SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT LAVROVA, V.V. - LAVROVSKIY, K.F.

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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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SOV/66-59-1-2,-,,32 Cold Stora-e Houses and Artificial Skiiting Rinks in'the CSR air being blown doyen from the top of the door and sucRed up at the bottom. Th-ure are 24 artificial ice skatin-rinks in the CSR. Tt tahas 6 to 10 hour's to freeze the water in the rink. The froezing pipes are laid in concrete at a diGtance of 85 to 100 mm from one another. The specific loc.d-for covered rink3 is 250-300 kgcal/m2 and for open kinks 150 - 200 kgcal/M2. Ice thickness is 2 cm. Skating-rinks with brine freezing system last about 10 years. There are 3 photos. Card 3/3 LAVROVA, V. V.I.Cand Tech Sci (diss) "Experimental research into heat-exchange coefficient in theboiling of freon-12." Leningrad, 1960. 14 pp with illustrations; (Ministry of Higher and Secondai-f Specialist Education RSFSR, Leningrad Technological Inst of Ref-rig- eration:Industry); nwnber of copies not giveni price not giveni (KL, 28-60, 161) BADYLIM, I.S., prof., doktor takhn.nauk; BUKHTSR, Ye.Z., inzh.; VEYNBMG, B.S., kand.tekhn.nauk,- VOLISKAYA, L.S., inzh.; GERSH, S.Ya., prof., doktor tekhn.nauk [deceased]; GUREVICH, Ye.S., inzh.; DANILOVA, G.N., kand.tekhn.nauk; UPIROVA, Ye.Y., inzh.; IOM, D.M.. kand.takhn.nauk; KAN, K.D., kand.toldm.nauk; JAVWYA.-Y-Y,,I. inzh.; MEDOVAR, L.Ye., inzh.; ROZ W ZLID, L.M., prof.. doktor tekhn. nauk; TKACEIEV, A.G., prof., doktor teklin.nauk;' TSYRLIN. B.L.; SIRIK&LISRSKIY, M.G.. inzh.; SHCHERBAKOV, V.S., inzh.; TIKOBSON, V.B., kand.tekhn.nauk; GOGOLIN, A.A., retsenzent; GUEMN, A.A., reteenzent; KARPOV, A.Vev retsenzent; KURYI23V, Ye.S., retsenzent; LIV&iITS, A.B., retaenzent; CHISTYAKOV, F.M., retsenzent; SUMMIN, A.Ye., retsen- zent; SHEMS HED INOV, G.A.. retsenzent; FAVLOV, R.Y., BpOtered.; KOBtIUSHVILI, Sh.N., glavnvy red.; RTUTOV, D.G., zam.glavnogo red@; GOLOVKIN, N.A., red.; CHIZHOV, G.B., red.; NAZAROV, B.A., glavnyy red.izd-va; NIECLAYAVA, N.G., red.; EYDINOVA, S.G., mladshiy red.; HEDRISH, D.M., tekchn.red. (Refrigeration engineering; encyclopedic reference book in three volumes] KholodilInaia takhnika; entsiklopedicheskii Bpravochnik v trekh knigakh. Glav.red. Sh.N.Kobulashvili i dr. Leningrad, Gostorgizdat. Vol,l, [Techniques of the production of artificial cold] Tekhnika proizvodstva iskusatvenno.vo kholoda. 1960. 544 P. (MIRA 13:12) (Refrigeration and refrigerating machinery) AMMAMOV, S.V.--(continued) Card 2. 1. Vaesoyuznvy institut rastaniyevodetva (for Sachkarev, Lizgunova, Br9zhnsv, Gazenbush, Heshcharov, Filov, Tkaohenko, Kazakova, Krasochkin, Lavandovskays, Shebalina, Syskovaq Makcanhava, Ivanov, Hartymv. Girankot Ivanovap Shilova). 2. Gribovskaya ovoohohns7a salektsionnaya opytuays stantaiya; chlen;r-korrespondenty VaesoyuzMDy skademii sel'skokJ4ozyaystvennykh nauk im. V.I.Lenina (for Alpatlyev, Solov'Yeva). 3. Daystvitellnyy chlen Vaesoyuznoy akademii sallsko- khozyaystvannykh nauk im. Y.I.Lanina (for Brezhnev). (Vegetables--Varieties) BOBKOV, Vsevolod Andreyevich,, kand, tekbn. nauk, starshiy naucbMy sotr,; ~LAVRO~VAV.~V. kand. tekbn. nauk, nauchnyy red.; EAPIMIJ M.S., red.; MAMONTOVAI N.N., tekhn. red. (Automatic ice machine for making crushed kitchen ice; scientific report) Issledovanie avtomaticheskogo 11dogeneratora dlia proizvod- stva droblenogo pishchevogo I'da; nauchnoe soobshebenie. Moskva2 Gos. izd-vo torg. lit-ry, 1961. 