palictuationo in the 'Tater Temp-j:rature of Deep L r.~!vs of :3 e,:a I-Ieteorpl. i
'39
xidrologiya, 11o 4, 195~, r,
Observations conducted by the authors by Otans of deep-iralter t~,166rom.,tcrz amA r'esis-
-orr ., Gulf arui B 'Yerke-
~tance thernmmaters on tkie tem,'erature of the deep rraters of the Vy 1 st
i Zund testify to the existetice of short and ul-trashort period o scill!.tions diffe~ing~ ans to
intensity, i-rith cycles -calculated in hours, -minutes, and even '5econds; The observations
were carried out ~A%, various deep horizons of 22 stations at &Ufereiit~ tines of We ~ay and
for various conditions of the weather (in the c~iso of consideral-A3 1~~Al of the Loat, the
thermometer of re----istaonce, was placed in a smcl,,t~l bqW). The,ten,-,Orature rcadi(igs were
tak-en evei-j- 15 seconds (sometimes evel-f 1-3 minixtes)- 1110 3, 195~) So: Stuii-
No 713, 9 ITOV 55
ZVEREV, Aj--k-., AND BERMEYM, D. YA.
Computation and Correction of the Horizons of Submemlo'n of Ba-Vhometer,-
The insufficiencies of the procedure for computing the ~h orizono
according to the.tables of A.I. Kireyev are the complexities,
and tre-
mendousness of the computations, which must be carried''out abonrd ship,
and also the Impossibility of assigning all bathometers to standard
horizons. The authors propose to simplify and make more preclie the
existing method of computing horizons. WhGeolt No. 5, 1955) Mgh,
Zap, Y_yanh. arkt. mor. ngbiligbohaq No. 5, 1954, 204-21i
SO: Sum. No. 744t 8 Dee 55 Supplementary Survey of Soviet Solentific
Abstracts (17)
SOMOV, M.H,, doktor geOgTafonaUko redo; TAUWMg G.K*s doktor geogrefo
nauko redo; DOLGIN# I.K., kand.gsogrsf.naukv~red.;:ZYXR3V A A
kand.geograf.naulk, red.; DROZHZHINA, L.P.* tokhn.rW.
(Haterials of the Soviet Complex Antarctic Zxpedition] Katerialy
Sovetskoi komplekenoi antarkticheakoi ekspeditsii.' leningradt.
Izd-vo *Horskoi transport.' Vol.2. Uirst Continental Bxpedition,~
1955-1957; scientific resultal Pervaia kantin~entallnaia ekspeditaiia,
1955-1957 gg.; nauchnys resulltaty. Pod red. H.K.Somovn* 1959.
161 Pe Vol.), Dirst Continental Expedition, 1955-1957: observation
dataj Pervaia kontinentalInsia'ekspoditaiia, 1955-1937 gg:waterialy
nabliudenii. Pod red. G.H.Taubera. 109. 459 p. Vol.4 First
Continental Expedition, 1955-1957; obodrvatio6 data]-Pervaia konti-
nentallnaia ekspeditaiia. 1955-1957 M.; materialy nabliudenii. Pod
red.G.M.Tauber, I.M.Dolgina. 1959. 482 p. Vol.6. Second Marine
Fapedition in the diesel-electric oklp 00b"t 1956-4957,- observation
data] Vtoraia morsknia okepeditaiia no d/e 10b'", 1956-1957 gg.;
materialy nabliudenii. Pod red. A.I.Zvereva.~ 1959. 386 p.
(MIRA 130)
lo Sovetskaya komplekonsys, antarkticheskaya ekepeditsiyao 19554958.
(Antarctic regions-Russian exploration)
vr-i~F-V, A -A,
PRUE I BOOK EXPLOITATION SOV/4351
Sovetskaya antarkticheskaya ekspeditsiya, 1955-
Vtoraya morskaya ekspeditsiya na d/e "'01112J956-1957~gg-;
materialy nablyudeniy (Second Marine E?Epedition on the
Diesel-Electrie Ship "Ob's" 1956-1957; Materials From
observations) Leningrad, Izd-vo "Morskoy tramsport."
1959. 386 p. Errata slip inserted 'I (Series: Its:
Materialy.. tom. 6) -800 copies printed.
Sponsoring Agency: Arktiche8kiy I antairkticheaskiy nauchno-
issledovatellskiy institut.
Ed.: A. A. Zverev., Candidate of Geographical Sciences14 Tech.
'Ed.-.-L. P. Drozhzhina.
PURPOSE: This book Is intended for oceanographers, hydro-
logists, and hydrochemists.
COVERAGE: This is Volume 6 of a multivolume work containing
scientific data collected during Sovlat.kitarctie expeditions.
The volWne is a compilation of'ocealnograpblc data re-
corded by the Second Soviet Marine Expedition, headed
Second Marine Expedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
by Professor I. V. Maksimov,, during:A voy4;e on the
dlesel-eleatrie ship "Obl", from November 1956 to'June
1957. The hydrological, hydrochemidal, and biological
observationp of the expedition were condacted off bhe'
northern coast of Antarctica betwee6the Antarctic'-
Continent and Capetown and in the Indian Ocean as Par as
UalcuttEL. These included visual and semi-instrumental ob-
servations of waves, sea ice and iaebergs;.the determi-
nation of salinity, alkalinity., pH yalues.,,and them
content of silicates, nitrates, and'dissolved oxygen;~the
measurement of temperature; the recording of the velocity
and direction of surface and deep currents; the deter-
mination of the color and transparency of water; and,the
collection of fauna and flora, particularly plankton.
Among the instruments used in making the observations;
were Alekseyev BFV-2 and BPV-2r current.meters,,electro-
magnetic current meters (EMIT) for indaijuring surface '
currents, VOM-50 and GM-16 wavemeters, BM-118 bathometers,
EPP-09 potentiometers, K-17-B steredphotocamera3, ST-55
electrical thermometers, thermal depth gages, deep7water
thermometers,.and thermobathygraphao, The following soi-
entists participated in processing and interpreting'the
data obtainedi'K. V. Moroshkin',and A. A.'Zverev, who
Second Marine Expedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
directed the processing of deep-water hydrological re-
cordings and observations on currents at the Insti,.tut
okeanologii AN SSSR (Instit4te of Oceanography of tbe~,
Academy of Sciences-USSR) and the Leningradskoye v~saheye
inzhenernoye uchilishche imeni admirala Makarova, (Lanin-
grad Higher Naval Engineering School'imeni Admiral Makarov),
M. A.. Bogdanov, who processed the observations on:eurrents
atthe Vsesoyuznyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut
rypnogo kliozyaystva i okeanografii (All-Union Scientific
Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography); A, PO
Morozov, who directed the processing of visual wave ob-
servations and wave data at the Leningradskoye otdeler,-'Iye
Gosudarstvennogo okeanograficheskogo instituta (Leningrad
Branch of the State Oceanographic Inptitute); A. A.,Dreyyer,,
staff member of the dosudarstvennyy okeanografichealciy~
institut Gidrometaluzhby SSSR (state Oceanographic Institute
of the Hydrometeorological Service of,the USSR) who~worked
on wave measurements; V. P. Kozhukhov', who worked on the
observations of the dip of the visible horizon at the
Leningrad Higher Naval Engineering Sehool imeni Admiral
Makarov, A. N. Bogoyavlenskly, who worked on the results
'Second Mai~ine Ex.pedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
of hydrochemical observations at the.Inatitute of
Oceanography of the Academy of Solences VSSR; V. V, Barsukov
and Yu. Ye. Permitin, who worked on the ichthyologital
materials at the Zoologicheskiy instibut AN SSSR (Zoolo-
gical Institute of the Academy of Sciences USSR) and the
All-Union Scientific Researoh Institute of Fisheries and
a
O~*,aeanogra`3 hy.; K. V,, Beklemishev and V. S.,Xorotkevieh
(plankton . and A. V. Gusev and F. A. Pasternak (bbnthoo)
who worked on the hydrobiological observations at- the I
Zoologif_~al nistitute of the Academy of Soienotea USSR and
the Institute of Oceanography ofthe Aaadarkr of Soienctes
USSR. There are 7 references: 5 Sov:Let,, I German, and.
I English.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Foreword
Eydrologilzal and hydr9cheml-al studies
Deepwater hydrological observations
OiR4-4746.
ZVEREVI A. F.
"Pharracological Lspect of Preparation 126, 12, 6 dimetox7banzochl non",
and its use in Suppurative Diseases, Abstract, Farmtiltol. i Toxicoli, 9,
No. 3, 1946; Cand. Med. Sci., Hospital Surgical Clinic, Sverdlovsk Med. last.
and S-,rerdlov3k Lffiliate, All-Union Sci. Research, Chemico-Pharmaceutical Inst.,
-1946,
SOV/3-58-11-10/38
AUTHORt Zverev A.F., Doctor of Medical Sciences; Professorl Insti-
H"
TITLE: Urgent ChanA-s in the System of Traini Ing Physidiane (Naz-
revshiye izmeneniya v sisteme podgotovki vraolhey)
PERIODICAL: Vestnik vysshey shkoly, 1958, Nr 11, pp 26 30 (USSA)
ABSTRACT: Tba Prtbnr deals with the reasons for the occlasional. gradu-
ation of,mediocre physicians by the inatitUtfis, and examines
the question as to what must be done to ensure that the
medical vuzes train only phvaicians of high competence and
understanding, devoted to their specialty and to the public
health. In the first place it is necessary to change the
principle of eiarolling students at medical vuzes. The beat
reinforcement is the youth that is coming from hospitals.or
other public health institutions after having worked there
for 2 to 3 years. They yield the best doctors and orga In-o:
izers of public health service, and should bf) given prefer-
ence in.entering the vuz. Since the number of persons with
such practical experiende is growing from yenr to year, it
can be safely said that after several~yeara a preliminary
professional experience will become obligatory for all per-
Card 1/3 sons wishing to study medicine. The admittance should be
SOY/3.-$8-11-10
Urgent Changes in the System of Training Physicians
coordinated-,with:.thel-doman'der.of the'AndividuiVeolonomipi
districts anUrepublice. ~.Th~;Uralej*:Bi~sris'aad the Fa
East have a.shortage;of doctors, while the s(oathern atitricts
have a surplus. It is:auggested that the Sverdlovsk Medical'
Institute be expanded, and youth from the local popula 'tion
be given,preferenoo.-:The term.:of training should remain.at
6 years ''.also day- time instruction should be:rotainedg and
the students should discontinue any other works However,
as an experiment# the lessons of the lot cours4 students may
take place in the evening at several institutes. Correspond-
ence tuition is impossible ' As some of'~the students usually
drop out, a greater number can be admitted to the first
course than is foreseen by the plan. This will ensure that
the sti-te plan of training spe6iallate is fulfilled. The
author also deals with the question of revising the ourti-
Card 2 /3 cula, uniting some chairo. He comments on practical train-
ing and the necessity of assigning hospitals.an& sanitoty-
(1911C.UPHALOCELE) (VITEBSKII, IA.D.)
