t2'---' -016. UNCLASSIFIE 0' PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
t,~'-Xikc ACCESSION NO--AP0116648
~J"A3$TRACT/E)(TRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE DEPENDENCE OF LUMINEScENC;l: ANC)
OF,TITLE DYES ON THEIR STRUCTURE VARIATION WAS INVESTIGATED.
14AX. AND LUMINESCENCE SPECTRA, THE INTENSITIES OF
1
-1- UMINESCENCE, AND THE ABSORPTIVITIES, WERE. MEASURED FOR EJOH SOLNS. OF
L
';.7-~-.PHENOXAZINE, 3H,PHENOXAZIN,3tONE (1), AND OF 12 OT14ER DYES DERIVED FROM
8y9rCH:CHCH*. CH, 7fuETv 70H SU82v
.1 4SUBSTITUENTS. ON I GIVEN):
--.l-,Z,CH:CHCH:CH,7jNME SUB2,.192,CH:CH CH:CHv7yNET SU82, 2vOH, 2,NH
:SU82iTiNPOSITIVE H SUB3,8#9,CH:CHCH:CH, 7,NH SU6218191CH:CHCH:CH,
'~~-17 ME(NME.SUB2)t 1,7,ME(NH SUBZ)j 1,7, OH(NH SUB21. FROM THE RESULTS,
tOkCLUS IONS WERE DRAWN ON THE STRUCTURE OF PHENOXA? INE DYES. ALL THE
$-TU 0 1 ED. ~,C
QMPOS. EXHIBITED INDICATOR PROPERTIES; DEPENDING ON THE PH OF
fk:--,.'-~-~~.-THE-';tMEalUM THEY CHANGED NOT ONLY THEIR COLOR BUT ALSO THEIR
LUORESCENCEO
2/2 019 UNCLASSIFIED PFIOCESSMG DATE-04DEC70
Z 1,RC ACCESSION NO--AP0139622
ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-iU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE ~EFFECT 0 F M NON TAE PROTEIN
COMPki-OF-SUKELLULAR STRUCTURES (CYTOPLASMIC AND CHLORUPLAST FRACTIONS)
OF LEAVES OF PEA PLANTS WAS INVESTIGATED* THE ASS~EINCE:OF PIN FROM TLE
H
NUTRITIVE MEDIUM CAUSED A DECREASE OF THE AMT, OF CHLORUPLAST PROTEINS
PER G OF FRESH TISSUE. THE ART, OF CYTOPLASt4lC. PRQTEl.N,!S -WAS NOT
INFLUENCED. THE CHLOROPLAST PROT:EINS 14ERE SEPD. Lill A BEAE CELLU,WSE
COLUMN INTO 10-12 COMPONENTS,, THE,CYTOPLASMIC PROT E- I NS . I N TiG 13- L 4. THE
ABSENZE OF HN. FROM THE INUTRITIVE MIXT. ;, CAUSED :CHANI;ES IN THE QUAL
-0
-~CIOMPN. OF PROTEINS: A DECR EASE OF 'A NO & LIP - COM, PON.F NT S , I P1 B' Tli
'FRACTIONS; AN INCREASE OF AMT. OF PROTEINS ELUTED.ZlY 0.01-0.05M
3SPHATEv BUFFER PH
8.0; AND A DECREAS5 OF AMT. OF COkfl)ONENTS ELUTED BY
0#19M PHOSPHATE BUFFERv PH 8*0. fACILITY. INST. PLANT PHYSIOL.,
KIEVP SSRa
UNCLASSIFIED
UISSER uDc 6i4-7:615-23:54,T. 1, 118
VROCHIE-MY K -- K., "OR"AIVA T. D.
