircraft designs, which will take into account not only the interests of the designer, technologist and ultimate consumer, but also the general interests - those of the national economy. In the author's view, the determination of the efficiency of a new Card 1/4 ACCESSION NR: AP4043429 concept of "technologicnl effectiveness of design't does not extend to the sphere of the actual operation of the aircraft. In addition, the author attempts an analysis of the concept of "repairability". By "repairability of design" is to be understood its adaptability to the detection and elimination of faults, as well as to their prevention. Quantitatively, repairability may be characterized either by the expenditures of time and material on the detection, elimination and prevention of faults (considering the required qualification rating of the servicing personnel) or by the readiness factor tw k w r =w~r where tw is the sum in-operation time of the aircraft over a sufficiently long time interval and tr is the outage time for repairs during the same interval. The author attempts to demonstrate that the concept of technological effectiveness is applicable to designs having identical repairability. On the basis of the author's reasoning, the concept of the technological effectiveness of design may be formulated in the following manner: by the technological effectiveness of a given design variant is understood the complex of its properties which permit the manufacture of this design with smaller production expenditures (in comparison with some other variant) and with identical, or better, values for the assigned Card 3/4 ACCESSION NR: AP4043429 machine presupposes a comparison of the "effect", obtained by means of the machine, with the "na t iona I -economic expenditure": E where C is the efficiency, E is the effect, and B is the expenditure. Analyzing this formuli on the basis of examples from the aircraft industry, the author states that "the most important task of the Design Bureau is the development of an air- craft which will yield the highest possible value for the criterion of efficiency". Noting that the problem of the overall or "complex" evaluation cannot be consider- ed completely solved, at the present time the author analyzes, in the light of this problem, the technol*ogical effectiven6ss of design. This concept is shown to reClect the perfection of the design from the point of view of actual production and is, therefore, an economic concept characterizing the adriptability or applica- bility of a given design variant to manufacture with less cost in comparison with other variants. The concept thus his sense only when discussing two or more design variants of the same part or component of the machine (in this case, an aircraft),-which satisfy assigned parameters (in terms of strength, weight, aerodynamics, reliability, and so forth). It has been emphasized that the Card 2/4 ACCESSION NR: AP4043429 -design parameters, repairability and equal qualitative output. Orig. art; has: 2 figures and 2 formulas. ASSOCIATION: none SUBMITTED: l5Nov63 ENCV: 00 SUB CODE: AC NO REF SOV: 002 OTHER: 000 'Card. 4/4 BELYAROV, K., brigadir-elektrikov .Senas of cooperation. Ayt,tranap. 40 no~11:7 N 162-o (MIRA 15:12) 1. 3-1-y gruzqvoy avtopark Leningradskogo avtoupravleniya. (Loninipad Province-Transportation., Automotive) ii~Y46V: i~-; KNRMOVI- V. 1469cow University Public feeding in the new building of the Moscow State University. Sov. torg. No. 3, 1953. Monthly List of Russian Accession Library of Congress, Lwo 1953. Unclassified. BILYAKOV, K., lnzh.-tekhnolog. I I ~Pro=uf~its and vegetables in the United States. Obahchestv, pit. no.3:56-57 157. (Km no) (United Stateo-Food. 7rozen) BELYAKOV, K. - Containers for semkorepared foods. Obehahestv. pit. no-3:40-43 Mr '5& (Containers) (MIRI 11:4) TROPIMOVA, T.-I.; SHTRYMAN, R.A.; SHOIRO, H.S.; NALITICH, O.A.; ODINTSOT, A.I.; (MONOT, S.R.; R7BAK, I.A.; SHMIN, G.F.; BMTAXOTP KX- SIDOROV, V.A.; TOYTINIKATA, S.-Ye.,; DMSOTA. K.G.-; KHRUSTALITA: O.N.; OMYTAKOVA, L.,,red.- BABICHETA. V.V., takhn.red. [Manual on technological advice and technical specifications for semiprooessed products and dishes of meat, poultry, fish, potatoeso and vegetableal Sbornik tekhnologichookikh instruktaii I tekhni- chaskikh uslovii na polufabrikaty i kulinarnye izdeliia is miaea, ptitay; ryby. kartofelia i ovoshchei. Moskva. Goo.-izd-vo to'rge lit-ry,-1958. 101 p. (XIRA'13.-4) 1.,Russia (1923- U.S.S.R.-).Ministerstvo torgovli. (Food industry) (Cookery) BILYAKOV, L. - * Growth of self-oervice stores in foreign countries. Sov. torg. no.7:55-59 Jl 157. (MLRA NO) (Self-service stores) - - ~- 1 7- 1.. .. - -- -- ~13~ - --': .. - :1- _.~r - B~LYAKOV L. ~ .11 World tonnage of c.hartared tankers. Mor. flot 25 no.5s42-43 )V 165. (NIRA 18:5) 1. Starshiy ekonomist konlyunktarnogo otdela Vsesoyuznogo ob"yedineniya "Sovfrakht". BELYAKOV L. Automobile and tractor shipments in marine transportation. Mar. flot. 24 no.5-.43-44 Yq 164. (RIRA 18:12) 1. Starohiy ekonomist Vseaoyuznogo ob"yedineniya "Sovfrakht". BELYAKOV, L.N. --------------- Relationship of wind currents with local winds AM the wind field. 