ZTJMWj A.Fes professor (Sverdlovsk, Bankovakiy persulok, d.8, kv, 29); 1
]UMAW, G. M..
Homo,Dlasty with cartilage of ostoomyslitic bou4 cavities In children.
following sequestreatomro Taet.khir, 83 UO-1106-59~1159.
1. rz detskoy khtrargichaskoy kliniki (sav. pwof. A.P. Zverev)i
Sverdlovskogo meditainakogo instit-ata,
(GkRTILLGA tranopl.)
(OSTMKMITIS in Inf. & ohildj~
ZVWj IA. F-,,-profoosor (Sverdlovvk Bankovskiy per., c1,,;8, kv, 29);
P -
ZVERET, A.F., prof. (Sverdlovsk, Bankovskly persaloln-' d.8' Im.29)
Primary hypemephrold cT,-incar of the livcr ina inftrlt. Vast,
khir. 90 no.5&122..123. MyI6.3 Nita rizA,
I Iz klururgiclieskcy klinikl detakogo vozrambf, ( Z~V.- prof.
A:F. Zverer) Svevllovikogo meditDinakogo Insti-Luta.
A I
*0 A lip
C=%.-
Zv c- R F
v m
0o -
-
00 -04
0 *so
-04
go
SubelftWe (w shallac and Etivrold. it, (1, Zvrttv
It No. .2. WNIMUny
z4ftir'. goal, It. d4r.-
id Hsw
40 plmqauy The alkyl pheft-Aic Inw) Which litay fir 11
l
l
imi
m
mes In rkr. wink. .11. G. Abore
000
0 0
gee
so
sea .00
so age
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j ties
ties
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&MLLU441CAL LIMAT CIO*
00
Al
b u AV 10 11 I p M I -I
* to to it ON a K a 99 a M tt ff
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ad asultiret aWy
-00
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s0'4 i sil-P-1m, kill-S
.00
rmi~jllo det. the avok; sull,ph-
Y04- 4711141194'0 tKIIII
illml of 1
ISIS .3
IW. A11111,00, P.Mlmw and
Wlwt-~ whril Utillf4t,411
Co
i
o
N
4 it,
Itud
La
144-ri 11) [Initial fitelort of Or fluire it
(91 fit IN 5111N
l
11
ind ll2
) diftwid.11 ol. the cotistituents of the -Altillitr 111
,4
'
Ole milt itim, . The
Und Ptm't't% vvri. lt,-r!%hv
'flat ~Iffflitlll 141ill look '11
-
-
161 i
t
4
1.) 10
ti
49
t
.
1.1fit . 1.11. &1 , g1%. 1. t,(
folowdoll Ilivillute itill), S. L. Malf.'s 4
o 0
:l to
L A ~lIALLU"KAL LIj(*jV4f CLA%$1040110011
S it. I
iL
041 q6t
. fill
too
Id tit$
1
-77'r- 00 1)
u 0 AV N3 LI ef If K
to P it Of
0 00 0 0 0 0 0 9
9
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0 Ole 0009 00 00 404010 e 0 Is 0 :14 4 a 0. 0,11 1 00 4
ZVERE V A. I.
"Blood Transfusion in Ambulatory Practice," Sov. Med., No. 6
Road Station for Blood Transfusion of the Tashkent Railwayi -;a1949-0
MP
AR6019465 SOURCE CODE': UR/OO8l/66/OOO/OO2/SO73:/SO73
AUTHOR: Kvasnikov, Ye. W.; Zverev, A.,N.
TITLE: Effect of temperature on strength and deforma~tlon~ properties of
certain construction plastics
SOURCE: Ref zb,khim, Part II, Abs. 2S504
REF SOURCE: Sb. Inzh. konstruktsiy. Dokl. k XXIII N4vcbn. konfere.ntsil.
Leningr. inzb.-stroit. in-ta,; L., 1965, 170-175
TOPIC-TAGS:,,glass fiber,,glass textolite, lemina.ted'Material, plastic':,
strengtbi tensile strengtb, deformation, compressive 'stress, meebanical
stress, thermal stress
ABStRACTz Three types of construction plastics were subjected to tests,
un4r uniaxial stress and compression under conditions of short term
exposure to reduced and elevstec~/temperatures from -50 to +900' glassy
fiber aniso~-&pic material SVAMN-14ith 1:1 and 1:5 anisotro'by4ased on
binper ED-64~nodifled v tb bakolite.Zlocquer; glass t
,Li extoli~.o ased on
J-b~/lLF'brand clotb; ana, W-0-0-a-laminate
pol,-%ester binder PN-11and TT -- . _
plaNic DSP-B it-b--pT-enol binder It was.shovrn that there is a nearly,
lin6ar relationsbip between tempe~aturo and the strengtb of the glass
Card 1/2
L 46295-66
ACC NR- AR6019465
reinforced plastics under stress and compression (glAss t extolite based
A). The stability of the me.charical indices
on PN-1 binder is an except~o
of glass reinforced plasticsPat different temperatures depends more on
the kind of binder than on the type of filler. V. Frivalko,
IcTranslation of abstract7.
SUB CODE: 11 lito
Card 2/2 afau
T I,(a) WOM
ACC NRi ,OLjRCE CODE: LM/()124/65/0C)O/O12/V099/VO99
r
Ye.,
AUTHOR: Kvasnikov, .'N. ,Zverev X
Ile
'~'i.and deformation
TITLE:..Effect 6ftemipeerj ure~on,the~~strRMt praerties of some
f
structural plastics
kh4:Abs.'A_2
SOURCE: MeMa"n` i V847
Ref. zh
REF SOURCE. 8b. I&W. Ionstrukis i'Y il: Dokl.,~ kXXIII Nauchn. k6nferentaii. Lenin r.
a.
inzh. -stroit. i3i-t 3,965,: 170- 75
TOPIC.TAGS: material def6romatit)fi,~i'flberglass reinforced plastid, tensile ,strength,
fe t
compressive strength, low-temperatureef c 9-high temperature effect
' " ~.It` ii':'l ii' 'were tested' ension 'and
.o ~ArVc ur p as ce
AIL~TRACT: Three types. Xor uniaxial t
compressioV for brief !rlb4s at. 1464 ~,And high temperaturea'.(-50-49000: an anisotropic
pt ,
mn,. an sotro& ;I and 1;5, fib'erglass-reinforc
fibe~glasolmterial 7 with i It I, ed textolite
and wood-reinforced lami~afedzplasiia-'-L;It is shown that there i's a nearl'y linear re-
lationship between,atrength dnd'temperature,in fiberglass-reinforced plastics under
tension and compreasio'~~('viih~'thd~~id~eption.of fiberglass-Veinforced textolite). V.
rivalko. (Translation'6f
UB
CODE: 11
Card 1/1
FZDDBOY, V.S.; RTABCHIKOV# T.R,; FOLTAKDV, I.S.; SOH0K]:N,:ff.I.; RTABYKH, P.M.;
-NOVIX, N.G.; SLFMJKHA, T.Y.; DRASMVSKIYN K.M.o; LALA3ZXOV, S.K.;
A 1YRTi A*P.; TRYSTAFIYBV, V.Vo;
, NCMSOV, L.G.;
GROSSMAN, B..I.; HHRMAN, A.01.
Petr Alakeanarovich Smirnov, 1902-1958; Wtuary.:Kh1m. I~tiqlch.~ topl.,
i masel. 3 no.12:68 D 158. WHA 11:12)
(Smirnov, Petr.Aleksanarovich, 1902-1958)
'rVMVq AtS*
)4ethod of deterndning the amount of metal used in making castings.~ Lit
proizv. no.6:25-26 je '53- MiA 6:7)
PHASE II TREASURE ISLAND-BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REPORT AID 20 11
BOOK
.~Call No~i. Q0 861.T85
Aut~ors; ZVM, A. S., KIRYUXHIN' B. V., XONDRATIYEV K YA'
SELEZNEVA, YE. So, TVERSKOY,~P. No YUDIN, M. I.
Full Title: COURSE OF METEOROLOGY (PHYSICS OF THE ATMOSPHERE)
Transliterated Title: Kurs meteorologlil(Fizika atmoster'y)
Publishing Data
Originating Agency: None
Publishing House: Hydrometeorolog ical Publishing House~ (Gimiz)
Date: 1951 No. pp.: 888. ..No. of aopies'~'. lPpOO0
Editorial Staff
Editor: Professor Tverskoy, F. No Tech. Edo; None
Editor-in-Chief: None Appraiser: Kane
Others: 1) Scientific Council and the scientific parsdnnel oif
the Fain Geophysical Observatory, 2) Prof, Kh~omov, So Pop
who critically analysed -the manuscript.
Text Data
Coverage: A fundamental course in the physics'of the atmolsphere covering:its
properties, methods of investigation, application of thermodynamics),
radiant energy, heat energy, water vapor, motion, weather and its
forecasting, atmorpheric optics,, electricityj and acoustics.
1/55~
PHASE I TREASURE ISLAND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REPORT AID 453 1
'BOOK Call. No'.; 0632826
Author: ZVEREV, A.,S.
Full. Title: FOGS AND THEIR FORECASTING
TransliteratedTitle: Tumany I ikh predskazaniy~17
Publishing Data
Orisinating Agency! None
Publishing House: Hydrometeorologica 1 Publlshins"~ouse ."OidrdmAeoizdat"
Date: 1954 No* pP.: Noi~of c6~les:. 11,000-
Editorial Staff
Editor: Kiryukhin B. Ve
Appraisers: Pchelko, I. a.., Sadovnikov' A. V.',;Gurov, Bo Ps~andf
Broydo., A. 0.