'--PYi:TJ, YE, I., Doctor of Medical Sciences.11,
and MA-71"No., N. U., All Union Scientific Plesearch Tnstit#e of i~~jiene ~~il
Amica of insecticides, Polymexs, band Plastica., KieV
--eheas4 Approach to the Setting of StEmdards for New Grganophosphorus
Pesticides in Environmental Objects"
Nbsclow, Gigiye--a i Sanitariya-, No 11, 19712, pp 96-99
Ab s
-ft-ract: Such or-ganophosphorus compounds as thiophos, methy2ji,,ercaptophos,
carbophos, etc. may enter the.hiumn body with. food, water, and air. Hence a
comprehenx;ive appmach to the atitting of Fitandaris for -the pooticld,,,s is
reco nd d. It involves establIshing the mikimum permitiulble done for -.un
and the relative share of each M-diun, in the dose, i.e. D~,
:~." . Di
A
vhere D~ is the safe permissible dose for man; D, is the eurnount of pesticide
in food; D2 is the amount of nesticide in water; D3 is the amount of pesticide
in inkInled air; i is the amount in the ith medium. The fol-lovin-a steps are
taken to set the standard for a given pesticide.- (i) toxicolo,~ical studies and
generalization of the results to determine D~j.for animals; (ii) determination
1/2
It;, ~!] It RRRI I
usnM
igiyen.- anitari~--, NO U, IT
C i Sa PP
,a, D", for --a- 't-a-zed Cr! :22e ccnnmnative sensitivit"r of Ingn n-I'l ani"n-IS to the
ba ar-,-xal O-f t-~! ide in -rarious
ca=l i Lu a- a f i~ pastic
med, i &'K F~3 ... K r.,A relati S"'are of ezkch mzllum ~11 for ran, ee.'Icutla-
tic-r- of the standard 4), a = e d iim base-d on 1~1,for -WI all-,l oll
iv) C(-.lmv risoll
of
for ~-m vith tl-o- total wr~.,mt of the pesticide that :my Peretnate the
'_;zi-_O CC--Itact vrit~rl Various vnedia" E'arlier
sh--awed t=t amn- are eim-0-114, Sensitive to rm,~~t Orgimo-"Alosphlorus
zesticides 34"tar a aineLe Rawevar, arm is cmnsaidlerably vore sansi-
ic 0:
ti"ge after Chma. P~zllnngad eqmsure.
2/2
~.~VSRIAMM WA Im"bliAlIAHMN
0 26 PROCESSINS DATC-020CT70
DEFIVATIVE OF L)lEt~ENZC,PYctENECLIIN,)~4E
AUTHOR- 103.2) -541 E: P,~N.NOV. F. N. Z OS I M
OF I IN F irj-- U S S R
592-4
GRG. KHIM. 1970, z,(3)
-DATE PU&L ISHEL)-----70
-SUF
3JECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY
-TOPIC' T"~G.S-53E&ZENE DERIVATIVE, Z U I N JN E 9PHENANTHRENEP AIRU','~ATIC POLYCYCLIC
~-HYD~-~iCARBONs NITRATION, CHEMILAL. REDUCTION9 POLY 11CR ,DYE
AARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
l':_:oGcUmFNT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
T R F F L/FRA.4f--l 992 /14 084 STEP W11-UP 036 /70 /0
"PROX
L~%;ZS I F I r 13
P ESS14G DATE-01OCT70
UNCLASSIFTE6
"i;STRACT. NITRATTON' 'IF
M GAVE IrS DIA'11'40 WHICH
3v
I. S. REDUC-f--D iiIT4 NA St!i~Z STO THE DINITRU'DERIV. tLl) OF 1, OF INTEFEST
~~AX TtiE- S-Y&THESIS OF CUORED PiAYKERS. TPE: PREPU. 0 F I I CD U L .3 % L S!', 8 E
-PT:14 LOW YIELDS, BY REACTING 1, WITH H SUB2 NrH IN ~DNC H
---SUBZ 50,SU3.4 S-R14. CON7G. V SUS2 O.SUBS.
UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAM-E-1934/1250 STEP
UNCLASSIFfED ~PROCESST~G DATE--18SEP70
ACCESSIGN NO-AP0055921
8STRAC-T/r_-xTRACT--fU) Gi3_o_ ABSTRACT. A STUDY OF SUSPENSION STABILITY
`_'~WAS CARRIED CUT ON' SUSPE-USIONS, COUTG. SLIGHTLY SOL, CORROSION
--INHIBITORS, DICYCLOHEXYLAM40NIUM NITRATE, AND CYCt,$,)HE.XYLAJM~!0NIUm
CHROMATE, AND 1ONTG# SYNTHETIC- LATEXES AS, BINDERt
AND EITHER NH SJB4
c
ASEINATE OR SOL. ME CELLULOSE.(I) AS.THE PROTECTIVE COLL31D. A RHEOL.