'Probl*Arkt.i Antarkt. nof5a67-70 160* (KML 14W (ocean .0'Urrents) (Winds) BELYAKOVO L.N. "C-~~~ Effect of waves on the records of,different current meters. Trudy AANII 210:91-93 '61. (ocean currenta) (MIRA 141l1) -7777--7:77;77% ~6CWIK-AP6007653 (N) SOURCE CODE to UR/02i3/66/066/001/0159/0161 AUTHOR. Belvakov, Lo N* iORG: ~Arctic andAntarctic Scientific Research In;s A~tA. (A~ktiche kiy i an arkt :t cheskiy pauchno-i's-sled-ovati6l'skiy:inistitUt) Ski urre 'th, a BPV automatic recorderN" TITLE: The measurement, of low,velocity,c nts SOURCE:' Okeanologi~a v., 6, no.. 1 1066 159-161, TPPIC TAGS- geophysic instrument,-, instrunent calibration equipment ocean current: ABSTRAM Since low velocity.current (0 to,10 cm/sec) measurements made with Alekse'- yev BPV_2 and BPVi..2p automatic recorders are dif fi dolt to analyze,-twelve automatic:. recorders of this design were ex-Minined to'determine the-precision of calibration. The dat~:sh~4 that V. *(the. Initial velocity_of a recorder in a quenching stream) varies - In from 2 to 2.5.cm/sec and.from-3.0 to 3.S cm/sec.for BPV-2 and BPV-2p models,.respec- -tively. - VG magnitudes (the velocities at , which the wheels of arecorder begin. to torn) yary:fr6m 0 to 6 cm/sed, The author suggests a special calibration curve.in which.an imaginary..--. f ero point would be 'replaced by:zero., :Orig. art. has: 1:tablej,: fi gure.- SUB COM.: 081 'SUBWDATE., 23Jan65/ ORIG REF.* 000/ OTH REF; '000 UDC*. ~551.46.085 i3:11K ) I Noscov Inst. of "The Internal Friction of 'Metast4ble' Solid Solutions." report presented at an Inter-vuz Conference on Relaxation Phenomena in Pure Metals and Alloys, 2-4 Apr 1958,, at Moscow Inst. of Steel. Vest. Vys. Shkoly, 9. 72-3~ 1958. 24-2-23/28 AUTHORS. Arzhanyy, P. M. and Belyakov, L. N. (Moacov,,). TITLE: Investigation of the stru ture an of the phase composition of diffusion coatings of an alloy of chromium with silicon beryllium. (lealedovaniye atruktury i fazovogo soatava diffuzionnykh pokrytiy splava khroma kremniyem i berilliyem). PERIODICAL: Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Otdeleniye Tekhnicheskikh Nauk, 1958, No.2, pp. 149-152 (USSR). ABSTRACT: The authors-investigated the structure and the phase composition of an alloy containing 60% Cr and 40% Fe, the surface of whiCh was saturated by means of diffusion with silicon and beryllium ~n the solid phase at temperatures of 950 to 1200 0 for durations between thirty minutes and fifteen hours. It was found that at the surface the following phases are separated out; the silicide (Cr,Fe)Si, the silicide (Or Fe) S' the a-phase and the eutectic, of the solid solution ;flilicon in the a-phase plus the a-pha8e. After saturating the same alloy with silicon at 950 0, the beryllides (Cr,Pe)Be and (Cr Fe)Be2 and the solid solution of Be and the a-DRase Nverel observed; at 1000 0 and above the beryllides (CrFe)Be and (Cr,Fe)Be the a-phase and the solid solution of 5 pil Card 1/2Be in the a- ase could be detected. The micro-hardness GN~;LYA KOV., L - tl~ BOV/126-6-1-15/33 AUTHORS: Avraamov,, Yu. S.5 B nd Livshits, B. G. TITLE: Internal Friction Peaks in Ni-Cr Base Solid Solutions (Piki vnutrennego treniya v tverdykh rastvorakh na baze nikell-khroma) PERIODICAL: Fizika Metallov i Metallovedeniye, 1958, Vol 6, Nr 1. pp 116-121 (USSR) ABSTRACT: The alloys used were 20% Cr, 0.0,9016 C. balance Ni, and 20% Cr2 2.48% Tit 0.68% All 0.03% C, balance Ni (nichrome and nimonic respectively). Torsional oscillations in vacuol using an apparatus not described, were employed. Fig.1 shows the effect of variable grain si e ( duced by quenching from various temperatures on the ia~ernal friction-temperature curve for nimonic (up to g50 C); two peaks are found, at 150 (A) and 650-660 G (E) respectively. The latter is ,caused by grain boundary displacement. Fig.2 gives similar curves for nimonic of low and high carbon contents, the latter after quenching and ageing. Fig.3 shows the same for nimonic containing varying amounts of Ti. From these results it is concluded that the A peak Card 1/2 is related to the presence of Ti, as no deformation is SOTt/126-6-1-15/33 Internal Friction Peaks in Ni-Cr base solid solutions involved, and the peak rises with Ti content. The 0 exact shape of the peak is affected by ggeing at 520 C31 and completely removed by ageing at 575 C for eight hours. Fig.4 illustrates the results of applying various heat-treatments to the alloy. The effects are related to the formation of a K-state in the a' solid solution. The fact that the A peak tends to split into two separate peaks, which behave differently,, is not, however, discussed. There are 4 figures and 8 references, 5 of which are Soviet, 3 English. ASSOCIATION: Moskovskiy institut stali (Moscow Steel Institute) SUBMITTED: October 22, 1956 1. Nickel alloys--Physical properties 2. Nickel alloys-- Card 2/2 Mechanical properties 3. Grains (Metallurgy)--Metallurgical effects 4. Titanium--Metallurgical effects "234 3GV/126-8-3-18/33 4,0" T,* S.. 0. ..Skiy. T.S., AUTIORS, Avr^ . a..,.- 3 0. an B!i~S6 TITLXt Intornal Friotion of Yot4stable Solid Solutions FIRIODICA.L&Fialka astallov I -talloy.aenly.. 1939. Vol 8. Mr 3. pp-44,0-1448 (USSR) ANSIVACTS Th- alloy At ht"etric cowposItion fJ13XA and alloys * r ! :Ition alloyed with 1.34 sad 2-77* No. C - of the ..: ,, octl-ly. Vora studied by measuring the temperature r d p ndonce of internal friction. U6InX this Method, Xi,fs : 4 pe bdonas, and those alloyed with typ. Alloy. without ol .1.0 21 37A t". alloy. ~ (nimonto I or* Z n oolyb4..". .dL dTh AMICIoosip..Itloa Of %U4 Save" IK.t.d : :h is '. bl. a. p 441. Th. I. rual alloy: shown in th to 1. friction was measured In wire specloons. 