Text Data
Coverage: This is an account of the results obt6ined Soviet-sciOn-
tists, in recent-years in the field of forecastiiig the formation and
dispersion of fogs. The author considers that:this problem is~no~ Yet
completely solved but that Soviet investigation6 ha,!,re improved the
quality of tog forecasts which are important for all~forms of,trans-
port, particularly for aviation. Special attention ia~given to phys-
ical processes of fog formation. Facts exposed In thia monograph~can
be applied to any geographical region. Local features of fog:forzia-
tion and dispersion are not discussed In this wor*k but'they muSt be
1/3,
Tumany i ikh predskazaniye AM
53:-
4
'The monograph la b sed loiIiinvest
.considered by forecasters. lgations
made by the author, by B. V. Kiryukhin and bygradi~ate,stude nts of
the Leningrad Hydrometeorological Institute. The book is one of the
series "Scientific-Popular Library". It contains tables and ~diagrams.
TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE
Foreword
Ch. I Properties of Fogs. Conditions of their and
Dispersion
1. Basic Properties of Fogs 5
2.~ Condensation of.Water Vapor and Fog Formation 9
3. Radiation Fogs 12
4. Advection Fogs
17
Other Types of-Fogs ,
.;.,21
Dispersion of Fogs 27;
7. Classification of Fogs.'. 31'
8.
Synoptic*Cdnditions of Fog Formation 35
Ch.. II
Fog Forecasting.
1. General Principles of Fog Forecasting 372
2. Estimation of the Cooling necessary for FogiYormation
An a given Air Mass W
3. Forecasting the Cooling of,Air ~48'
2/3
PHASE I BOOK EXPLOITA%O~., SOV11912
Uchebn sinopticheskiy atlas (school Synoptical Atlas of W6e'Lther
Mapy . Izd-vo 48 foAdv:
ST Pt. 1. Leningrad IGidrometeor L , 1956.
maps (in portfolio) 8pOOO copies printed.
Compilers: K.G. Abramovich, P.D. A5tapenko, V.V. pykov, V.,I!o B~shuk,
V.P. Gurov, A.�* Zverey, L.S. Nininap A.A.~Xorozkin, L.L. Rupp6rt,~
and B.M. Sergeyev-1---Ed-, (Title page): Kh. P. Pogosyan, P.rofessor;
Ed. (Inside book): M.N. Yasnogorodskaya; Techo Ed*:
A.A. Soloveychik.
Zadaniya dlya studentov k "Uchebnor4u.,.'.sinoRticheskomu atiasu,"
1. (Assignments for Students using the School Synoptical
Atlas of Weather Maps, Pt. 1) 1956. 114 p.,
Compiler: A.S. Zverev; Ed*: M.N. Yasnogorodskaya.
PURPOSE: This atlas is intended for use by students at institutions of
higher learning specializing in meteorology.
School Synoptical (Cont.) SOV/19l2
COVERAGE: The atlas consists of 96 weather map's (48 sheets) Ion an
identical base) giving detailed meteorologi6al and aerolotical
information for certain months of 1952-1955,. These maps 1 :10
mill.) cover portions of Greenland and.the,eastern tip of-Can4dap
all of Europe, North Africa) the Near HastsiCentral Siberia, and
the Siberian polar regions to approximately'AOO'D~E. Included'
with the atlas is a booklet of lesson assignments based on-the
information compiled on.the weather maps. The appendix to the
lesson assignmeat bookle"t contains 12 tables of synoptic weather
information from the field reporting stations shown on the maps.
Compilation of the atlas was conducted under the~direction~of the
following scientific personnel: Candidate of Physical andAathe-
matical Sciences K.G. Abramovichp Candidate of Physical and Mathe-
matical Sciences V.V. Bykov, Candidate of Geographical Sciences
L.S. Minina, Candidate of Geographical Scienoes P.D. Astapenko,
Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences V.P. Gurov, Meteor-
ologist A.A. Morozkin2 Candidate of Geographical Sciences Ruppert,
Meteorologist B.M. Sergeyev, Candidate of Geographical Sciences
V.I. Bushuk and Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
A.S. Zveryev.
Card 2/3
School Synoptical (Cont.) SOV/19112,
Specialists from the Tsentrallnyy institut prognoz-ov, the
Meteorologic4eakiy fakulltet.Voyennovotdush4oy Akademli
An. A.P. .4ozhayokogo, and the Leningradskiy,gidrometeorologiche5kiy
Inatitut helped in compiling the Atlas. No references ate givent
TABLE OF CONTENTS: None given
AVAILABIZ: Library of Congress
:6/17/59
Card 3/3 I(K/j ab
ASTAFJOKO, F.D., kerid.geografichookikh nauk; BURTSIV, A.Io, kendefizi6
matematicheskikh nank; GtMOY,,V.P., Icand.fisiko-nateciatichaskikh
nsuk; ZjWUwAkS-, kandafiziko-matematichookikh-,nauk; ZVBTAII,,G.D.,
doktor geograficheakikh nauk; MININA. L.S.. kand.reografichaski'_h~nauk:
MOROZKIN, A.A., inzhener-meteorolog-, RUPPERT, L.L4, kand.geografichs-
skikh nauk; SERGEYHY, B.M.. inzhener-mateorclog; SAHOTWV, A.I.9
kand.fiziko-matematicheakikh nauk; TURXMTTIP:Z.L., kend.geogrefiche-
skikh nauk; CHERNOVA, Y.F., stershiy nauchnyy sotradnik; CHISTYALOT,
A.D., kand.fiziko-matematicheakikh nauk; FOGOSYAN, 11h.? #' prof.,r6d.;
YASIIOGORODSKAYA. M.H., red.; BRAYNINA, M.P., tekhn.recle
[Uynoptic study atlas] Uchebrzyi siaopticheskil atlas. Ieningrad,,
Gidrometeore izd-vo,- Pt..2, (Bost, F.DeAstapen):o i drp) 19570;
90 fold. maps (in,portfolio)_ (Prectica; recomendations
and assignments for students using the OSynoptIze study atlas*!
Metodicheskie rkomendateii i zedaniia dlia:studentov k "Uchebtiomt
sinopticheekomm stlasu,v cheat' 2. Sant. A.S.Zverev. 1957.~ 87
Q _c; 'D (MMA 110.)
1. Wentrallnyy Institut prognozov (for Che'nova).
(Climatology--Charts, diagrams, etco)
Call Nr*1157025
UTHOR: ,
ir R
Zverev, A16kse
TITLE; synoptic Meteorology (Sinopticheskaya meteorologiya)
PU9. DATA: a
Gidrometeorologicheskoye,izdatellstvo, Leningra4
1957* 559 pp-j 5300 copies
ORIG. AGENCY: None given
EDITORS: Responsible Ed.: Pchelko, I.G,;'Editor: Yasnogorodskaya.,
M.M.; Tech. Ed.: Kononova, L.B.; Correctors; Mamed,ovap
V.V. and Mezhikovskayas F.I.
PURPOSE: The book is written for students,of hydrometeorological
instituteso universities, and other indt.ituti6n6 of
learning., as well as weather services personnel afid
other ptrzons interested in short-term forecasting.
COVERAGE: This is a systematic exposition,of problems In, synoptic
meteorology and theipractical means of analyting and
i
e
forecasting weather. The book represents the.substanc
of the lectures delivered by the auth6r at the
Leningrad Hydrometeorological Institute and has been,
he says, brought up to the level of modem understanding
of hydrometeorological problems, A list of 166 references,
Card 1/22
Call Nr; 1157025
Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
160 of which are USSR, 5 English, I Gemah and: a very useful
appendix close the book. There are 9 chaptericoveringall the
essentials of the subject. Chapter I presents basic concepts of
synoptic meteorology$ its historic develQpmento and the modem
multi-phase approach in solving meteorological problems,by the
three-dimensional technique of analyzing aty-iospheric processes.
The present organization of meteorological services in the USSR,
the simultaneous observation method, the Aeaumulation and dissem-
ination of datap and the accepted meteorological code are all
discussed. Physical conditions in the atmosphere and efforts to
forecast and to affect weather through human intervention are
also considered. Chapter 2 analyzes the vardous fields of
meteorological elements, the technique of~preparing and~analyzing
near-surface weather maps, baric topog.raphy mAps, maps of the
distribution of wind fields, geostrophlo and thermal winds,
maps, etc. Error correction and dynamic equations for conditions
of continuity are presented. Chapter 3 deals with the transfer
of energy and problemb of general atmospheric circulation of
which cyclones and anticyclones are but two basic forms. The
many schematic drawings and climatic maps, appearing in the text
are highly instructive. Chapter 4 covers tlWmain weather-
creating factors and discusses the causes foro'variations with
time. Circulation, transfomation and orographic features
eating weather, andan analysis of local variations in
Card M'
e-1 2
Call Nr:,1157025
Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
air pressure and temperature are included in this chaptero which
also gives Kibel's solution of such hydrodynamic problems, and
Fridman's velocity vortex. Chapter 5 conc6rna the formation and
geographic classification and distribution of stable and unstable
air masses, and is amply illustrated. Chapter 6 describei3
atmospheric fronts, their formation and wash-out,isotherm and
inversion layers, and Margules, formiila. Baric and isoallobaric
field fronts and their displacements are also discussed.
Chapter 7 discusses types and stages and the displaoement.ofIropl-
cal and non-tropical cyclones and an-ticyclones. In the absence
..Of a fully developed and accepted theory for such processes the
author reviews the convective, . thermal and vortex theories
and also touches upon the wave, divergent and advecto-dynamic
theories; typical conditions in various regiozis~and localities
are well illustrated, Chapters 8 and 9 refer to the most!'im-
portant problem in meteorology., i.e.., short &ad~long-range
weather forecasting. This is achieved througa advance compu-
tations based on interpolation and extra.-polation., the study of
synoptic situations, and the prognostication of,all possible
phenomena including special conditions. Mapping forecasts and
Card j/22 I:
Call Nr: 1157025
~Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
prognostication techniques used abroad are deocribed.
TABLE OF CONTENTS ~Page
From the Author
Chapter 1. Subject of Synoptic Meteorology. General Information ,
About the Weather Bureau -11-58
1. Subject and problems of synoptic meteorolog y :11-24
1. Definition of the subjecti Synoptic ine thod (11)
2. Connection between synoptic meteorologyiand o.ther
branches of science (12)
3. importance of the weather forecasts in the
national economy and in the defense (13)
4. Fundamental concepts of synoptic meteorology (14)'
5. Problem of scientific weather prognosis and ways
of solution (20)
6. Problem of the active influence on weather (23)
2. Fundamental stages in the development of synoptic
meteorology P-4-33
1. Pre-synoptic period of weather study 24~
2. Organization of the weather services M
3. Evolution of synoptic meteorology in "the 19th
and the beginning of the 20th centuries (27)
Card 4/22
ASTAPSHKO, P.D.: ZVXRHT, I.S., doktor geograf.nauk.10tv.red.; XVITSA,
H*P* 6 redq; TA70- ~A, V., takhnred,
C*tmospheric processes in high latitudes ofAhs Soutbern Heiispherel
Atmosfernye protsessy v vysok1kh ahlrotakh iuzhnogo polusharila.