:STUDY,OF THE SUSPENSIONS CONFIRMED THE S T ES
HIGHER EFFECTIVENE-iS (IF I A H
PROTECTIVE COLLOID. AT SIMILAR TO 40DEGREESt 1. E. THE T`:MP, OF PAPER
'COATING UNDER INDUSTRIAL CONDITIONS,- THE VISCOSITY OF SUSPENSIONS CONTG.
J, WAS ABOUT 'TWICE THE VISCOSITY OF THU SE, CONT5, THE CASEINATE. THE
STRENGTH OF "STRUCTURES FORMED Ar,,40DEGREES. WAS LOWEr, TliAN THAT OF THOSE
-IFORM-EIX AT 25DEGREES, INDICATING GOOD PROCESSAOILITY. OF: SWPENSIONS
CON TG-* L.*. WkVES._OF IJNHIBJTG,R. PAKTI.CLE~ S.EDIMENTATON R.4TE AS A FUNCTION
OF-, -T-fiE R S I I E't -WITHIN THE 2-100,mu ANtEt':FOR~:SUSPENSIONS HAVING
fk
:VISCOS I UES Rm-,,GING FROM 17.4 TO .107 CP 140WED A SIGNIFICANT
s
SED IMENTAT TON RATE FOR PARTICLES THE OtAK. OF'WHICii EXC-;-:EOEO 10 MU.
IF THE PARTICLE SIZF. OF THE INHWTORS SUPPLIED TO PAPFR
I TOR S St
HILLS EkEEDS 10 MU, SUCH IN-41L AOULD OF SUbOtCTED TO ADONL.
BEFGAr~ BEING USEO IN THE-PREPN CF:.SUSPENSAONS.~ W14EN
It LL '.%G
SUSPE'StONS PREP0. FROM CORROSION INHIBIT(3~5 WITWTHE PRGPI!:R PARTICLE
'$I ZE_~ CONTAIN, 10-14PERCENT I THEY: RERAI.N. STABLE FOA HR, AT 5PEPCENT
-ARE STABLE FOR AT I ~Nk
,_.jAE;Y L EAST:'
UNCLASSMED
US&R
JMZOV, G. P. KANYGIN, Yu. I.
'Serbicides in Feed Production"
Gerbitsidy vKormopToyizvodstve [English Version Above], Moscow, Rossel'
khozizdat Press, 1971, 144 pages (Translated~from Referativnyy 7hurnal,
Xhimiya, No 3, 1972,.Abstract No3N676,:K: by T. Belyayeva).
Translation: This book discusses problems related to the use of herbicides
for destruction of weeds in hay fields and pastures, and factors influencing
the~toxicity of herbicides.
Nil
Gyroscopic
USSR. UDC: 62-56
SLIV, E. I., BORISOV, Yu. A., ZOST, Z. G., IL'ICIIEVA, D., Leningrad Insti-
tute of Precision Mechanics and O~tics
"Errors of the Extremum Method of Finding the Meridian in Initial Orien-
tation of Inertial Systems"
~Leningrad, Izvestiya VUZov. Priborostroyeniye, Vol 16, 1~o 8, 1973, pp 68-71
Abstract: The authors examine the errors involved in determining the po-
sition of a Cyroplat- form in the azimuth from the extremum of the azimuthal
chea-acteristic. it is sho,.m that the expected accuracy of determining the
gyroplatforra position in the first approximation ii higher than with gyro-
compass determination since the procedural errors of the method. are low and
in principle can be reduced, accuracy is independent of the drift of the
leveling gyros, and at the same time the constructional errors are the same
as in the Gyrocompass method.
USSR UDC:,6zg.78.017.2
ZOTEM, A.I'* and ZABIROV, M. G.