31 P. (MIRA 14;12) 1. Vsesayuznyy nauchno-isoledovatellskly institut kholodillnoy pro- mysblennosti Im. A.1 Mikoyana (for Bobkov). i1ce-Manufacture) BRUT, Darlya Semnovne; LAVROVA, Telene Anton-ovna; DMMUTS, S., red.; VJMICHKO, M., , -- [Handbook for students entering the special secondary schools of the Ukrainian S.S.R. in 1959; as of March 1, 19591 Dovidnyk dlia vatupnykiv po serednikh spetsiallnykh uchbovykh zaklsdiv Ukrainalkoi RM na 1959 rik; za stanom na 1 beresnia 1959 roku. Kyiv, Derzh vyd-vo tekJm.lit-ry VRSR. 1959. 250 P. (m"A 130i (Ukraine--Technical education) 28 (5) AUTHORS: Britaket If.: SOV/32-25-8-26/44 TITLE: Application of the Photo-electric Stylometer FES-1 for the Analysis of Noneonductive-Powders PERIODICAL: Zavodakaya laboratoriyal 1959, Vol 25p Nr 6) PP 970 - 971 .(USSR) ABSTRACT: Por comparison 'a non-resolved beam'of the are is being used in the instrument FES~-I' which causes difficulties in the analysis of powders.. Therefore, a light filter was inserted in the chan- nel'in the present case, which filter permits the passage of only a narrow wave-range of the spectrum. To stabilize the in- tensity of the spectrum the blowing-in of the sample method ac- cording-to A. K. Rusanov was applied. Sodium is Used as inner standard. Determinations of lead$ zinc, and copper on ores and flotation residues of the lead-zinc production were made (Table)2 the influence of the blowing-i-in velocity-, of the current in- tensity of the are and the chemical composition of the sample were investigated and it was established that these factors do not cause an appreciable displacement of the calibration dia- Card 1/2 Application of the Photo-ol6ctric Styl:ometer-FES-1 SOV/32-~25-8-26/44 -for the Analysis of Nonconductive Powders grams~(Figure). There are 1 figure and 1 table. w ASSOCIATION: Gosudarstvennyy inatitut tavetnykh metallov (State Institute . of Non-ferrous Metals) Card 2/2 SAMONOVA, K.A.; TRATRIN, A.D.; IAVROVA,,-)Ca.M.,- Responses to our articles. Zashch. rast. ot vred. i bol. 6 no.6zll Je 163. (MIRA 16:8) 1. Zaveduyushehaya-sektorom sluzhby ucheta i prognozov Rostovskoy oblasti..(for.Samonova). 2. Nachaltnik otryada po zashchite rastedl- Sorochinskogo proizvodstvennogo upravleniya Orenburgskoy Afor Tratrin). 3. Zaveduyushchaya Urzhumskim nablyu- if~tellnym punk-tom, Kirovskaya oblast' (for Lavrova). (Plants, Protection of) p SUIRT, Ya.YU., IAVROVA, Yo.Y. Use of eemonovocillin for preventing pneumonia in acute catarrh of the upper respiratory tract and in influenza in children. Antibiotiki 1 no.6:34-36 N-D 156. (MLI?A 10:2) 1. Datakeya konsulitatsiya i poliklinika 0kruzhnoy moskovskoy dorogi. (P.UUMONIA. prevention and control, procaine penicillin with eamoline, prev. of pneumonia in common cold & influenza (Rus)) (COMMON COLD, therapy, procaine penicillin with eemoltne, prev. of pneumonia (Rua)) (IMIUBUZA, therapy, same) (ANTIBIOTICS, therapeutic use. ecmoline with procaine penicillin, prev. of pneumonia in common cold & influenza (Rus)) (PENICILLIN, related compounds, proeaine penicillin with acmoliua, prev. of pneumonia in common cold & influenza (line)) Q~ip/,!T'l p"rof.; IAVROVA. Ye.V.-, LITVIUOVA, U.N. Prevention of focal pneumonia during influenza and acute catarrh of the upper respiratox7 tract in children. Sov.zdrav. 16 no.12: 35-39 D '~?