Moskva, Izd-vo Akad.nauk SSSR, 196o. 281 p#: (II resdel prograwq
MOO (mateorologiia)o no-3) (HMA 13:12)
(Antarotica--Atmosphers)
USPENSKIY, B.D.,doktor fiz,-mat. nauk, prof.; BEWU5OV;.SjL,;.~o
fiz.-mat. nauk;-PYATYGINA, K.V.; YUDTjI,1'11.I.; VERTSAIDV,
A.N., kand. fiz.-mat. nauk; DAVTDOVA, O.A.; KUFYANBKAY*0'4~
A.P.; PEPRICMIKO, I.A.; ~40RSK% I G.I.;~ TOMASHEVICH, L.V. j
SAMOYLOV, A.I.; ORLOVA, Ye.l.; DZHORDZEIO, V.A.; FETRENKO,
N.V.; DUBOVYY, A.S.; ROI-IOV, A.I.; PETROSYANTS, M.A.; GIA20V
*j~ip.-WTAYEVA, T.F.; BELISKAYA, N.N.; CHISTYAKOV, A.D.;
GANDlN, L.S.; BURTSEV, A.I.; MTSAWV,'~A.ll.;: BIAGROVYY, N.A.;
BELOV, P.N.; ZVIWk.AV$, ~retsQnzen:t;,:$TJ)EWO-
red.; DUBENTWV-,". '.,-kind. fiz*-mat, nauk, nauchn. rea.;
SAGATOVSKIY'~.N V.s'r9d.; 8UGAM~N.A.S'doktor geogre nauk,
prof., red,; ROGOVSKAYA, Ye.G., red.
[1-11anual on short-range weather forecasts) Rukbvodstvo po
kratkoarochnym prognozam ~ogody. Leningrad, Gidrometeoizdat.
Pt.l. Izd.2., perer. i dop. 1964. 519 P. (MIRA 18:1)
1. Moscow. TSentrallnyy institut prog-nozov.
ZYBUT, A.T.
Mechanism of certain experimental neuroses in dogs .Zhur.vys VA rv
deiat- 7 no-3:434-01 My-Je 05?. 10110)
1. leboratorlya fistologii I patologii vrashey nervnoy, deystellno-1
sti Institute normallnoy I patologicheskoy fiiieloglt AMR SSSIR.
(NIUROSIS, experimental,
In dogs (Rua))
ZURRY. A.
Dryg-induced aleep in the treatment of experimental neuroses d6gs.
(with summary in linglishl. Biul.eksp.biol. i~m'nd. 43 no.6-29-32~
Je '57. (MIRA 10:10)
1. Is laboratorii vysshey nervnoy dayatelluosti (zav..- Tg.A.Takovleva)
Institute fiziologii (dir. - deyetvitellny7 chlen A14N SSSR prof. T.N.
Chernigovskiy) AHN SSSR, Koukva. Fredstavlena'doyetvitelOnyu chlenor.
AHN SSWt prof. V.N.Chernigovokim.
(NEUROSBS, experimental,
off. of medication sloop ther. (Rue))
(SIZWI effects,
on exper. neuroses in dogo, medication slaep ther. Pua)l
ZVMW, AoTv
Analysis of certain mechanisms o
of a fixed (sterootypio) moto; j
Zhur.vys.nerv.detate 9 noolts -9
lo Xaboratoi7 of Phv*01067 alld
Institute of Tormil ii~d Patholog
og
Kedloal Sciences, Moscow*
Omosm, Mere
mechanisms of n
(Rue))
7T, -,I~
-Ii. HT,
ACCESSION NRs-, AT4042682 $10000/63100010001019710198
AUTHOR: Zverev, A. T.*; Kitayev-Smy*kq L. A.
!TITLE. Effects of short-term weightlessness on the nervous system
,SOURCE: Xon~vrentstya po aviatsionnay L komdabeekoy meditainso 1963-
Aviatsioanays. i kosmicheskays meditains, (Aviation add apate medicine); materialy*
.konferentaiio Moscov# 19631 197498
TOPIC TAGS: weightlessness. nervous system, performance teat, angular accelera-
tiont Coriolis acceleration
ABSTRACT: Experiments were performed in order to determine thiiability of men
to perform certain types of tasks under conditions of weightlesiness. The tasks
included responding to lights., numbereq and needle indicatproo igh I apt
If a 1 t it
the subject had to connect contactso If a 3-digit figure 'appeared, he had to dial
the number on a telephone-like dial, In the came of the niedle indicator, the
subject had to maintain :it on center,while the needlo deviated according to a
progrwmed tape* In work with contacts* when the aircraft was gathering speed,'
execution time van reducedl daring inintial excess 11 oxecution time became still-
Card 1/2
ACCMION NRt AT40202
Aens; during weightlessness it became greaterg often greater than, the initial
level; during the second excess S it disialehed,once more'l and'd4ring the second
level flight it increased. Execution times for work withi3-digit numbers followed
the same pattern* The magnitude of error in work with keeping the needle indicatorl
,on center was 1*5--2 times as great during initial and post-weightless overloads
~ as it was during level flight* During weightlessness,' the magnitude of error over
level flight increased by a factor of 3-4, When subjected to angular accelem-
tiona# the magnitude of error increased by 10-15%. During cariolis accelerationeg",
'the margin of error also increased in'aU stages'of flightq tut'L was particularly
marked during weightlessness when it increased $- to 10-fold. Theme objeotive
data contrasted with:subjeative evaluations of the subjects Who1elt, that it was
pore difficult to work during excess S than during weightlessness.
ASWCTATION: none
-SUBM s 27sep63 MCW 00 com La
0
KO MW my: OW
Card 2/2
;t
4
ACC NR, ATGO12903 SOURCE CODE: UR/0000/65/000/000/0245/0252
~e7
AUTHOR: Mtayev-Smyk, L.A.,- ZverevA T...
ORG: none
TITLE: The Influence of short-term wMahilessness and the combined action of weight-
lessness and angular and Coriolis acceleration on some functions of the h6man
operator
SOURCE: Sistema chelovek I avtomat (Man-automaton systems). Moscow, Izd-vo Na:uka,
1965, 245-252
TOPIC TAGS: weightlessness, angular acceleration, Coriolis 1--,aRC E . man, man
machine communication, automaton, human engineering, human physiology , v85 rj6W4,4,0
ID/ Vrc Wd'q A.J 0. E
ABSTRACT: The progress of cosmonautics has posed the problem of development of an
optimal version for the Inclusion of man , in the cosmic'i-apparatus system.~ Inthe
solutIon of this problem It will be necessary to take into account some of the specific effects
to which the operator-cosmonaut will be subjected In flight, such as if eiFbtlessna ss. Thepie-
sentar*clew~as written as part of the program of investlga~tlon of the activity of man
operator subjected to weightlessness and to the combined action of weightlessness and angular
and Coriolis acceleration. The conditions of weightlessness were created in an aircraft in
parabolic flight, with the duration of weightlessness lasting for 28-30 see, preceded by and
followed by G, force up to 15 see. -In some tests, weightlessness was established without
Card 1/2
ACC NR- AT6012903
being preceded or followed by G force application. It was found that an Increase In the time
of motion reaction and a rise in the error during operation In weightlessness may be the
result of known disorders of the function of the visual and motor~analyzer, as well as a
disorder in central integration. - The difference in the direction of the variation in the time
of the motion reaction during weightlessness and G force may be compared to the con-,
trasting variations In the muscular tonus in these conditions. The substantial decrease in
the quality of work of the operators, and the appearancb of vestibulovegetative disturbances
in them during the combined action of weightlessness and Coriolis acceleration, which,
first of all, Influences the vestibular apparatus, confirms tho opinion of many authors that
weightlessness primarily promotes disorder in vestibulax function.
Arreductionintheperformance quality during weightlessness and angular ani
Coriolis acceleration, furthermore, may promote a variation In *the coupling between the
human body - and the support, i.e., 'the seat. The character of motion is. undoubtedly
affected by the absence of - the weight of the extremities and the trunk.
T
, his, according to the authors, primarily explains the reduction In the time of putting on and
taking off the parachute harness in conditions of zero gravity. In an evaluation of the data
obtained it is necessary to take Into consideration the fact that during the first 30 see
of w& i gh tl e s snes s, the processes of adaptation and stabilization occurring in the
neurop~ychic, cardiovascular, and other systems of the organigm apparent
are not completed, Orig, art, hasi 3 figure3 and 2 tables. E08)
SUB CODE: 05/l/ SUBM DATEs. 02Aug65/ ATD PRESS t,6-dg)"
Card 2
16(1) PHASE I BOOK WLQXTATION
sov/2936
Zverev, Anatoliy Vladimirovich
Hyady Furlye i integral Furlye; lektsiya 01ya studinto* zaocbva
VTUZov (Fourderls'Serie'a and Integrals; Lecture for Students of Correspondence
Schoks of Higher Technical Education) Moscow, 1958. 46,p.
3,000 copies printed.
sponsoring Agency: 'Vaesoyuzn~y zaochW politeithnicheskiy in.stitut.
Kafedra vysshey matematiki.
Ed.: F.A. Bakshiyan,-Professor$o Beep. Ed.! P.A. B4j*iyan, Profeesor;
Ed,, of Publishing Houser I.I. Bank, Tech. Ed.: P-G.Iobrov,;
PLWOSE: This booklet is intended especially for corresymdence students.