"Synthesis of Nonlinear Control Systems with Incomplete Information
on Prescribed Distribution of the Roots of Characteristic Equation
for a Closed System"
Tr. Kazan., av-iats. in-ta (Transactions of Kazan Aviation Institute) 1971,
vyp,138, pp 82-88 (from Referativnyy Zhurnal-Raketostroyeniye, No 7,
1972, Abstract No 7.41.163)
Translation: The problem i!i considered of the synthesis of linear
regulator parai-neters with incomplete information on the control object,
the disturbed motion of which is repreriented by tho falloNvirig systei of
differential equations with constant coefficients: f- It , where
is the unit ve cto r; i s the s cal a r cont rol fu ri c t i on VI
It is shovmthat if the control object can be fully controlled and the number
of dimensional coordinates k 4 o , then there is a vector 1, , having
'ri- k null elements corresponding to k randoni roots of the
USSR
ZMYEV, A. I. and ZABIR(3V M. G.) Tr.. Kazan. aviat s. in-ta,
1971, v.YP 138,
PP 82 -88
characteristic equation of the closed system; these random roots not
coinciding with K zeros of one of thejunctions resulting
from replacing the ;5 column by column in the matrix H~(X) =/A -A C-//
Particular cases are given of the distribution of roots of characteristic
equation of a closed system, where one or several components of vector
become zero. The appendix gives the synthesis of the automatic control
system with incomplete information on the control object, the disturbed
motion of which is represented by a system of.differential equations
where the matrixAsbas~a quasitriangular form
(9 references, resume).
2/2
0:669.011621.78 J
USSR
iOLISIMKOV, V. I., PIMMOV, D. P., ORIM j Lo G-s Malf, M. A.,
4 V S and BORKOVSKIY, YU. Z.
OThe Effect of Thermozechanical Treat
Upact Ductility, Crack
meAt on~the
pagation# and Disintegration Viscosity"
7,:-i~:.-" Dnepropetrovsk, MetaLlurglchas;3,ya I Gornoradnaya, Propyshlennostlp No 4(82),
~Jul-Aug.7% p 32
Abs. ts' Results axe presented of an investigation.,of the mechanical
txac
7
--..=oPerties of 14Kh2GMR steel after the usua1heattreated and after high-
--Ae rature thermomechanical treatment (JiT1,M). Tabulated repointp, relative
Mpe
longation, relative contraction, fatigue liml-tt'and impactiductility at
hav:increase the strength
temperatures. HIlfr was found Ao Somew
''chazacteristics of the steel. HTMT does not lower the plasticity, it
ubstantially increases the impact strength at the expense of the Increasing
-share-of the work of crack propagation. The incz-aase of structural strength
of 1402GIIAR steel by HTMT lasts-up to a 6500 C temper temzerature~ The
creation of a stable substructure by hardening. Increases ihe~: resistance of
the'. steel -to brittle failure and decreases Its, susdeptlbllit~i to stress
*cen rat
e t ions. Two-tabless four blbliographic'~re fItrances, -
40
UDO 621
WSR -178-372t6O.14.016.8
AS
ZOTEM, V. S. UST 1CO, M. YU. ,GUDKOVt A. A and BAX HOV, L. V.,
ftvtraX-BM-dmWic Research Institute of Ferrous Metallurgy
."Stat and Fatigue Strength of Alloy KM4OhTTYu (EP543) After Different
ic
Strengthening Modes"
ffmcowp Metal-lovedenlys i Termicheskaya Obrabotka Metallov) No 82 Aug 73p
PP 68-7o~
Abstracts The effect of plastic deformation and subsequent aging on the
static and fatigue strength of alloy EP543 (author's certificate No 172869)
WOZ, investi a The alloy had the following chemical composition (in %)a
0.04 a (vax~t 0.~ 81 (max), 0.8 Yz (max), 0#02 S (max). 0-035 P (max),
14-17 Cr, 39-42 N1, 4.5-6.0 Mo, 2.5-3.2 Ti, 0-7-1.2 Al, and 2.7-3.3 Cu
(per ChMrU-1-988-70). After standAxd heattreatment and aging (quench from
ip,50-1100009 aged at 7500C lor 5-15 hours the tensile streiigth vaa greater
than or equal to 110 kgf/= , and yield strength was greator than or equal
to 110 jjTf1Lj2, and yield atrength was greater than or equal to 65
kgf/jk;?~. Elastic deformation was done by two methodst rolling with completion
~at 900-925 C, ensuring absence of recrystallization (mode,.I)~ and static
tension at room temperature (mods 11). It was found that the strength
38 -
USM UDC 621-874:624.023-9337:620.178.3.-974
KOBRIN, M. Y., Candidate of Technical Sciences, FEDOROV, YU, K., Engineer,
ZINGEFRAN, B. Z., Engineer, ~~ ~V~ ~,.Candidate oflecluiical Sciences, and
TYIM':-M. A. Doctor of Technical Sc:iences
2
IfFatigue Strength of the 'gelded Beam S~ipport %bassembly of (hrerhead Travelling
zranes at Minus Temperatured'
Moscow, Vestnik Mashinostroyeniya, No 4, Apr 73, pp 16-19
Abstract: The authors determine the effect of low tempera-L;res on the fatigue
of the support suba,5seirblies of welded metal structures with Sharply
varying croas sections. The jib of a 20-ton -eries produced trayel.Ung crane is
udied. The beam is made from St3 grade steel and welded 16-th the E42A electrodes.