300 on long and 1 n AM rdered .0 ant diameter. In VACUUM. The &ll0y NI3 l o C O 01, 4ppro.1-t ly CR. 10 ~, . Crt p.i.t Mi Vith o l Y l ). V, the ". a .,as ch. t.Mp.,.tur. 4.p.nd..c. :. h l l And d of Internal friction of a quenched X1 11 n'h. M: '::: ! U .r.) rd rI fron a temperature above that at wbIch j t- p. ka. A Ad 9, with saxi" at 12G ad 290 Q Axe C&rd 1/16 ob: rv:d (Fig 1). In the curv. of the t..P.mt-r. 6WRIONWAMM rr9_f_,.W_.C7W defamed XL3xn lay (75% deforsation)s the pAAkW AAnd 5 rs"Ln *ad a- additional peak. 0. having a M&MLMUM .% 226 C, t, ppearml ths S*nsral level as Lat.roal fraction riaois h-ply (Fig 21 An Additional peak. C. having A L Iso. at "16 &A evident In a carburix*4 Xj,Xn ^I ;, lay O-M; C (Fig 3).,,Tbe Appearance of this peak do t: the diffusion of rb" at-- in the I..txG tr... range. Dories the invoottsation of tb4 tarimetwo f "1671-9 the Ni3XR -*lid -ol-tIon -tth "Iybd..uo. it round that supplasiontary Maxiau, - pfoas H and C at And 346 C - appeared In twoporotu~ro dop*ndenev of intorual friction A---. (Fig 4). In Vig 1. the Influe"s :Clboat tro&taevkt an the toaporatur* depondoace or A 1 Oy 60"AlUIAS 1.3636 No LA 41ADwIft. A ob.oined with an alloy containing 2.77% No. Cm Measuring th internal friction ef XjF* alloys allayed with Me (?1 6)two poakm were obtained in ch* I~ toopwrature r"S;~.Cn* IbO '-.1-n .1 6". (1-6k A) and the other (P!n At A.ans 7 an-* ch. influ.". or beat 7 Card 2/4 te"t.sat an tar. of It.~ 1, 1rjotj*o Ih:.*'.':Ytx Ved, ch. %r,~..::c A he.. c;f I. h!3r:;. Is 8 h I: C I TI friction of A alloy. IMTS 9. the ch..&. 1, &,1:rCaL fr&c."onawath Ti song.at to a asopic alloyIAAn Va. Th. in r. Conclude that On usasuring the tooporature dopendence of LUternal, friatLon of ..t.st.bl. ..lid so I.ts... :bar at.rl.tto Create Can be ..P"t.4 Von has the ttruo tu.ral factor 1. -scoodingly .-It. Th. Magnitude or b:t.1h. gr..t.r. L.. Sro.t.r dif rI rgy VA. . qu..ch;d ad .red :11:y. A,hGo% risen of too int*r.. I rictL.a of rd~'Ing LI yIh:t of alloys Coming a X..t.to A ,!motor. at low tomper4iturse &A #KC0$dLA4IY Iftc4r-o%;Ing G:YFIS 41 "4 6). On adding aolyb4- to ordering all A(UL'".) the ..testability pook decrease* &A Malybdon d:cr:,**,* 1h* 4:,gr*:.*f **:Ibl order. Conv.d A, r..Iy . I. t As, to X- t ': .11.78 (XI~Fa # No) the metastability ps4* Increases. a, in* In,r:^ In."*.1yb4e:uM concentration appears to Increase be .':n Co I tsgrogation (Z~at&to) In the eoluti... Card 3/4 Th. a... Con be &old about jit.atua, A. the -11-Y 92437 ll;,,Th-. -.ulo..nt of the Internal friation t11 " *ska) romd*re differentiation between lordoring and g.dtate poeviblo. 7%ero ore 9 CLSuros6 t.bl:,:nd L9 r.f.r.ac... 12 of which are Soviet .64 W-t SULINITT90i August 12. 190 33 'Al 10 0 Uf 1v Ila If BELYAKOV, L.N.; BELYAKOVA, L.T. Some geologicalebaracteristics of the convergence region of the Urals and Pay-Khoy. Matopo geol.i p'ol.iskop.Sev.-Vost.Evrop.- ebasti SSSR no.1:55-60 161. (MIRA 14:11) (Ural Mountains--Geology) 28868 s/i8o/Wooo/oWoo6/o2o The role of delta-ferrite .... E.11"L/E380 o.14-1.~)O Al in the different batches) by anodic solution in an electrolyte containing 350 g/litre F6CI 3 and 20 tnl./Iitre of HCI tAbstractor's note - the text Sives 1120 mm/litre]. The delta-ferrite was subjocted to microchemical. ana-lysis. Since 0 martensite and carbides were absent after quenching from 1 050. C1 the austenite composition could be calculated. The influence of delta--ferrite on the martensite transformation was studied on two other heats, whose composition (respe4ztively, 0.06, 0.09.1'o C; 0.53, 0.54 INIn; ci.28, o.42 si; 16.88, 15-20 Cr; 2.69, 4.6o Ni; 0-11*12, 0 Co-, 0, 0-2,32 Al) was chosen so as to give martensite points above room temperature in each batch. Various quenching temperatures were lased cl,7nd the effect of aluminium, cobalt and on -hc iii..~,rtensite trar)sfojination was*studied. Thi. a'uthc.-~,,ri th-at delta-ferrite appearing in the struct-ure of L~taWless -jteel produces a substantial redistri- bution of C-azz-bon ..ind alloying elements between delta-ferrite and ausLe.-ilte, leadi.ng to a drop in mart ensi t e -transf ormat ion temperature, the drop ircreasing with increasing delta-ferrite Card 2/3 28868 S/l8o/6j./ooo/oo4/oo6/020 The role of delta-ferrite E-1. I )-/ R3 8 0 content. The expt~t-:mi-nO~ ~~Iholsred tll-oA 1. i.n tft~i absence of carbides, sma.".1 J lead either to a slight. .!-_,crease i..,i tpmperatlire -,)r to zi der'.reas' e 5-11alle.r iysl- n ; 0 a I-- 1~d. "Ype-riinents are needed to elucldate,thi,~ Iead6 to a considerable imcreasf~ in t,?rzper,,(ut-c if.~et lip-ating that results in carbide fot-mjaf.ic):~~ L-; explained '~Y a~ more intensive separ-a-tion of the .ii-bid,,~ jjl-~a:~e at the d-~:!t,*--ferrite/austenite boundarles compay&4 with that at austelail-e/austenite boundaries. There ~%rk, 2, ) and 7 r.eferenc.-ts: 2 Soviet-bloc and 5 nua--5cVi0---'t'J.4~'z.. Tli,-.,, four latest English-language references quoted PLJ. I - quoted In texts Ref. 2 - F.C. MorikmAll . F,L%~ ~:uff a~),l NjI.J. Grant - Metal Progr., 1957, x:. 73., no. 4; Vt f . 3 - H.'V. Shirley - J. Iron and Steel Inst., 1957, v. J,(4, n,- '. 