COVERAGE: *The booklet presents the essentials of the materiel,and gives a
sufficient number of seleeted problems and examples Uhich Lt". practical
application. It also contains a discussion of the Fom~ier Integrai, an
understanding 6f which is necessary for students of the energetielo
Card 1/3
Fourier's Series andtIntegrals; (Cont.) Sov/29~6
and electrophysicaX departments. The booklet is one of ibe chWeri of a
general. textbook on mw%ematical analysis written. by the departnerit. of
hijher*mathematics'at the'41-Uaion Polytechnic Correspondence Institute,
No personalities are mentioned, There are no references
TAKE OF CONTENTS;
1. Concept of a Periodic Function 4
2. Simplest Periodic Fu~nction- Sinusoldal Value -(ffarmonils) 51
3- Various Properties 0~r'.letegrable Functions Widih d*Alte #sed
in Studying and Practicing the Applicati.on ot Fourier Series
4. A Fourier Series and CcmPuting Its Coefficients 16
5. Half-range rourier Series 20
6. Examples of the Expansion of Periodic Functions in a'Fourier
Series 21
Card 2/3
Fourier's Series and Integrals; (Cont.) ~SPV/2936
7- Expansion'of a Function Defined on the Interval (0, 1) In a
Half-range Fourier Series I . . I III N
questions and problem for self checiting 33-
8. The Fourier Integral 35
Problems for independent solution. 40,
9. Fourier's Method of Solving a Wave Equation and Relit
Conductance Lquatioh 41
AVAILABLE: Library, of ConVess
LWAPP
Card 3/3 3-10-60
palictuationo in the 'Tater Temp-j:rature of Deep L r.~!vs of :3 e,:a I-Ieteorpl. i
'39
xidrologiya, 11o 4, 195~, r,
Observations conducted by the authors by Otans of deep-iralter t~,166rom.,tcrz amA r'esis-
-orr ., Gulf arui B 'Yerke-
~tance thernmmaters on tkie tem,'erature of the deep rraters of the Vy 1 st
i Zund testify to the existetice of short and ul-trashort period o scill!.tions diffe~ing~ ans to
intensity, i-rith cycles -calculated in hours, -minutes, and even '5econds; The observations
were carried out ~A%, various deep horizons of 22 stations at &Ufereiit~ tines of We ~ay and
for various conditions of the weather (in the c~iso of consideral-A3 1~~Al of the Loat, the
thermometer of re----istaonce, was placed in a smcl,,t~l bqW). The,ten,-,Orature rcadi(igs were
tak-en evei-j- 15 seconds (sometimes evel-f 1-3 minixtes)- 1110 3, 195~) So: Stuii-
No 713, 9 ITOV 55
ZVEREV, Aj--k-., AND BERMEYM, D. YA.
Computation and Correction of the Horizons of Submemlo'n of Ba-Vhometer,-
The insufficiencies of the procedure for computing the ~h orizono
according to the.tables of A.I. Kireyev are the complexities,
and tre-
mendousness of the computations, which must be carried''out abonrd ship,
and also the Impossibility of assigning all bathometers to standard
horizons. The authors propose to simplify and make more preclie the
existing method of computing horizons. WhGeolt No. 5, 1955) Mgh,
Zap, Y_yanh. arkt. mor. ngbiligbohaq No. 5, 1954, 204-21i
SO: Sum. No. 744t 8 Dee 55 Supplementary Survey of Soviet Solentific
Abstracts (17)
SOMOV, M.H,, doktor geOgTafonaUko redo; TAUWMg G.K*s doktor geogrefo
nauko redo; DOLGIN# I.K., kand.gsogrsf.naukv~red.;:ZYXR3V A A
kand.geograf.naulk, red.; DROZHZHINA, L.P.* tokhn.rW.
(Haterials of the Soviet Complex Antarctic Zxpedition] Katerialy
Sovetskoi komplekenoi antarkticheakoi ekspeditsii.' leningradt.
Izd-vo *Horskoi transport.' Vol.2. Uirst Continental Bxpedition,~
1955-1957; scientific resultal Pervaia kantin~entallnaia ekspeditaiia,
1955-1957 gg.; nauchnys resulltaty. Pod red. H.K.Somovn* 1959.
161 Pe Vol.), Dirst Continental Expedition, 1955-1957: observation
dataj Pervaia kontinentalInsia'ekspoditaiia, 1955-1937 gg:waterialy
nabliudenii. Pod red. G.H.Taubera. 109. 459 p. Vol.4 First
Continental Expedition, 1955-1957; obodrvatio6 data]-Pervaia konti-
nentallnaia ekspeditaiia. 1955-1957 M.; materialy nabliudenii. Pod
red.G.M.Tauber, I.M.Dolgina. 1959. 482 p. Vol.6. Second Marine
Fapedition in the diesel-electric oklp 00b"t 1956-4957,- observation
data] Vtoraia morsknia okepeditaiia no d/e 10b'", 1956-1957 gg.;
materialy nabliudenii. Pod red. A.I.Zvereva.~ 1959. 386 p.
(MIRA 130)
lo Sovetskaya komplekonsys, antarkticheskaya ekepeditsiyao 19554958.
(Antarctic regions-Russian exploration)
vr-i~F-V, A -A,
PRUE I BOOK EXPLOITATION SOV/4351
Sovetskaya antarkticheskaya ekspeditsiya, 1955-
Vtoraya morskaya ekspeditsiya na d/e "'01112J956-1957~gg-;
materialy nablyudeniy (Second Marine E?Epedition on the
Diesel-Electrie Ship "Ob's" 1956-1957; Materials From
observations) Leningrad, Izd-vo "Morskoy tramsport."
1959. 386 p. Errata slip inserted 'I (Series: Its:
Materialy.. tom. 6) -800 copies printed.
Sponsoring Agency: Arktiche8kiy I antairkticheaskiy nauchno-
issledovatellskiy institut.
Ed.: A. A. Zverev., Candidate of Geographical Sciences14 Tech.
'Ed.-.-L. P. Drozhzhina.
PURPOSE: This book Is intended for oceanographers, hydro-
logists, and hydrochemists.
COVERAGE: This is Volume 6 of a multivolume work containing
scientific data collected during Sovlat.kitarctie expeditions.
The volWne is a compilation of'ocealnograpblc data re-
corded by the Second Soviet Marine Expedition, headed
Second Marine Expedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
by Professor I. V. Maksimov,, during:A voy4;e on the
dlesel-eleatrie ship "Obl", from November 1956 to'June
1957. The hydrological, hydrochemidal, and biological
observationp of the expedition were condacted off bhe'
northern coast of Antarctica betwee6the Antarctic'-
Continent and Capetown and in the Indian Ocean as Par as
UalcuttEL. These included visual and semi-instrumental ob-
servations of waves, sea ice and iaebergs;.the determi-
nation of salinity, alkalinity., pH yalues.,,and them
content of silicates, nitrates, and'dissolved oxygen;~the
measurement of temperature; the recording of the velocity
and direction of surface and deep currents; the deter-
mination of the color and transparency of water; and,the
collection of fauna and flora, particularly plankton.
Among the instruments used in making the observations;
were Alekseyev BFV-2 and BPV-2r current.meters,,electro-
magnetic current meters (EMIT) for indaijuring surface '
currents, VOM-50 and GM-16 wavemeters, BM-118 bathometers,
EPP-09 potentiometers, K-17-B steredphotocamera3, ST-55
electrical thermometers, thermal depth gages, deep7water
thermometers,.and thermobathygraphao, The following soi-
entists participated in processing and interpreting'the
data obtainedi'K. V. Moroshkin',and A. A.'Zverev, who
Second Marine Expedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
directed the processing of deep-water hydrological re-
cordings and observations on currents at the Insti,.tut
okeanologii AN SSSR (Instit4te of Oceanography of tbe~,
Academy of Sciences-USSR) and the Leningradskoye v~saheye
inzhenernoye uchilishche imeni admirala Makarova, (Lanin-
grad Higher Naval Engineering School'imeni Admiral Makarov),
M. A.. Bogdanov, who processed the observations on:eurrents
atthe Vsesoyuznyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut
rypnogo kliozyaystva i okeanografii (All-Union Scientific
Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography); A, PO
Morozov, who directed the processing of visual wave ob-
servations and wave data at the Leningradskoye otdeler,-'Iye
Gosudarstvennogo okeanograficheskogo instituta (Leningrad
Branch of the State Oceanographic Inptitute); A. A.,Dreyyer,,
staff member of the dosudarstvennyy okeanografichealciy~
institut Gidrometaluzhby SSSR (state Oceanographic Institute
of the Hydrometeorological Service of,the USSR) who~worked
on wave measurements; V. P. Kozhukhov', who worked on the
observations of the dip of the visible horizon at the
Leningrad Higher Naval Engineering Sehool imeni Admiral
Makarov, A. N. Bogoyavlenskly, who worked on the results
'Second Mai~ine Ex.pedition (Cont.) SOV/4351
of hydrochemical observations at the.Inatitute of
Oceanography of the Academy of Solences VSSR; V. V, Barsukov
and Yu. Ye. Permitin, who worked on the ichthyologital
materials at the Zoologicheskiy instibut AN SSSR (Zoolo-
gical Institute of the Academy of Sciences USSR) and the
All-Union Scientific Researoh Institute of Fisheries and
a
O~*,aeanogra`3 hy.; K. V,, Beklemishev and V. S.,Xorotkevieh
(plankton . and A. V. Gusev and F. A. Pasternak (bbnthoo)
who worked on the hydrobiological observations at- the I
Zoologif_~al nistitute of the Academy of Soienotea USSR and
the Institute of Oceanography ofthe Aaadarkr of Soienctes
USSR. There are 7 references: 5 Sov:Let,, I German, and.
I English.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Foreword
Eydrologilzal and hydr9cheml-al studies
Deepwater hydrological observations
OiR4-4746.
ZVEREVI A. F.
"Pharracological Lspect of Preparation 126, 12, 6 dimetox7banzochl non",
and its use in Suppurative Diseases, Abstract, Farmtiltol. i Toxicoli, 9,
No. 3, 1946; Cand. Med. Sci., Hospital Surgical Clinic, Sverdlovsk Med. last.
and S-,rerdlov3k Lffiliate, All-Union Sci. Research, Chemico-Pharmaceutical Inst.,
-1946,
SOV/3-58-11-10/38
AUTHORt Zverev A.F., Doctor of Medical Sciences; Professorl Insti-
H"
TITLE: Urgent ChanA-s in the System of Traini Ing Physidiane (Naz-
revshiye izmeneniya v sisteme podgotovki vraolhey)
PERIODICAL: Vestnik vysshey shkoly, 1958, Nr 11, pp 26 30 (USSA)
ABSTRACT: Tba Prtbnr deals with the reasons for the occlasional. gradu-
ation of,mediocre physicians by the inatitUtfis, and examines
the question as to what must be done to ensure that the
medical vuzes train only phvaicians of high competence and
understanding, devoted to their specialty and to the public
health. In the first place it is necessary to change the
principle of eiarolling students at medical vuzes. The beat
reinforcement is the youth that is coming from hospitals.or
other public health institutions after having worked there
for 2 to 3 years. They yield the best doctors and orga In-o:
izers of public health service, and should bf) given prefer-
ence in.entering the vuz. Since the number of persons with
such practical experiende is growing from yenr to year, it
can be safely said that after several~yeara a preliminary
professional experience will become obligatory for all per-
Card 1/3 sons wishing to study medicine. The admittance should be
SOY/3.-$8-11-10
Urgent Changes in the System of Training Physicians
coordinated-,with:.thel-doman'der.of the'AndividuiVeolonomipi
districts anUrepublice. ~.Th~;Uralej*:Bi~sris'aad the Fa
East have a.shortage;of doctors, while the s(oathern atitricts
have a surplus. It is:auggested that the Sverdlovsk Medical'
Institute be expanded, and youth from the local popula 'tion
be given,preferenoo.-:The term.:of training should remain.at
6 years ''.also day- time instruction should be:rotainedg and
the students should discontinue any other works However,
as an experiment# the lessons of the lot cours4 students may
take place in the evening at several institutes. Correspond-
ence tuition is impossible ' As some of'~the students usually
drop out, a greater number can be admitted to the first
course than is foreseen by the plan. This will ensure that
the sti-te plan of training spe6iallate is fulfilled. The
author also deals with the question of revising the ourti-
Card 2 /3 cula, uniting some chairo. He comments on practical train-
ing and the necessity of assigning hospitals.an& sanitoty-
(1911C.UPHALOCELE) (VITEBSKII, IA.D.)