- (MIRA 11:1) 1. Iz detskoy konsulitstaii i oolikliniki Okruzhno Hoskovskoy dorogi. (11FLUENZA, in inf. & chold compl., focal pneumonia, prev., ekmoDovocillin (RUB)) (ANTIBIOTICS, ther. use ekmonovocillin in prev. of focal pneumonia in influenza & upper resp. tract infect. in child. (Rua)) (PNICUMONIA, in inf. & chold. prev. in influenza & upper reop'otract infect., ekmonovocillin (Rue)) AUTHOR: --D~VLo-va,-Ye- V. 31663 S/570/61/000/019/003/008 B104/B102 TITLEs Geographical distribution of ionospheric disturbances in the F2 layer SOURCE: Akademiya nauk SSSR. Institut zemnogo magnetizma, ionosfery i rasprostraneniya, radiovoln. Trudy, no. 19 (29), 1961, 31 - 43 TEXT: Under the program of the International Geophysical Year, the IZMIRAN Institute evaluated data on the critical frequency foF2 in 19 11, In September of'that year, seven magnetic storms occurred. The deviations t afoF2 (in %) throughout this month were determined. The disturbances in the P2 layer begin long before a magnetic storm occurs in high lati- tudee. As the magnetic storm develops, the disturbances spread to medium and lower latitudes. Several anomalous regions above the earth were discovered, in which afoF2 is considerably higher or lower than in their neighborhood. These "centers" are shifted during a magnetic storm. The following pattern is proposed on the basis of an investigation of the Card 1/3 31663 S/570/61/000/019/003/008 Geographical distribution of ionospheric.... B104/B102 motion of these centers and of &foF2 charts& One to three days before the magnetic storm, small negative centers (20 - 3* of AfoF2 appear in high latitudes, which are usually accompanied by positive centers in lower latitudes. As the magnetic storm starts, the negative centers are moving southward and extend over a larger area. During the magnetic storm, the area of negative AfoF2 covers the entire area between 45 and 650 north latitude. The negative centers are then situated either over Candda or over Europe. In December 1957, no negative centers were observed over the Far East and the Pacific. As the magnetic storm further develops, the positive centers in lower latitudes are replaced by negative ones. Total absorption was observed in high latitudes almost during the entire period of the magnetic storm. Toward the end of the latter, the latitudinal dis- tribution of negative disturbances is distorted, and positive centers appear in the South Pacific. Recommendations are made for the evaluation of results for short-range weather forecasts. ~The results obtained here need further verification. There are 3 figures, 2 tables, and 4 non- Soviet references. The 4 references to English-language publications read as follows: Burkard, J. Geophys. Res., 56., no. 4. 595) 1951; Lawrence. J. Geophys. Res., .58, no. 2, 1953; Sinno. Rept. Ionosph. Res. Card 2/3 66 S/517(0 611000101910031008 Geographical distribution of ionospheric... B104/B102 Japan, 8 ' 28, 1954; Obayashi. J. Radio Res. Laborat., Tokyo, .1, no. 6, 55, 1954. Card 3/3 m: AM023T36 SOURCE CODE: ttR/2831/65/000/014/0066/0093 AUTHOR: Mpgileyskiy, E. I Zevakina, R. A.; Lavrova, Ye. V.; Lyakhova, L. ORO: none \Q~ TITLE: The nature of time-space distribution of ionospheric disturbances SOURCE: AN. SSSR. Mezhduvedomstven= Seofiziclteskiy komitet. V razdel programwj MGG: Idfibs?Fra~ Bbornik statey, no. 14, 1965. 