3 ; Ref. 5 - H.C. Vacher, C.J. Bechtoldt J. Res. Nat.. Dur. Standards, 1954, V. 53, no. 2. SUBMM ED: February 2(, L961 Card 3/3 s/i8o/61/000/005/014/018 E071/E435 AUTHORS: Belyakov, L.N. and"Livshits, B.G. (Moscow) TITLE: Delta ferrite in an austenite-ferrite stainless steel PERIODICAL: Akademiya nauk SSSR. Izvestiya. Otdeleniye tekhnicheskikh nauk. Metallurgiya i toPlivo, no-5, 1961, 90-95 TEXT: The influence of hot plastic deformation (forging and- rolling) the retention time at temperatures of homogenization (1050 to 1300*0 and cooling velocity of ingots on the amount of 6-ferrite in an austenite-ferrite stainless steel (C 0.07 to 0.09; Mn 0.44 to 0.70; Si 0.52 to 0.70; Cr 14.53 to 15-73i Ni 7-7 to 8-8; mo i.6o to 2.30; Al 1.30 to .1.38) were investigated. The determination of 6-ferrite was done in all cases by the metallographic method with an accuracy of + 0.5 abs.% and by the magnetic method with a relative accuracy of + 3%. For the latter method, specimens were austenized at 105eC for 15 minutes, cooled in air to 300 -2500C and annealed at 2500C for 1 hour in order to stabilize the austenite. It was found that the velocity of cooling of the ingots has an influence on the amount of 6-ferr1te in the austenite-ferrite steel. The lower Card l/ 3 3/18o/61/000/005/014/018 Delta ferrite in an austenite- E071/E435 the cooling rate in the range of crystallization temperatures, the higher is the content of 6-ferrite in the cast steel. In the axial part of the ingots weighing 25 and 450 kg the amount of 6-ferrite is 1.35 times higher than on the periphery. On the periphery of the ingots, martensite is present in a considerably smaller amount than in the axial part. Hot plastic deformation of stainless steel at 1000 to 1100% lowers substantially the amount of 6-ferrite, whereupon forging and rolling produce equivalent results. A non-uniform distribution of martensite-is more stable, but this non-uniformity of the structure is removed on rolling a 450 kg ingot into plates 6 to 2.3 mm thick, On heating cast and forged steel to 1050 to 11500C and retaining it at this temperature for 0.5 to 5 hours, the amount of 6-ferrite changes only a little, whilst at 1200 to 13000C, it in:reases substantially. Hot plastic deformation at 1000 to 11000C lowers the amount of 6-ferrite considerably faster than annealing at the same temperature. It is considered that the non-uniformity of the distribution of 6-ferrite and martensite in ingots is due to dendritic segregation, since zonal non-uniformity along the cross- section of an ingot is insignificant. There are 5 figures, Card 2/3 S/180/61/000/005/014/018 Delta ferrite in an austenite- E071/E435 2 tables and 9 references; 6 Soviet and 3 non-Soviet. The two references to English language publications read as follows: Ref.4: Irvine K.J., Llewellyn D.T., Pickering F.B., J. Iron and Steel Inst. 1959, v.192, no-3. Ref.7: Cina B. J. Iron and Steel Inst., 1954, v.177, no.4. SUBMITTED: February 27, 1961 Card 3/3 BELYAKOV L.N - LIVSHITS, B.G. Phase analpie of 128HSIU austenite-ferrite steel. Zav.lab. 27 no. 10: 1192-1194 161 0 (MIRA 34: 10) 1. Moskovskiy Institut stali im. I. V. Stalina. (Steel-Analysis) (AuateniW (Ferrite) '7 t: :J W L 26605-65 F,,; A J)AA ACCESSION NR: AP5005108 S/0129/65/000/002/0052/0054 AUTHOR! Bel. rakov, L. N.1 Kozlovskaya, V. 1. TITLE: Res-Idlial austenite, In martensitic stainless stet-;12 SOURCE: Metallovedeniye- i, terrticlie,-~a'ya,obrabotka.metallov, no. 2, 19'.65, 52-.~54 TOPIC TAGS- stainless steel,'tmrtensitic sta- n ess,-steel, chr I marte ium nicke n- sitic steel, residuallau~tenitd, residual'sustenite-behavior, steel treatment aining 0.13-0-25X C, 11-78-15.70%: ABSTRACT Six martensitic tain s steOals cont Cr 1.56-3.20% Ni 0"1.89%~W, and O~-1,60% Mo were tested to determine th' e effect of heat treatment op( the quaratty of residual austenite. It was found.that the quaptity Of -ie-sid4il austenite increases with increasing annealing temperature and increasing content of,carbon and alloying elements. The quantity of residual a~stenite In steels 'with a high content' of alloying elements reaches 40-50%'wher- ever steels quenched in hot ~100-1500 oil are tempered at 350C without bein g cooled to room temperature.L~However, this austenIte is not completely stable and is transformed to martensit~ by-cooling to -70C. Whenever residual austenite is undesirable, the steel must be cooled to room temperature before tempering or COM ASSOCIATION: none SUBMITTED: 0OFeb65 ENCL., 00 NO REF SOV: .000 OTHER. 000 SUB CODE: HH ATD pREss: 3188 ACC NR;AT0035116 SOURCE CODE: UR/2561/66/000/022/0035/0042 r AUTHOR: Shpay'kner, a. 0.; Belyakov, L lzmaylov, V. V. ;OIRG: None ;TITLE: The influence of Pacific Ocean waters on the hydrological regime in sections !of the Arctic basin near the Pacific Ocean ;SOURCE: Leningrad. Arkticheskiy i antarkticheskiy nauchno-isrledovatellskiy institut. ~Problemy Arktiki i Antarktiki, no. 22, 19066, 35-42 ITOPIC TAGS: hydrology, ocean current, ocean dynamics, ocean property, ocean tide ABSTRACT: The efforts of scientists to determine the'gonesia of the warm layer in the sections of the Arctic near the Pacific Ocean are discussed in some detail. Com- puted and observed values for heat exchange in the areas are compared and are found to coincide well. Study of the activities of Pacific Ocean waters will undoubtedly prove to be usefui for an understanding of the characteristics of the formation of