ZTJMWj A.Fes professor (Sverdlovsk, Bankovakiy persulok, d.8, kv, 29); 1
]UMAW, G. M..
Homo,Dlasty with cartilage of ostoomyslitic bou4 cavities In children.
following sequestreatomro Taet.khir, 83 UO-1106-59~1159.
1. rz detskoy khtrargichaskoy kliniki (sav. pwof. A.P. Zverev)i
Sverdlovskogo meditainakogo instit-ata,
(GkRTILLGA tranopl.)
(OSTMKMITIS in Inf. & ohildj~
ZVWj IA. F-,,-profoosor (Sverdlovvk Bankovskiy per., c1,,;8, kv, 29);
P -
ZVERET, A.F., prof. (Sverdlovsk, Bankovskly persaloln-' d.8' Im.29)
Primary hypemephrold cT,-incar of the livcr ina inftrlt. Vast,
khir. 90 no.5&122..123. MyI6.3 Nita rizA,
I Iz klururgiclieskcy klinikl detakogo vozrambf, ( Z~V.- prof.
A:F. Zverer) Svevllovikogo meditDinakogo Insti-Luta.
A I
*0 A lip
C=%.-
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It No. .2. WNIMUny
z4ftir'. goal, It. d4r.-
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40 plmqauy The alkyl pheft-Aic Inw) Which litay fir 11
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folowdoll Ilivillute itill), S. L. Malf.'s 4
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:l to
L A ~lIALLU"KAL LIj(*jV4f CLA%$1040110011
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ZVERE V A. I.
"Blood Transfusion in Ambulatory Practice," Sov. Med., No. 6
Road Station for Blood Transfusion of the Tashkent Railwayi -;a1949-0
MP
AR6019465 SOURCE CODE': UR/OO8l/66/OOO/OO2/SO73:/SO73
AUTHOR: Kvasnikov, Ye. W.; Zverev, A.,N.
TITLE: Effect of temperature on strength and deforma~tlon~ properties of
certain construction plastics
SOURCE: Ref zb,khim, Part II, Abs. 2S504
REF SOURCE: Sb. Inzh. konstruktsiy. Dokl. k XXIII N4vcbn. konfere.ntsil.
Leningr. inzb.-stroit. in-ta,; L., 1965, 170-175
TOPIC-TAGS:,,glass fiber,,glass textolite, lemina.ted'Material, plastic':,
strengtbi tensile strengtb, deformation, compressive 'stress, meebanical
stress, thermal stress
ABStRACTz Three types of construction plastics were subjected to tests,
un4r uniaxial stress and compression under conditions of short term
exposure to reduced and elevstec~/temperatures from -50 to +900' glassy
fiber aniso~-&pic material SVAMN-14ith 1:1 and 1:5 anisotro'by4ased on
binper ED-64~nodifled v tb bakolite.Zlocquer; glass t
,Li extoli~.o ased on
J-b~/lLF'brand clotb; ana, W-0-0-a-laminate
pol,-%ester binder PN-11and TT -- . _
plaNic DSP-B it-b--pT-enol binder It was.shovrn that there is a nearly,
lin6ar relationsbip between tempe~aturo and the strengtb of the glass
Card 1/2
L 46295-66
ACC NR- AR6019465
reinforced plastics under stress and compression (glAss t extolite based
A). The stability of the me.charical indices
on PN-1 binder is an except~o
of glass reinforced plasticsPat different temperatures depends more on
the kind of binder than on the type of filler. V. Frivalko,
IcTranslation of abstract7.
SUB CODE: 11 lito
Card 2/2 afau
T I,(a) WOM
ACC NRi ,OLjRCE CODE: LM/()124/65/0C)O/O12/V099/VO99
r
Ye.,
AUTHOR: Kvasnikov, .'N. ,Zverev X
Ile
'~'i.and deformation
TITLE:..Effect 6ftemipeerj ure~on,the~~strRMt praerties of some
f
structural plastics
kh4:Abs.'A_2
SOURCE: MeMa"n` i V847
Ref. zh
REF SOURCE. 8b. I&W. Ionstrukis i'Y il: Dokl.,~ kXXIII Nauchn. k6nferentaii. Lenin r.
a.
inzh. -stroit. i3i-t 3,965,: 170- 75
TOPIC.TAGS: material def6romatit)fi,~i'flberglass reinforced plastid, tensile ,strength,
fe t
compressive strength, low-temperatureef c 9-high temperature effect
' " ~.It` ii':'l ii' 'were tested' ension 'and
.o ~ArVc ur p as ce
AIL~TRACT: Three types. Xor uniaxial t
compressioV for brief !rlb4s at. 1464 ~,And high temperaturea'.(-50-49000: an anisotropic
pt ,
mn,. an sotro& ;I and 1;5, fib'erglass-reinforc
fibe~glasolmterial 7 with i It I, ed textolite
and wood-reinforced lami~afedzplasiia-'-L;It is shown that there i's a nearl'y linear re-
lationship between,atrength dnd'temperature,in fiberglass-reinforced plastics under
tension and compreasio'~~('viih~'thd~~id~eption.of fiberglass-Veinforced textolite). V.
rivalko. (Translation'6f
UB
CODE: 11
Card 1/1
FZDDBOY, V.S.; RTABCHIKOV# T.R,; FOLTAKDV, I.S.; SOH0K]:N,:ff.I.; RTABYKH, P.M.;
-NOVIX, N.G.; SLFMJKHA, T.Y.; DRASMVSKIYN K.M.o; LALA3ZXOV, S.K.;
A 1YRTi A*P.; TRYSTAFIYBV, V.Vo;
, NCMSOV, L.G.;
GROSSMAN, B..I.; HHRMAN, A.01.
Petr Alakeanarovich Smirnov, 1902-1958; Wtuary.:Kh1m. I~tiqlch.~ topl.,
i masel. 3 no.12:68 D 158. WHA 11:12)
(Smirnov, Petr.Aleksanarovich, 1902-1958)
'rVMVq AtS*
)4ethod of deterndning the amount of metal used in making castings.~ Lit
proizv. no.6:25-26 je '53- MiA 6:7)
PHASE II TREASURE ISLAND-BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REPORT AID 20 11
BOOK
.~Call No~i. Q0 861.T85
Aut~ors; ZVM, A. S., KIRYUXHIN' B. V., XONDRATIYEV K YA'
SELEZNEVA, YE. So, TVERSKOY,~P. No YUDIN, M. I.
Full Title: COURSE OF METEOROLOGY (PHYSICS OF THE ATMOSPHERE)
Transliterated Title: Kurs meteorologlil(Fizika atmoster'y)
Publishing Data
Originating Agency: None
Publishing House: Hydrometeorolog ical Publishing House~ (Gimiz)
Date: 1951 No. pp.: 888. ..No. of aopies'~'. lPpOO0
Editorial Staff
Editor: Professor Tverskoy, F. No Tech. Edo; None
Editor-in-Chief: None Appraiser: Kane
Others: 1) Scientific Council and the scientific parsdnnel oif
the Fain Geophysical Observatory, 2) Prof, Kh~omov, So Pop
who critically analysed -the manuscript.
Text Data
Coverage: A fundamental course in the physics'of the atmolsphere covering:its
properties, methods of investigation, application of thermodynamics),
radiant energy, heat energy, water vapor, motion, weather and its
forecasting, atmorpheric optics,, electricityj and acoustics.
1/55~
PHASE I TREASURE ISLAND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REPORT AID 453 1
'BOOK Call. No'.; 0632826
Author: ZVEREV, A.,S.
Full. Title: FOGS AND THEIR FORECASTING
TransliteratedTitle: Tumany I ikh predskazaniy~17
Publishing Data
Orisinating Agency! None
Publishing House: Hydrometeorologica 1 Publlshins"~ouse ."OidrdmAeoizdat"
Date: 1954 No* pP.: Noi~of c6~les:. 11,000-
Editorial Staff
Editor: Kiryukhin B. Ve
Appraisers: Pchelko, I. a.., Sadovnikov' A. V.',;Gurov, Bo Ps~andf
Broydo., A. 0.
Text Data
Coverage: This is an account of the results obt6ined Soviet-sciOn-
tists, in recent-years in the field of forecastiiig the formation and
dispersion of fogs. The author considers that:this problem is~no~ Yet
completely solved but that Soviet investigation6 ha,!,re improved the
quality of tog forecasts which are important for all~forms of,trans-
port, particularly for aviation. Special attention ia~given to phys-
ical processes of fog formation. Facts exposed In thia monograph~can
be applied to any geographical region. Local features of fog:forzia-
tion and dispersion are not discussed In this wor*k but'they muSt be
1/3,
Tumany i ikh predskazaniye AM
53:-
4
'The monograph la b sed loiIiinvest
.considered by forecasters. lgations
made by the author, by B. V. Kiryukhin and bygradi~ate,stude nts of
the Leningrad Hydrometeorological Institute. The book is one of the
series "Scientific-Popular Library". It contains tables and ~diagrams.
TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE
Foreword
Ch. I Properties of Fogs. Conditions of their and
Dispersion
1. Basic Properties of Fogs 5
2.~ Condensation of.Water Vapor and Fog Formation 9
3. Radiation Fogs 12
4. Advection Fogs
17
Other Types of-Fogs ,
.;.,21
Dispersion of Fogs 27;
7. Classification of Fogs.'. 31'
8.