s
t %,
The bent sheet of the bottom band is welded to the vertical wall by a bilaternl
angular seam (10 rmun fillet). Tests were conducted at +20 and -400C on a hydraulle-
Pulsedotestinr machine includimg refrigeration equipment4 The fatigue limits for
the full scale beams of a travelling crane are determined by the interpolation
method and are &-13.4 1- or -40oC.
g/rrm2 for +20OG and ora 1.3 k&/Mm2 f
IA
USSR UDC:669.18:621.746
LYUDKOVSKIY, V. 111. , VOINOV, S. G. KOSOY, L. F. -YEV, V S-. *TAPOVA,
Xa, P..
"quality of High-Strength Structural Steel Refined.in the Ladle With Liquid
Synthetic Slag"
Proizvodstvo Chernykh Ketallov [Production of Ferrous Metals--Collection of
Worksjj No 75, Metallurgiya Press, 1970, pp 234!-239
Translation: Melting of high-s-rength.steel with treatme'nt by synthetic slag
allowed the content of sulfur in the metallto be decreaski by almost 2 times:
from 0.0057 to 0.00'40,
The contamination of the metal by nonmetallic inclusions was decreased,
both when estimated by the method of electrolytic separation (fron 0.0079 to
0.0062%) and by the method of counting contaminated fields of vision (from
6.8 to 4.2%). The decrease in contamination of the metal with inclusions
evaluated as line oxides and brittle silicates, was partlicularly noticeable.
The results of tensile testing of smooth specimens and specimens with
sharp notches indicated that the steel refined with synthetic slag has greater
tility and structural stren.ath. I figure; it tables; 4 biblio. refs.
ut,
i
USSR, UDG 517-51
ZOTIKOV S. V.
"On the Convergence Almost Dverywhere of Fourier Series in Terms of Haar-Type
systems"
Moscow, Sibirskly Mztematicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 14, No 4P Jul-Aug 73,
pp 760-765
Abstract. The article consider4 questions ofithe convergence almost everywhere
on 0,!7 of Fourier series in terms,of orthonormal systems of -the class X,
firstintroduced. by N. YA. VILEMIN. Fach system X h4~of this class is
m
defined by the sequence ipni of natural nu bers Pn>, 2, (n.?~O). The class
X includes the classical sy3tem of !fear functions, vhich~represents the systen
X Jpnj - where pn = 2, The article considern the question of the
existence of sequences of partial sums of the Fourier series for a function in
terms of the system X iPn which converge almost everywhere to the value of
-the function.
The author thanks ProfesCor N. YA. VILMKIN for formulating the problem
and for his interest in the work.
UDC~
'620-1193-5
SR
S.', and BEI/,TNyUK, E. yA.P state Institute of Applied Chemistry
ARigh.Temperature Corrosion of Tungstenp Ylolyb(kenum, and' NiObiuM n Hydrogen
Moscov, Zashchita Yatallov, Vol 6, -NO 2, Mar-Apr 70, pp 218-220
In the process of producing and processing fluoride compounds,
equipment is frequently exposed to hydrogen fluoride at.high temTeratures. The
maximum temperature limit of nickel ~ appli:Cabilityln HF:iis 600-650%. There
Is a lack.of information on the-corro,sion: resistance (uiider these conditions)
for high-melting metals: tunwsten,-mo1ybdenum*,.and niobium, e~xcert for data an
their stability in liquid hydrogen-f Puoride, This studt~ concerns the corrosion
rate:of these metals as a function.of temperature.: DattL on the corronior of
niobium, tungsten, molybdenum, andnickeL are. given in t~ table in the original
article. In gaseous HF at 300-6000C niobium is chemicd1ly un-stable. It.