hydrometeorologic~l conditions in the sections of the Arctic basin adjacent to the Pacific Ocean, but to do so will require the organization of regular measurements of the quantities of.Pacific Ocean water flowing into the Arctic basin through Bering Strait. Orig. art. has; 1 figure and 4 tables. SUB CODE: O8/6UWDATE; 09Jua65/ORIG REF; 011/0TH REF; 001 Card 1/1 UDC: 551,465(268) FEY-YAKOVI L.P.; GOLOVANOV, N.F.; SAFROINOV, V.P. ,x tra Lip raphy of Slnlan complex sediments in the Kotuykan basin. Uch. zap. UJIGA. Rag. geol. no.4:60-72 164. (MIRA 18:12) SOURCE CODE: UR/0413/66/000/014/0009/0009 IINVENTOR: Vyalov, N. N.; Finagin, P. M.; Soroking At N,; Tartakovokiy, Is K.; ORG: None, "TITLE: Pipe rolling mill. Class T, No. 181693 [announced by the Elektrostall Heavy' AMachine Building Plant*(Elektrostallskiy zavod tyazhelogo marhinostroyenlya)) ISOURCZ: prom obraz tov zn, no. 14, 1966, 9 ITOPIC-TAGS: pipe, rolling mill 1ABSTRACT: This Author's Certificate introduces: 1. A pine rolling mill consisting of .a housing with.drive and input and output equirment. The housing ia equipped with pilger mill roller and automatic mill roller arsemblies. 2. A wdificatior of this de- vice for producing tubes by the pilger method., The unit has a fced mezhanism, a echanism. for controlling mand-re-1- =61ing and transfer, and a lifting trough on the 117, -linput side. The output side of the mili is equipped with a lift table. 3. A modifi- cation of zhis unit for automatic pipe rolling using,maister rollers on the input side lof the aiill*t6 replace the hoisting trough. The unit also has a fixer: trough, while la tingle assembly consisting of wiring, crosspiece and brake-centering unit.is mounted jon.tbe output side of the mill., COM 13/ SUBM DAVE: lojan64 .All ASATULLAYEV, N.R.; BELYAKOV L.V ; DORCKHOV, I.L.; ZHURAVIZV, B.Ya,; KATS, TV -*-' ye.po Ya.G.; MIKIIAYLM~,'- . Re.; -IMOMIROV, V.G.; USPENSKIY, Tectonics of the convergence zone of structures in the Chingiztau and Lake Balkhash region (central Kazakhstan). Sov. geol. 8 no.4:90-102 Ap 165. (MIRA 18:7) 1. Moskovskiy geologorazvedochnyy institut, i Moskovskiy gosudarstvennyy universitet. BELYAKOV L.V.--~-VITMANI F.F.; ZLATIN, N.A. Collisions of deformable bodies and simulating the process. Part 2, Zhur. tekh* fii* 33 no.8:990-995 Ag 163, (KMA 16:n) 1. Fiziko-tekhnicheakiy institut, imeni A.F.Ioffe AN SSSR, Lenin- grad. ACCESSION XR: AP4020582 S/0057/64/034/003/0519/0522 AU171OR: Belyakov, L.V.; Vitman, F.F.; Zlatin,'N.A. TITLE: On the impact of deformable borlics and its simulation. 3. On the correspon-' dance of the instantaneous values of tho parameters of the simulated and simulating processes SOURCE: Zhuzmal tekhnicheskoy fiziki; v.34, no.3, 1964, 519-522 TOPIC TAGS: impact, deformable body, deformable body impact, simulation, impact si- mulation, deformable body impact simulation, steel dural impact, copper aluminum impact ABSTRACT: On the basis of dimensional analysis, two of the authors have previously, proposed the following general expresaion for,the depth, LK, of the crater formed by the normal impact of a body of revolution moving parallel to its axis on the plane surface of a large target (F.F.Vitman and N.A.Zlatin, DAN SSSR,146,No.2,337, 1962; ZhTF,33,No.8,982,1963) and experimental evidence of its adequacy has been ob- tained (L.V.Belya~kov, F.F.Vitman and N.A.Zlatin, .1b d 33,No.8,990,1963). Card 1/3 ACC.NR: AP4020582 "2 L-13 k 10- _70- I WL I. 'potIOP do Poial Here H is the "dynamic hardness" of 'the matorial, p is the density, anda is the Yelocity of sound. I and d are'characteristic longitudinal and transverse &,mensicw of the projectile and k is a form factor describing the shape of the projectile hwd.' vo designates the impact velocity. The stibscripts 1 and 2 refer to the target and projectile materials respectively, and the subscript 0 Indicates the values prior to impact. It was hypothesized that not only the final crater depth LK, but also the values assumed during the course of the impact process by all the relevant pa.- rameters are functions of the dimensionless quantities appearing in this equation and of an appr9priate reduced time. To test this hypothesis, impacts of soft steel. cylinders with dural targets and copper cylinders with aluminum targets were ob- served by an x-ray technique similar to that employed by V.A.Tsukerman and M.A.Mana- %ova (ZhTF,24,211o.2,391,1957). The materials and the impact velocities were so cho- sen that'the dimensionless parameters in the above equation had the same values in the two cases. It was found that the penetration depth, the projectile length, and the maximum projectile width all were the same functions of the reduced time t/r for the steel-dural collisions'as for the copper-aluminum collisions. Here t is the Card 2/3 ACC.NR: AP4020582 time since contact and T is the duratioa of the impact process. T was-68 microsec for the steel-dural ir;;pact and 100 microsoc for the copper-aluminum impact. Twelve x-ray photographs of the impacts are reproduced. Orig.art.has: 4 formulas and 3 fi- guros. ASSOCIATION: Fiziko-toldinicheskly Institut 1m.A.F.1offe AN SSSR, Leningrad (11";Lco-, t~~C&I'Institllte, AN SSSR) SUBMITTED:DgFebG3 DATE ACQ: 329ar64 ENCL: 00 SUB CODE% PH' RR REP SOV: 017 OMER; 006 card -3/3 got L ~5378-65 /E67 (WEerr 60/F~0 60/S0 W/T/Err-(0_2/&~M/EV (t) -4 iko ACCESSION UR.