Synoptic*Cdnditions of Fog Formation 35
Ch.. II
Fog Forecasting.
1. General Principles of Fog Forecasting 372
2. Estimation of the Cooling necessary for FogiYormation
An a given Air Mass W
3. Forecasting the Cooling of,Air ~48'
2/3
PHASE I BOOK EXPLOITA%O~., SOV11912
Uchebn sinopticheskiy atlas (school Synoptical Atlas of W6e'Lther
Mapy . Izd-vo 48 foAdv:
ST Pt. 1. Leningrad IGidrometeor L , 1956.
maps (in portfolio) 8pOOO copies printed.
Compilers: K.G. Abramovich, P.D. A5tapenko, V.V. pykov, V.,I!o B~shuk,
V.P. Gurov, A.�* Zverey, L.S. Nininap A.A.~Xorozkin, L.L. Rupp6rt,~
and B.M. Sergeyev-1---Ed-, (Title page): Kh. P. Pogosyan, P.rofessor;
Ed. (Inside book): M.N. Yasnogorodskaya; Techo Ed*:
A.A. Soloveychik.
Zadaniya dlya studentov k "Uchebnor4u.,.'.sinoRticheskomu atiasu,"
1. (Assignments for Students using the School Synoptical
Atlas of Weather Maps, Pt. 1) 1956. 114 p.,
Compiler: A.S. Zverev; Ed*: M.N. Yasnogorodskaya.
PURPOSE: This atlas is intended for use by students at institutions of
higher learning specializing in meteorology.
School Synoptical (Cont.) SOV/19l2
COVERAGE: The atlas consists of 96 weather map's (48 sheets) Ion an
identical base) giving detailed meteorologi6al and aerolotical
information for certain months of 1952-1955,. These maps 1 :10
mill.) cover portions of Greenland and.the,eastern tip of-Can4dap
all of Europe, North Africa) the Near HastsiCentral Siberia, and
the Siberian polar regions to approximately'AOO'D~E. Included'
with the atlas is a booklet of lesson assignments based on-the
information compiled on.the weather maps. The appendix to the
lesson assignmeat bookle"t contains 12 tables of synoptic weather
information from the field reporting stations shown on the maps.
Compilation of the atlas was conducted under the~direction~of the
following scientific personnel: Candidate of Physical andAathe-
matical Sciences K.G. Abramovichp Candidate of Physical and Mathe-
matical Sciences V.V. Bykov, Candidate of Geographical Sciences
L.S. Minina, Candidate of Geographical Scienoes P.D. Astapenko,
Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences V.P. Gurov, Meteor-
ologist A.A. Morozkin2 Candidate of Geographical Sciences Ruppert,
Meteorologist B.M. Sergeyev, Candidate of Geographical Sciences
V.I. Bushuk and Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
A.S. Zveryev.
Card 2/3
School Synoptical (Cont.) SOV/19112,
Specialists from the Tsentrallnyy institut prognoz-ov, the
Meteorologic4eakiy fakulltet.Voyennovotdush4oy Akademli
An. A.P. .4ozhayokogo, and the Leningradskiy,gidrometeorologiche5kiy
Inatitut helped in compiling the Atlas. No references ate givent
TABLE OF CONTENTS: None given
AVAILABIZ: Library of Congress
:6/17/59
Card 3/3 I(K/j ab
ASTAFJOKO, F.D., kerid.geografichookikh nauk; BURTSIV, A.Io, kendefizi6
matematicheskikh nank; GtMOY,,V.P., Icand.fisiko-nateciatichaskikh
nsuk; ZjWUwAkS-, kandafiziko-matematichookikh-,nauk; ZVBTAII,,G.D.,
doktor geograficheakikh nauk; MININA. L.S.. kand.reografichaski'_h~nauk:
MOROZKIN, A.A., inzhener-meteorolog-, RUPPERT, L.L4, kand.geografichs-
skikh nauk; SERGEYHY, B.M.. inzhener-mateorclog; SAHOTWV, A.I.9
kand.fiziko-matematicheakikh nauk; TURXMTTIP:Z.L., kend.geogrefiche-
skikh nauk; CHERNOVA, Y.F., stershiy nauchnyy sotradnik; CHISTYALOT,
A.D., kand.fiziko-matematicheakikh nauk; FOGOSYAN, 11h.? #' prof.,r6d.;
YASIIOGORODSKAYA. M.H., red.; BRAYNINA, M.P., tekhn.recle
[Uynoptic study atlas] Uchebrzyi siaopticheskil atlas. Ieningrad,,
Gidrometeore izd-vo,- Pt..2, (Bost, F.DeAstapen):o i drp) 19570;
90 fold. maps (in,portfolio)_ (Prectica; recomendations
and assignments for students using the OSynoptIze study atlas*!
Metodicheskie rkomendateii i zedaniia dlia:studentov k "Uchebtiomt
sinopticheekomm stlasu,v cheat' 2. Sant. A.S.Zverev. 1957.~ 87
Q _c; 'D (MMA 110.)
1. Wentrallnyy Institut prognozov (for Che'nova).
(Climatology--Charts, diagrams, etco)
Call Nr*1157025
UTHOR: ,
ir R
Zverev, A16kse
TITLE; synoptic Meteorology (Sinopticheskaya meteorologiya)
PU9. DATA: a
Gidrometeorologicheskoye,izdatellstvo, Leningra4
1957* 559 pp-j 5300 copies
ORIG. AGENCY: None given
EDITORS: Responsible Ed.: Pchelko, I.G,;'Editor: Yasnogorodskaya.,
M.M.; Tech. Ed.: Kononova, L.B.; Correctors; Mamed,ovap
V.V. and Mezhikovskayas F.I.
PURPOSE: The book is written for students,of hydrometeorological
instituteso universities, and other indt.ituti6n6 of
learning., as well as weather services personnel afid
other ptrzons interested in short-term forecasting.
COVERAGE: This is a systematic exposition,of problems In, synoptic
meteorology and theipractical means of analyting and
i
e
forecasting weather. The book represents the.substanc
of the lectures delivered by the auth6r at the
Leningrad Hydrometeorological Institute and has been,
he says, brought up to the level of modem understanding
of hydrometeorological problems, A list of 166 references,
Card 1/22
Call Nr; 1157025
Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
160 of which are USSR, 5 English, I Gemah and: a very useful
appendix close the book. There are 9 chaptericoveringall the
essentials of the subject. Chapter I presents basic concepts of
synoptic meteorology$ its historic develQpmento and the modem
multi-phase approach in solving meteorological problems,by the
three-dimensional technique of analyzing aty-iospheric processes.
The present organization of meteorological services in the USSR,
the simultaneous observation method, the Aeaumulation and dissem-
ination of datap and the accepted meteorological code are all
discussed. Physical conditions in the atmosphere and efforts to
forecast and to affect weather through human intervention are
also considered. Chapter 2 analyzes the vardous fields of
meteorological elements, the technique of~preparing and~analyzing
near-surface weather maps, baric topog.raphy mAps, maps of the
distribution of wind fields, geostrophlo and thermal winds,
maps, etc. Error correction and dynamic equations for conditions
of continuity are presented. Chapter 3 deals with the transfer
of energy and problemb of general atmospheric circulation of
which cyclones and anticyclones are but two basic forms. The
many schematic drawings and climatic maps, appearing in the text
are highly instructive. Chapter 4 covers tlWmain weather-
creating factors and discusses the causes foro'variations with
time. Circulation, transfomation and orographic features
eating weather, andan analysis of local variations in
Card M'
e-1 2
Call Nr:,1157025
Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
air pressure and temperature are included in this chaptero which
also gives Kibel's solution of such hydrodynamic problems, and
Fridman's velocity vortex. Chapter 5 conc6rna the formation and
geographic classification and distribution of stable and unstable
air masses, and is amply illustrated. Chapter 6 describei3
atmospheric fronts, their formation and wash-out,isotherm and
inversion layers, and Margules, formiila. Baric and isoallobaric
field fronts and their displacements are also discussed.
Chapter 7 discusses types and stages and the displaoement.ofIropl-
cal and non-tropical cyclones and an-ticyclones. In the absence
..Of a fully developed and accepted theory for such processes the
author reviews the convective, . thermal and vortex theories
and also touches upon the wave, divergent and advecto-dynamic
theories; typical conditions in various regiozis~and localities
are well illustrated, Chapters 8 and 9 refer to the most!'im-
portant problem in meteorology., i.e.., short &ad~long-range
weather forecasting. This is achieved througa advance compu-
tations based on interpolation and extra.-polation., the study of
synoptic situations, and the prognostication of,all possible
phenomena including special conditions. Mapping forecasts and
Card j/22 I:
Call Nr: 1157025
~Synoptic Meteorology (cont)
prognostication techniques used abroad are deocribed.
TABLE OF CONTENTS ~Page
From the Author
Chapter 1. Subject of Synoptic Meteorology. General Information ,
About the Weather Bureau -11-58
1. Subject and problems of synoptic meteorolog y :11-24
1. Definition of the subjecti Synoptic ine thod (11)
2. Connection between synoptic meteorologyiand o.ther
branches of science (12)
3. importance of the weather forecasts in the
national economy and in the defense (13)
4. Fundamental concepts of synoptic meteorology (14)'
5. Problem of scientific weather prognosis and ways
of solution (20)
6. Problem of the active influence on weather (23)
2. Fundamental stages in the development of synoptic
meteorology P-4-33
1. Pre-synoptic period of weather study 24~
2. Organization of the weather services M
3. Evolution of synoptic meteorology in "the 19th
and the beginning of the 20th centuries (27)
Card 4/22
ASTAPSHKO, P.D.: ZVXRHT, I.S., doktor geograf.nauk.10tv.red.; XVITSA,
H*P* 6 redq; TA70- ~A, V., takhnred,
C*tmospheric processes in high latitudes ofAhs Soutbern Heiispherel
Atmosfernye protsessy v vysok1kh ahlrotakh iuzhnogo polusharila.