becomes brittle and readily fails even under a slight effort. This is attributed
t
-intergranular corrasion as well as to hydro en form ti-on.
o a, Unlike niobium,
tungsten and molybdenum begin to react-with HFat an appreciable rate only above
600. 0C. 11he metals form a protective,film~contisting of,~nonvolatile fluorides
'd
60
r~valence. Within 300- 0 C,:zolybdenum an t~i6A6teniare somewhat
-3. 2
USSR UDC 669.295.046.43
WICHEV, V. A., ZOTIKOVA, A, DROZ[IZHEV,,V. I
-Specifies of Behavior of Petroleum Coke in Chlorination of Titanium-Containing
Material in a Fluidized Bed"
Tr. Vses. N-i. i Proyektn. In-ta. Alyumin., Magn. i Elektrodn. From-sti [Works
of All-Union Scientific Research and planning Institute, of the Aluminum, Magne-
V
sium and Electrode Industry], 1970, No. 72,,pp 190-195. (Translated from Refer-
ativnyy Zhurnal Metallurgiya, No. 5, 1971, Abstract No. 5 G211 by the authors).
Translation: In order to determine the influence,of th*e redlacer grain size on
the technological indicators of the process of:chlorination in a fluidized bed,
laboratory and pilot plant tests were performed with various grain sizes. The
tests were performed for two Ti-containing ma*terials:: Ti slag and Ti02-SiO2
concentrate. The studies made it possible to~determine:the grain size of
Petroleum coke necessary to provide~a.high degree of: eictraction of Ti from the
Ti-containing material with slight coke lom-lkig; 4 tables.
42
USSR UDC.5TT-0)5T7-3Y5T7-7
ZOTIN A. Doctor of Biological Sciences.Alophy-oica Laboratory, Institute of
~~Zpmental Biology, Academy of Sciencei, USSR
"Aging and Rejuvenation from the Standpoint of1the Thermod as of Irreversible
ynald
Sir
-6-a-esse
Pz
Ilbscow Priroda, No 9, 1970,
pp. 49 .5
Abstract: According to the thermodynamic theorj of Prijgogine-1TiwTn, development
-.and growth of and subsequent changeo in an organism arejaccompaniel by a continuo:t.ls
process of aging of the system. This process is manifested by:a decrease in entropy
arid. according
to the author, also by a continuous dearease: In the Mte of heat pro-
duction. The organism exhibits tw types of approachen'to a stead~f state: W con-
stitutive movement of the system to the final steoAy ateLtia and: (ii.) inducible return
of the system to the current steadystate after.,deviating:xmder the influence of
internal or external factors..: Oageneeis repreaents'~a con~titutiire deviation from
the steady state; entropy reaches a level sufficient for ~the start of developwnt
and passage of the living system intothe state of constitutive approach-to the
final steady state. From the staudpoint of the thernodMiade th=7 of developmnt,
oogenesis reflects the process of regenerationof the System. In Val other stages
of life there is only the aging process accompanied bya dperease in entropy.
USSR
IMICHEV, V. A., ZOTIKOVA, A. N.j KLYUCHNIKOVA,:.Ye. F.'
,Chlorination Lf Flotation and Autoclave Titanium Concentrates in a Fluidized
Bed"
Tr. Vses N-i. i Proyektn. Ia-ta.~Alyumin., Nagn. EleKtrodn. Prom-sti [Works
of All-Union Scientific Research and Planning Institute of the Aluminum, Mane-
sium and Electrode Industry], 1970, No. 72, pp. 186-189. (Translated from Refer-
ativnyy Zhurnal Metallurgiya, No. 5, 1971., Abstract No, 5G2.10 by the authors).
Translation: A laboratory study was performed on the, chlorination of flotation.
and autoclave concentrates and they- were comparativel reanalyzed. The dependence
Y:
of,the rate of chlorination of three fractions of flotation aild autoclave con-
centrates with up to 20% Ti02 content on this content is linear. With identical
content of Ti02 at 8000, the rate of chlorination of flotation concentrate is
1.5 times higher than that of the autoclave concentrate, One re-ason for the
increased chlorination ability ofthe flotation concentrate is the significant
difference in grain size of rutile in the coxicentrates..~ 2 figs.