- AP5004589. 5/0020/65/160/002/0314/0316 AMOR, Belyakov, L. V.; Valitskiy, V. P.; Zlatin, N. A. TITLE: The role of thermal phenomena in collision of metal bodies SOURCE: AN MR, Doklady, vi. 16o, no. 2, 1965, 314-316, and top halfof insert, facing P. 314 TOPIC TAGS: i impact,heat, collision heat, oetal collision impact heat, metal collision heat, impact heat effect, impact effect, metal bodies collision efrect, collision heat effect, collision impact heat ABSTRACT: The role of thermal effects in the formation of the impact cavity in the target is considered at thrd-shold ippact speeds at which temperature is a m-,Qor factor, i.e., at temperatures approaching the melting point of the target material. Aluminum disks (dismueter-to-thickness ratio, 4:1) were shot flatly at a massive lead target. The disk and target materials were selected on the basis of their shock characteristics in the pressure versus mass-velocity coordinates. The tem- perature effect was evident at impact speeds exceeding 1.6 km/sec. At 1-7-1,8 km/sec a conical cavity formed In addition to and underneath the typical -depression corre- sponding to lower speeds. The conical cavity displayed obvious traces of fusion. Card., 1/2 L 07h13-67 EW (m) AWfw) /WP (t) IRPT A ACC NR& ArbUU2U4U WUME (;UL)t;: Uxfuu2ufbt)/.L-luluu4jua&fufuagfj AUTHOR: Belyakov, L. V.; Valitskiy, V. P.; Zlatin, N. A.; Nochalov, S. N. ORG: Physical-Technical Institute in. A. F. Ioffe, Academy of Sciences SSSR (FiJ6?_ tekhnicheskiy institut Akademii nauk SSSR TITLE: The melting/of lead in a shock wave SOURCE: AN SSSR. Doklady,l~. 1701, no. 3, 1966, 540-543 TOPIC TAGS; shock wave, x ray photography, high speed camera, pressure distribution, specific volume, thermodynamic analysis ABSTRACT: A study w," made of adiabatic heating of lead to the fusion point during im- pact shock loading. iThermodynamic analysis of melting in a shock wave is presented and schematic drawings are given of pressure as a function of specific volume and dis- tance. Thermodynarnic equations are given for the specific work done by pressure to aX, where X is the specific heat of fusion and a is a coefficient which depends on the shock pressure. Melting in a shock wave resulted in an entropy increase and a change in pressure distribution. These analytical results were checked by shock wave experi- ments on lead, in which high speed x-ray photographs were -taken of the fractured ends of lead sheets. Impact velocities ranged from 1085 to 1570 m/sec. A sharp change in fractur~.~ppearancc occurred at an impact velocity of 1250-1300 m/sec; this coincided Card :L/2 L 07423-6,1v ACC NR: AP6032848 with a mass velocity of 700 m/sec. It is known that melting of lead occurs in a shock wave when the mass velocity becomes 650-700 m/sec. This velocity corresponded to a pressure of 230-250 x 103 atm and to a 22-23% change in specific volume. X-ray photo- graphs are also shown of fracture in 1 mm thick lead sheets at an impact velocity of 1340 m/sec, during time intervals of 15, 30, 45, and Sit usec. These tests show that the difference between the speed of the split flange (initial fracture condition) and the residual mass of the "whiskers"It(final fracture condition) was 3%, verifying the specific work equation. ~h_e~t -thic6esses ranging from 0.5 to 3 mm were tested 15 Vseq xture at 1340 m/sec. Some of the sheets were covered with 0.05 after the moment qF fr mm thick aluminurCfoilltluring testing. The use of the foil changed the spacings of cleavage "whiskers?. These experiments confirmed that the originally postulated posi- tion of shock adia-r)ates of lead in the solid and two-phase conditions was correct. A calculation of the relaxation time from the data gave 3 x 10-7 sec. Presented by Academician B. P. Konstantinov on 13 December 1�65. Orig. art. has: 4 figures, 2 formulas. SUB CODE: l1/ SUBM DATE: 27Nov65/ ORIG FXF: 008/ OTH IRM ool Card 2/2 K= WKI XP6033425 SOURCE CODE: UR/0057/66/036/010/1875/188 AUTHOR: Belyakov, L. V.; Valitskiy, V. P.; Zlatin, N. A. ORG: Physicotechnical Institute im. A. F. Ioffe.AN SSSR, Leningr (Fiziko- tekhnicheskiy institut AN SSSR) TITLE: Thermal Wfecta accompanying an impact on a metal half-space SOURCE: Zhurnal tekhnicheskoy fiziki, v. 36, no. 10, 1966,1875-1882 TOPIC TAG~: ippact, impact ly?wvt thermal effect, impact effect modeling '_~' Ta-1c" Ittler ABSTRACT: The article discusses experiments aimed at expanding the range of applicability of criterla to parallel the effects between low-speed impact of one pair of materials to similar effects for a pair of different materials at a higher, experimentally unattainable,- speed. The upper limit of the interval for which the modeling curve will yield correct results is discussed at some length. The concept of,"threshold speed " is introduced. Threshold speed corresponds to the discon- tinuity of the modeling curve caused by melting of the metals in question and is estimated at about .0.7 to I of the velocity of sound in the given metal. If the threshold speed is correctly determined, the modeling curve should yield accurate data on impact results for speeds at least 3 to 3.5 times h~Zher_tban the ex"j;i_ mental. Experiments were conducted In which blocks of lead','tin','- And cadmium"iiere impacted by aluminum disks 4 mm thick and 15 mm in diame-ter at-apeeds up to 24 km/sec. Card 1/2 UDC: 