Moskva, Izd-vo Akad.nauk SSSR, 196o. 281 p#: (II resdel prograwq
MOO (mateorologiia)o no-3) (HMA 13:12)
(Antarotica--Atmosphers)
USPENSKIY, B.D.,doktor fiz,-mat. nauk, prof.; BEWU5OV;.SjL,;.~o
fiz.-mat. nauk;-PYATYGINA, K.V.; YUDTjI,1'11.I.; VERTSAIDV,
A.N., kand. fiz.-mat. nauk; DAVTDOVA, O.A.; KUFYANBKAY*0'4~
A.P.; PEPRICMIKO, I.A.; ~40RSK% I G.I.;~ TOMASHEVICH, L.V. j
SAMOYLOV, A.I.; ORLOVA, Ye.l.; DZHORDZEIO, V.A.; FETRENKO,
N.V.; DUBOVYY, A.S.; ROI-IOV, A.I.; PETROSYANTS, M.A.; GIA20V
*j~ip.-WTAYEVA, T.F.; BELISKAYA, N.N.; CHISTYAKOV, A.D.;
GANDlN, L.S.; BURTSEV, A.I.; MTSAWV,'~A.ll.;: BIAGROVYY, N.A.;
BELOV, P.N.; ZVIWk.AV$, ~retsQnzen:t;,:$TJ)EWO-
red.; DUBENTWV-,". '.,-kind. fiz*-mat, nauk, nauchn. rea.;
SAGATOVSKIY'~.N V.s'r9d.; 8UGAM~N.A.S'doktor geogre nauk,
prof., red,; ROGOVSKAYA, Ye.G., red.
[1-11anual on short-range weather forecasts) Rukbvodstvo po
kratkoarochnym prognozam ~ogody. Leningrad, Gidrometeoizdat.
Pt.l. Izd.2., perer. i dop. 1964. 519 P. (MIRA 18:1)
1. Moscow. TSentrallnyy institut prog-nozov.
ZYBUT, A.T.
Mechanism of certain experimental neuroses in dogs .Zhur.vys VA rv
deiat- 7 no-3:434-01 My-Je 05?. 10110)
1. leboratorlya fistologii I patologii vrashey nervnoy, deystellno-1
sti Institute normallnoy I patologicheskoy fiiieloglt AMR SSSIR.
(NIUROSIS, experimental,
In dogs (Rua))
ZURRY. A.
Dryg-induced aleep in the treatment of experimental neuroses d6gs.
(with summary in linglishl. Biul.eksp.biol. i~m'nd. 43 no.6-29-32~
Je '57. (MIRA 10:10)
1. Is laboratorii vysshey nervnoy dayatelluosti (zav..- Tg.A.Takovleva)
Institute fiziologii (dir. - deyetvitellny7 chlen A14N SSSR prof. T.N.
Chernigovskiy) AHN SSSR, Koukva. Fredstavlena'doyetvitelOnyu chlenor.
AHN SSWt prof. V.N.Chernigovokim.
(NEUROSBS, experimental,
off. of medication sloop ther. (Rue))
(SIZWI effects,
on exper. neuroses in dogo, medication slaep ther. Pua)l
ZVMW, AoTv
Analysis of certain mechanisms o
of a fixed (sterootypio) moto; j
Zhur.vys.nerv.detate 9 noolts -9
lo Xaboratoi7 of Phv*01067 alld
Institute of Tormil ii~d Patholog
og
Kedloal Sciences, Moscow*
Omosm, Mere
mechanisms of n
(Rue))
7T, -,I~
-Ii. HT,
ACCESSION NRs-, AT4042682 $10000/63100010001019710198
AUTHOR: Zverev, A. T.*; Kitayev-Smy*kq L. A.
!TITLE. Effects of short-term weightlessness on the nervous system
,SOURCE: Xon~vrentstya po aviatsionnay L komdabeekoy meditainso 1963-
Aviatsioanays. i kosmicheskays meditains, (Aviation add apate medicine); materialy*
.konferentaiio Moscov# 19631 197498
TOPIC TAGS: weightlessness. nervous system, performance teat, angular accelera-
tiont Coriolis acceleration
ABSTRACT: Experiments were performed in order to determine thiiability of men
to perform certain types of tasks under conditions of weightlesiness. The tasks
included responding to lights., numbereq and needle indicatproo igh I apt
If a 1 t it
the subject had to connect contactso If a 3-digit figure 'appeared, he had to dial
the number on a telephone-like dial, In the came of the niedle indicator, the
subject had to maintain :it on center,while the needlo deviated according to a
progrwmed tape* In work with contacts* when the aircraft was gathering speed,'
execution time van reducedl daring inintial excess 11 oxecution time became still-
Card 1/2
ACCMION NRt AT40202
Aens; during weightlessness it became greaterg often greater than, the initial
level; during the second excess S it disialehed,once more'l and'd4ring the second
level flight it increased. Execution times for work withi3-digit numbers followed
the same pattern* The magnitude of error in work with keeping the needle indicatorl
,on center was 1*5--2 times as great during initial and post-weightless overloads
~ as it was during level flight* During weightlessness,' the magnitude of error over
level flight increased by a factor of 3-4, When subjected to angular accelem-
tiona# the magnitude of error increased by 10-15%. During cariolis accelerationeg",
'the margin of error also increased in'aU stages'of flightq tut'L was particularly
marked during weightlessness when it increased $- to 10-fold. Theme objeotive
data contrasted with:subjeative evaluations of the subjects Who1elt, that it was
pore difficult to work during excess S than during weightlessness.
ASWCTATION: none
-SUBM s 27sep63 MCW 00 com La
0
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Card 2/2
;t
4
ACC NR, ATGO12903 SOURCE CODE: UR/0000/65/000/000/0245/0252
~e7
AUTHOR: Mtayev-Smyk, L.A.,- ZverevA T...
ORG: none
TITLE: The Influence of short-term wMahilessness and the combined action of weight-
lessness and angular and Coriolis acceleration on some functions of the h6man
operator
SOURCE: Sistema chelovek I avtomat (Man-automaton systems). Moscow, Izd-vo Na:uka,
1965, 245-252
TOPIC TAGS: weightlessness, angular acceleration, Coriolis 1--,aRC E . man, man
machine communication, automaton, human engineering, human physiology , v85 rj6W4,4,0
ID/ Vrc Wd'q A.J 0. E
ABSTRACT: The progress of cosmonautics has posed the problem of development of an
optimal version for the Inclusion of man , in the cosmic'i-apparatus system.~ Inthe
solutIon of this problem It will be necessary to take into account some of the specific effects
to which the operator-cosmonaut will be subjected In flight, such as if eiFbtlessna ss. Thepie-
sentar*clew~as written as part of the program of investlga~tlon of the activity of man
operator subjected to weightlessness and to the combined action of weightlessness and angular
and Coriolis acceleration. The conditions of weightlessness were created in an aircraft in
parabolic flight, with the duration of weightlessness lasting for 28-30 see, preceded by and
followed by G, force up to 15 see. -In some tests, weightlessness was established without
Card 1/2
ACC NR- AT6012903
being preceded or followed by G force application. It was found that an Increase In the time
of motion reaction and a rise in the error during operation In weightlessness may be the
result of known disorders of the function of the visual and motor~analyzer, as well as a
disorder in central integration. - The difference in the direction of the variation in the time
of the motion reaction during weightlessness and G force may be compared to the con-,
trasting variations In the muscular tonus in these conditions. The substantial decrease in
the quality of work of the operators, and the appearancb of vestibulovegetative disturbances
in them during the combined action of weightlessness and Coriolis acceleration, which,
first of all, Influences the vestibular apparatus, confirms tho opinion of many authors that
weightlessness primarily promotes disorder in vestibulax function.
Arreductionintheperformance quality during weightlessness and angular ani
Coriolis acceleration, furthermore, may promote a variation In *the coupling between the
human body - and the support, i.e., 'the seat. The character of motion is. undoubtedly
affected by the absence of - the weight of the extremities and the trunk.
T
, his, according to the authors, primarily explains the reduction In the time of putting on and
taking off the parachute harness in conditions of zero gravity. In an evaluation of the data
obtained it is necessary to take Into consideration the fact that during the first 30 see
of w& i gh tl e s snes s, the processes of adaptation and stabilization occurring in the
neurop~ychic, cardiovascular, and other systems of the organigm apparent
are not completed, Orig, art, hasi 3 figure3 and 2 tables. E08)
SUB CODE: 05/l/ SUBM DATEs. 02Aug65/ ATD PRESS t,6-dg)"
Card 2
16(1) PHASE I BOOK WLQXTATION
sov/2936
Zverev, Anatoliy Vladimirovich
Hyady Furlye i integral Furlye; lektsiya 01ya studinto* zaocbva
VTUZov (Fourderls'Serie'a and Integrals; Lecture for Students of Correspondence
Schoks of Higher Technical Education) Moscow, 1958. 46,p.
3,000 copies printed.
sponsoring Agency: 'Vaesoyuzn~y zaochW politeithnicheskiy in.stitut.
Kafedra vysshey matematiki.
Ed.: F.A. Bakshiyan,-Professor$o Beep. Ed.! P.A. B4j*iyan, Profeesor;
Ed,, of Publishing Houser I.I. Bank, Tech. Ed.: P-G.Iobrov,;
PLWOSE: This booklet is intended especially for corresymdence students.
COVERAGE: *The booklet presents the essentials of the materiel,and gives a
sufficient number of seleeted problems and examples Uhich Lt". practical
application. It also contains a discussion of the Fom~ier Integrai, an
understanding 6f which is necessary for students of the energetielo
Card 1/3
Fourier's Series andtIntegrals; (Cont.) Sov/29~6
and electrophysicaX departments. The booklet is one of ibe chWeri of a
general. textbook on mw%ematical analysis written. by the departnerit. of
hijher*mathematics'at the'41-Uaion Polytechnic Correspondence Institute,
No personalities are mentioned, There are no references
TAKE OF CONTENTS;
1. Concept of a Periodic Function 4
2. Simplest Periodic Fu~nction- Sinusoldal Value -(ffarmonils) 51
3- Various Properties 0~r'.letegrable Functions Widih d*Alte #sed
in Studying and Practicing the Applicati.on ot Fourier Series
4. A Fourier Series and CcmPuting Its Coefficients 16
5. Half-range rourier Series 20
6. Examples of the Expansion of Periodic Functions in a'Fourier
Series 21
Card 2/3
Fourier's Series and Integrals; (Cont.) ~SPV/2936
7- Expansion'of a Function Defined on the Interval (0, 1) In a
Half-range Fourier Series I . . I III N
questions and problem for self checiting 33-
8. The Fourier Integral 35
Problems for independent solution. 40,
9. Fourier's Method of Solving a Wave Equation and Relit
Conductance Lquatioh 41
AVAILABLE: Library, of ConVess
LWAPP
Card 3/3 3-10-60