USSR UDc 6l6.832.op2_o22.T,, .(B. pertussis)-
I(M. -616
9'.
HANCHURRI, A. Kh., and Allergy;Laborato Institu-;,,- of Vaccines
and era' imeni I. I. blechnikov, Mos ow
S
Me Role of Serum Antibodies in the Pathogenesis of Ex;perimental Pertussis
Encephalomyelitis"
Moscow, Patologicheskaya Fiziologiya i EksperimdntalInaya Terapiya, Vol 14,
No.4 jul/Aug 7o, pp 12-16
Abstract: Expe-rinental allergic encephalomyelitis, a good model for demyeliniz-
ing diseases of the human nervous system (including, postvaccinal encephalorrVeli-
tis)i was-induced in guinea pigs, by: injecting ilthemivith homologous nerve tissue
containing whooping cough bacteria. Two types of antibodies were found in the
sera of sensitized animals: cytotoxic and com~lement-fixing. The dynamics of
the two differed during the development of the-disease. Cytotoxic, complement-
dependent antibodies appeared with clinical synTtoms of the disearie and dis-
appeared when the Animals recovered.. Complement-fixing antibodieEi were found
when the -clinical symptoms -were pronounced, but did not disappear when the
animals recovered. A cytotoxic factor detected inranimal sera diu-ing the incu-
-bation pericd d4eappeared with tho AppearanCe .0f clinjasj symptomo It in
1/2
A
Pbot a Ph c
USSR UDO: 771-314
ZOTKIN, I. T., YAKOVLEV, N. 1.
for Nighttime Photo aphy-of Meteor TypelObjects"
gr
Promys ennyye Obra-.tsy, TovExnyye Znaki,
Moscow Otkrytiyal, Izobreteniya, hi
10 23, Aug 72, Author's Certificate N01346701, Division G, fiied 26 Nov 70,
~pi~blished 28 Jul 72, p 189
Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces: 1. A camera for
nighttime.photography of meteor type.objects. The camera contains an
h drive, a magazine with
objective lens with shutter, a modulator W-It
light-sensitized material, a rotating drive, and a timer. As i~ distin-
guishing feature of the patent, in order to~automate the proceEs of
photography vhile simultaneously-simplifying design, the camera is fitted
with optical elements fastened on.the modulator which,periodically de
flect the light beam, a device for relative . rotation. of the, magazine and
modulator,and a reference light which is.synchronind; with the timer and
modulator. -2. A modification of this camera distitguished by'the fact
that the modulator is made in the form of a.xotating'disc with sector
-shaped optical wedges on the edge, and the magazine i&, placed irL a ro-
tator
V2.1 021 UNCLASSIFTED-i DATE-"-~090CT70
~_-_JITLE-SEARCH FOR METEORITE CRATERS, ON "EARTH -u-
..S~JBJECCT AREAS 'ASTRONOMY, ASTROPHYSICSt EARTH SCIENCES ANU
--jQPLC_TAG.S-f4.ETE0RITE, EARTH PLANETS, -CRATERING
:71t_bKTRQL mARIQ NG-No RESTRICTIONS
14 ENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
P. 55-6.5
CICEANOGRAPtiY
-PROXY F.EEL/FRAME--199L/0878 -STEP NQ--UR/0454/7~0100/t/000/0055~/OOb5
.4; IRC ACCESSUN NU--APO,110599
UNCLASSIFIED
'112 021 .~;WiOCESSING OATE--090CT70
UNCL ASS IF IED
FOR METEORITE CRATE.Rs~ ON EARTH -U-
I.T.v TSVETKOVo V. 1'.