531.66.001.11 07367-67 ACC NR: AP6033425 The results were in good agreement with calculated threshold speeds. A marked difference was observed in the cavities formed at impact speeds of about I km/sec and those obtained at about 1.7 to 1.8 km/sec, the latter showing conical deepening with evidence of fusing of the target. A special high-speed x-ray investigation of the process at impact speeds up to 2.4 km/sec confirmed the ejection of molten material at speeds of 1.7 to 1.8 km/sec and highdr. Further confirmation of the threshold speed magnitudes was obtained Iin a special series of x-ray tests in which a copper cylinder was made to hit thin (about 0.05 of the diameter of the cylinder) sheets of lead, tin, and cadmium. The threshold speeds for metals'with higher melting point were calculated an the assumption that the heating up of the target by the impact is a function of the mass speed developed by the shock load and obeys the same law for all metals. The results of calculations for a number of metals confirm the assumption and agree with experimental data from various sources. Reference,is made to the experiments of A. C. Charters (Sci. Amer. v. 203, no. 4, 1960, 128), whose results could be extrapolated for impact speeds of 30 to 50 km/sec. Orig. art. has:. 6 figures. SUB CODE: 20/ SUBM DATE: 180c.t65/ ORIG REP: 012/ OTH REP: 007/ ATD PRESSt 5101 -.66,, FWT.(n) /T.1-1.1-P(W) /T&UPW TMel 20;291 1. ACC NRI AMULTILM UP./0057/66/036/002/0358/0 364 Bel kOVILeVs; Mat ni I AUTHOR: ZL Physicoiechnical;Institute I=. A.Feloffe,-AN SSSR, Leningrad (Fiziko-tekhnichos- Idy institut AN SSSR3 TITLE: On the deformation and,rupture.of massive, metallic bodies under-the.action,of: Short-duration pressure SOURCE: *Zhurnal,-tekhnicheskoy fiziki, v. 3 6, no. 2, 1966, 358-364 TOPIC TAGS:~ impact istrength, impact streds , high velocity impact, copper, zinc, tinj cadmi ' lead lead alloy, antimony alloy aluminum bardness,'plasticity ABSTRACT: Th nuthols have inves.tigeted.the.eavities producedin large blocks. of, copper, zinc' umi lead, and' a lead -antimony alloy by impact of,15-mm-diamete 4-mm-thfakalttWi-n~m-di-sks~at Velocities up to 2.4 km/sec. '..The experimental technique Z is-not'describod. AluminuM71 excited as the projectile material because the veloc-, ity-of 5.0und in thii'met s ?10191tively high and because its shock addabat lies well - below those of the target metals. . -The depth L ~of - the cavity increased smoothly With the:impact Velocity u except at a certain critical value of u, different:for the, dlf-. ferenttarget mater'lals,,at which L was discontinuoto. Rupture -of the target metal was Observed at impact velocities exceeding the critical value, but not at lower impact 2~- Card 1/2 1.66 001.11 UDC. 53 L 20179-66 ACC Nit, AP6007088 velocities. When L/at.,was plotted against d u2/H where" C~is the velocity .of soundi d the density, and H the dynamic hardness of the.taftet metal and't is:the duratiOn. ofm impact determined , from the velocity'of sound in. alimitnum , a~d the thickness.,Of-the pro- jectile.disk, the-points for all'the*t'argot metals, corresponding to _AmPnctFf&jgg.Uies exceedinig the respective critic a I values lay on a single smooth curve. The, va=ue of the.parameter..du2;11 at the critical velocity was difforont for the different metals. qnee in tbe plasticities of the several met That this difference was due to the differ K was conf im'ed ~b the behavior of, the Y6adir-hntimoilLy/~alloy (3% antimony) , whose plasticitir y and critical velocity wero'both much rower than those', of lead. The cavities produced at high impact"velocitics.in target metals other than 6opper were roughly-conioal In shape, whoreas the cavities in copper, had relatively Alat floors. This dif ference in behavior is ascribed. to the larger 'Value, for - c2gperltfian f or the other Metals L Of the quantity ct/D, where D the diameter of the projectile.disk. After some discus sion it As concluded that the -prodesses. taking place during Impact. unde'r -the conditions of the experiments are determined mainly by wavp.phenomena., Origs,art. has: 3-1ormul 5 fig ures~ and l,table. 415] PUB' CCDB:' 20/ ~JUPM DA7t.. 17~unOt ORIG RV: 01W 0 M-, MW#. 003/ ATD PRESS: A~-215 C"d 2/2 MILYAXOV, K., inzhener. Gas turbine automobiles. Tekhomole 24 320~5:15-17 yq 156.(nU 9:8) (Automobilds-Ugines) (Gas turbines) BELYAKOV, M. Belyakov, M. "From the history of our native meteorology," Vestnik vosdush. flota, 1948, No. 12, P. 11-15 00: U-2888. letopis ZhurnalInykh Statey, No. 1, 1949 itr OW9 in tfm Cated Pat 254*; .1122.-a 2*22-a'. A 'dkil, w. 10$-13 1 diol, in. 80--7*- d! locl. in, 1.5-Ptsitimm-, tk A3 wi h C!Y. Italyst (0.2v'~) CAVC the I"- V1.1b ethylene ClYvOL M. NH)v cn~ t7. W- I 4--t-utanedkA M. 13+ 123-7,; IALcicusazie- Odial, ta. lwt 4 *; 1.3-butane- ~I~W, It%. U-"t0% trie-1hy"pw M)a with Cthyf=e Clycal, M. in. 92-6,; J't-!;utaa-'-Ak4' 01. ler-82% 1,8-h-vigmed-4ol. ri. 75- u~kl, in, U-6*; in. 47- 80'. 1:104c" q* - -7"; 1.3-ttutlaodm, in. W-W; t,2, madi ra. M CA mw-w'; trieth$iaze glycol. iW M. 0-2"i in. -217 tal -26"; dW, xa~ 47-U'; in. 45-60*; 1,7-o~itafle' dkA, m. -S' ta0l; dk-thrku-- & 't-A, M. 10-11,; triallyl- epe lycal, M.