OF INFO--USSR
~_,SPURCE-ASTRUNOMILHESKII VESTNIKr, VOL. 4p JAN.-MAR.'. 19701 P. 55-65
:.-,DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70,
,-,SUBJECT AREAS-ASTRONOMY,A-TROPHYSICS, EARTH SCIENCES AND OCEANOGRAPHY
TAGS-METEORITE* EARTH PLANET, CRATERING
1-:CGNTROL MARKINIG-NO RESTRICTIUNS
..'PULUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
--UR/045er/ 745/004/00of 0055/0065
.;PK0XYREEL/'RAmE--199l/0a78 STEP NO
i--AP0110599
~--~,~J,RC ACLESSICN NL
UNGLASS10JED,
ZZ2 021 UNCLASSIFIED PkO'CESSING DATE-090CT70
IIRC ACCESSION NO-AP011.0599
r-_XTqACT--CUJ GP-G- AdSTRACT. DESCRIPTION OF THE F,-ATURES OF
AisSTk AC I/ I
METEDRITE CRATERS WITH DIFFERENT DIMEN'S.11INS A14D VARYING DEGREE OF A
-SUa.SPQUEN,T EROSION. TARLE TYPES & CRATERS ARE CONSIDERED: (1) IMPACT
CRATERS, J21: EXPLOSIVE CRATERS, AND (3'Y COMPLEX CkATERS W.TH DIAMtTERS
~~,UVER 10 KM. VATA ON 70 CERTAIN AND PQ.SSI&LE METEOKITk CRATERS ON THE
--TERRI TOK)t. OF THE USSR ARE TABULATED. FACIL.IJY: AKADEMI [A NAUK
koAl-.TET PO METEORITAM*,MrjSCoWf USSR
UNCLASSIFIED
112 023 UNCLASSI FINY' 0
~~PRMESSING -TE--02nCT70
,'TITLE--io.-0VtALQUS TWILIGHTS RELATED TO THE~ TUNGUSKA! METECIPATE - U-,
OR--Z-tITKINt I.T.
TRY .0F INFO-USS R
-.'S9URCE--i',,FTEORITlKA, NO. 29, P 170-176
:--OATE PUBLISHED-----70
.---,.S-UBJECT-~AREAS--ASTP,ONDMY,ASTROP4yslcs
--14ETEOPITEP LUMINESCENCEi PHOTOGRAPH
IC TAG S TWILIGHT
e-t-UNTROL. MARKtNG--NO RESTRICTIONS
OCUMENT.CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
RaXY- ELL/FRAME-1988'1963 STEP NC--UP,/253/t/6"4/'O,-'C;/02,3/0170/0176
"CIRC-ACCESSION NO--AT010662-1
UNCLASSIFTEO
212 023 UNCL ASS 1.~J'ED' DATE--020CT70
_IRC ACLESSION ND--AT0106621
._Ar3STRACT/IEXTRAC:T--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. EIGHT PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN IN JUNF
AND JULY 1908' ARE PRESI--NTED AND DISCUSSED, WHICH~ S
'4 ANOXIAL]USLY Bq[Gfir
HOi
:-EVENING TWILIGHTS OBSERVED AFTER THE,TUNGUSKA MEVEGRIlE FALL, THE
PICTURES WERE BORROWED FROM RARE OLD PUOLICATIDN.~, AN'D SUME oF THEM HAVE
NOT HEFX PUBLISHED IN THE RUSSIAN LITERATURE. IT IS CiONCLUDED THAT
THESE PHOTOGRAPHS CAUGHT SILVERY CLOUDS.AGAINST.~UNPRECEDENTLY BRIGHT
EVENING TWILIGHT. THE LLIMINESCtNCE 15 N6T A(JRORA,,L IN CHAPAcTER.
UNCLASSWIED
2 /2
USSR UDC 632.954:633.2.032.3
ZOTOV a- A. A., All Union Scientific Research Institute of Feed
"The.Use of Herbicides for Improvement of Mountain Meadows"
Moscow, Khimiya v Sel'skom. 1(hozyaystve, Vol 10, No 3, 1972, pp 48-52
Abstract: Attempts to improve mountain meadows with mixed grasses located iii
subalpine zone of the northern Caucasus showed that the most effective was
the.treatment of the sod with paraquat (2 kg/hectare) or with eolapon (20
kg/hectare) in combination with 2,4-D (2 kg/hectare) plus nitrogen and
phosphorus fertilizers corresponding to the fom-ula NqOP60. There was no
noticeable advantage when the grass was treated twice with paraquat, or
with paraquat. followed by 2,4-D over their concurrent application. In case
of rainy weather, grasses may be seeded immediately after the application of
paraquat; in case of dolapon a rest period of 3 weeks is required.
11, 1 6416i-uii 1;A
Ac,:. N
AbstractingiService:
Ref. Code
M
003455
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