-44 to -7 . ~NQUMRICI Of 111C pOlyCSECf% 41 'MOA v4 Coll; are tahtdated. The relatioa of the od Wr. to the st ure of the polyesteas is dism-med fl. It ~&.e vietvpqlut o! chzb pr-klpg wul *-twqetry of wacrtywc~p X Mtz adds knd ttt. d i h l$ un er N; t e ' x . . The non Z (mm the appCOPCEate ""i tbus were pictid. CSO VICM) With KeCrm In aatodavt at 2-75" ti) -res lc dl in 62-80% gicldzi. Di-N. ~ Me vc,fn -blp Lmlidicarb"Iy4te, at. 213-41, was prcpd. from the ILM LhIrcugit cisfoOde pAepd. ~y heatLIX the add With PO(N U td b t C4 ( Th 4 h M OR i - z ow y- y rutc wn w . e t e pc ;. v;tm haA the follawlar, in - &"* id a ith th t f m ac 's "s w : e lena g j M. y p ; Y ine-hykam &Iycol, WHO% wrameth1kat glycol. Z55- eo* 4 i h ; pentaluet 70 ; flexamethykne yfr e glycol, 160 i de=nethytene glycol. 12d-n*; ekzda- - Izethykirm Z'qcol, 112-Wi dittbylem Siyrui. 117-19'; 1,2-pmparediol, 130-40' .1,34aiusz4dfol. 125-35*- the cormpanding "Yestem of . , e ( 65-6 arbazy te acid. m 1 -Optodk - 7 8 WWI . m, "% EO-014, _86_~O W-76" th= (if f&nic "- 964% 70-811 -7" to "3 to -Ide, 54-94. 88-41*, 51-5m. A W k. rue mla!Rml of to Structures ;-t d'..' (roin or 6-ftsin puckirig a", sy-mweiry. C-li- jmrLsan wiz!i rmirtsten; 6 mqdit~ na O-ze In. rlotfitstt~m of 0-methIL-Alpf-, mad dwark addri. V. V. VorA7-A and S, V. Z1. 7,46 O-Polyrvr% uf vasicui gtr-w4- -'vith t6e 1;"s c 't " T z' t LmUcated rxW5 %vm prqyi. eonv-,Lnt~onnlily. 76 ' wl . an tabu4tpd. PtAy%mus A vario," g!N~ Is L /11 w-M loik Nv~: ethyltm glycia-1. M. -31' to -n.*; iliamthyleve gi-y-a' M. -35' to -31--; tctramcthyleue glycol, vi. - 43' to -38'; ptat=wthykac glycol, m. -46' to -42*; h,xa- Itazthy-1--lac gl~va~ at. -4?' to - 42% ticexuacthyicar: glv~ul, to -2'- glyz*l. m. Z7-00'. 1~2- to C11. .34' - '4' ~ - L h l i V o - to -L et ; tr to -30 t e gtyc~jl, m, -2 hvk y o imeglyrol, w -421 to -38'- thepclyc3ters d ghitaflL Reid vvitb - ttlsyk= g, 'Cw. ri. - 19- to - L2 '; pexltamethy!~u~ 1 . hmunnhyk-ne dytol. fr.. IrVcol m 22-5 iNc~Zet;4!Q Coll. a-- N-8Q% corT-ttp':'.14 ag -'-ty- 12 t 4 l bb~ Nd a , ata ' lu t7 So ttAt w th a k 7th d mbbZ i-W t th = l h 1 Q tA ., r- was ' a wi a mC C Y K T ne r.-I-floci Cd pfiy-.. pro-poertics to tke "m"s Uu-1 SY=- DIU-.U-y 0i M poly"ter ehv~~ is disc. in drwl. AUTHOR% Belyakov, U., institute Director SOV127-58-11-25129 TITLE* More Attention to the Learning of a Second and Associate Trad (Bol'she vnimaniya izucheniyu vtorykh i smezhnykh prof:lssiy) PERIODICAL: Pr,ofesaionallno -tekhnieheakoye obrazovaniye, 1958, Nr 11,, p 26 (USSR) ABSTRACTs The unusual development of engineering has caused the dis- appearance of some trades and the appearance of new ones, The teaching of a second and associate profession, within the limits of every installation, makes it possible to raise the workmens' qualification standard and labor efficiency, The experience of many years has shown that there are auf- ficient possibilities to acquire a second trade, Thus, a.g., persons learniag the trade of operators of steam enginesi compressors, crushersp whinohes, etc., must also learn the job of a metal craftsman. Last year, when switching-over to the 7-hour working day at the metallurgical combines imeni Serov, Nizhniy Tagil, Magnitogorsk, and others, the mass instruction of workmen of various trades in the repair- Card 1/2 man and metal craftsman trades permitted a growth in labor SOV/27 -58-11-25/29 More Attention to the Learning of a Second and Associate Trade efficiency of up to 15%. The author mentions the number of men who learned a second profession at the Magnivogorsk Combine, and points out that an associate trad* is usually learned in the installations through an accelerated coursed ASSOCIATIONY Sverdlovskiy institut tekhnicheskogo obucheniya. raboohikh (Institute of Toohnioal Training of Workmen, Sverdlovsk) 1. 1ndustr.1j;1 tralln!ag 2. Enginee-rIng personnel-4'ralLixg Card 2/2 22 (1) SOV/27-59-3-29/37 ,AUTHOR: Belyakov, M., Institute Director -------- TITLE: --------- Schools of Advanced Experience (Shkoly peredovogo opyta) PERIODICAL; Professionallno-tekhnicheskoye obrazovaniye, 1959, Nr 3, P 31, (USSR) ABSTRACT: Plant workers in the sector of ferrous metallurgy have obtained oonsiderably higher results in the productivity of blast and open-hearth furnaces and of tube-rolling and drawing mills than workers in the capitalistic countries. The shop and intershop classes of advanced experience have played a great part in attaining these results. Tens of thousands of workmen of metallurgical and tube-rolling plants are yearly being trained in these schools. They are either now workmen or those who do not reach the out- put-standard or whose showings are below the productivity of advanced workmen. Hundreds of classes are usually con- ducted at the large metallurgical combines, such as the Magnitogorsk, Kuznetsk, Nizhniy Tagil, Card 1/3 Pervouralsoldy novo~=bnyy, Sinarskiy trubnyy SOV/27-59-3-29/37 Schools of Advanced Experience I acquired the advanced working methods and their showings correspond with those set by the school. ASSOCIATION: Sverdlovskiy in3titut tekhnicheskogo obucheniya rabochikh chUrnoy metallurgii (The Sverdlovsk Institute of Technical Training of Ferrous Metallurgy Workers) Card 3/3 BELYAKOV M Vinzh.., izobretatell (Sverdlovok) Open-hearth furnaces feed corn. Izobr. i rate. no.7s8-10 JI 961. (MIRA 14:6) (Corn (Maize)) (slag) AIMTOLIEV, V.; SEMENOV, A - dotsent, general-mayor inzhenerotoWmicheakoy oluzhby New publications. Znan.-sila 37 no.9:45 S 162. ~MIRA 15:12) (Astronautics)