1 ifernyy i1sledovaniya., 66-93 tOPIC ,TAGS: -"ionospheric disturbance, solar wind, F layer, geomagnetic field solar plasma, critical frequency . solar corpuscular radiation, -atmospheric ionization, Atmospheric disturbance, ionospheric absorption, synoptic meteoroldgy'Map ABSTRACT: ionospheric perturbations are associated with solar corpuscular streams .,and the xwgnetosphereAYAn increased disturbance in the F2 layer at high latitudes is 'connected with additional -ionization and structural disruptions of t e lower ionosphere. Data obtained from 60 ionospheric stations during the IGY-Itere used in analyqie of the spatial distribution of anomalous absorption in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Absorption maps have been drawn and compared with solar processes, ionospheric disturbances, and perturbations in the geomagnetic field. Anomalous absorption begins several hours-after a type-IV radio burst and covers the polar cap and the auroral zone. During weak absorption, preeminent "shock zoneall and quasi-spiral regions are formed allowing direct entr7 of high-energy solar corpuscles. A corpuscular stream model with a forceless magnetic field was used for ionospheric disturbances. A forceless magnetic field is a necessary Card 112 LAVROVA, Ye.V. Geographical distribution of ionospheric disturbances in the FZ layer. Trudy IZMIRAN no-19:31-43 161. (MIRA 15:3) (Ionospheric radio wave propagation) (Magnetic storms) 1112L~- Krmnn, MG=SKIY, Ye. I.; ZEVAKINA$ R. A.; LAVROVA,, Ye. V.; KYAKHOVA., L. N. lion + the Nature and Space - and Time - Distribution of Ionospheric Disturbances." summary to be presented at.the 13th Gen Assembly, IUGG, Berkeley, Calif, 19-31 Aug 63 LATMVA, Z., That Is. bo'w valuable varieties were developed. Hau)m i pered.op. v sellkbox. 8 no-Ils-71-73 N '58. (MIRA 11:12) (plant brooding) IAVROVA* Z.,agronom ... -.- First Russian women agronomists. Nauka i pered.op v sellkhoz. 9 no.3:71-72 Mr '59- imm 12..5) (Women as agriculturists) LAVROTA, Z., agronom ReCent developments in the treatment of vegetable needs before planting. Hauka i pared. op. v sellkhoz. 9 no.4:14-16 Ap 159. (MIRA 12:6) (Vegetable gar4enlng) I LUBHILOVI N, , agronom; UVROVA Z. . agronom Advice to gardeners. Nmika i zhyttia U no.3.'51 llx 162. (Gardening) OIRA 15:8) LAVROVA. Z.P,.,,, (Moskva) . -.- I .- - - Causes of bitter taste in cucumbers. Prlroda 52 no.9:101-102 163. (MIRA 16:11) t . - ) V/V- LAVROVA-BALASHOVA, M. F. Cand Biol Soi -- "Isolation, lool Oin i tio and study of oertain ohemioal properties of the imi tib 0 Mos, 1961 (Aced Med Sci USSR). (KL,4-61, 192) -130- 6,4 03 11 r ; 11 4 U 14 , n n 11 16 00 1 0 JI 1) a Jd 10 30 v x P a 41 a 43 ad a 4 *00 at, '101qt ..vt. ' - The V$pWjv ocewnuo of Io&b&ml-Altk-ndm- -%;_SJA%:iUWWAL ' tint If9l" 1010 1 (Itm A7 QW1029) 4 h f t 04 i , . . f t , ; b *of SSWO i TSWIGN , pies v,,,ts j')utttj (N1 ttte 1cit lutlk .4 lie 1111ti wrte rxalll.l. ?%)rr chwwlv~ Two Rv. Palt, 3 1 S 0 (P" P C . ' (I and H) frm vukma umim"c" "t"M A&RAlyfe'l- I 00 t n e m 97 I N .03 7 0 ~A . _ 0 . 000-1 0 00 04 00 so coo so 4r ~00 Wj btTACkbft6LAL L11111411,41 CLA%101(41�Cw s' -c e (I tv it COO 04 IN A 9( 5 w a 0 0 0 0 a K a n it Is n I 1y4 Op 0 00 0 0 000 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 4`0 000000&0000000060 - ~ w is is v a " a I" n aw b w v a 39 oil 1111 No by upost 4uumlsze ai-p-A 'AL-1A Aj 1 -00 ol- OOKIILII AIO ItIll!!"L I.! r 0 -90 u, of a, ty. L , V. I. LkWITM AXV N. S. LAYRivlm- * Mi l i IOU s D5 M 0- iwa . s r s I OV10): Chm. Zrxtr. IWII, 1. 2w e III v Soo coo eq. -*a 00 COO coo 30* Uz- i =00 11,00 aftill ~A $it It u a A,# 10 A; " 0 '1 or of 3 Aa3aI KXT-7- 0 it It a (A ait aof u Cl it It "D AI?A 0 0 , 0 * 0 0 goo 0 : 0000 00 090 00 * 0 0 T'ses a 0 * 0 OIT400 * 9 00 * ID IV 06 000 : 9 0 * 00! 0 190 0 0 0 9 0 000 0 1 2 1 4 1 4 1 111 11 If U IS t1k UVIA t#JDZIU 33345 MIYUM fill USS 149 bit UPP40 41 41 41 &1 430 --A S. r aa I a 9 L A v 4 to? 0.0 J~ at - - - ------- 09 so 00 JOHN A. 00 teP0111ft 09 =&gb~" 14 S6Dth UML %. S, LAVItOVIC35 Awl) 1). YA. Afi-ml. SWW416.453-W1931). C'TIAIL BLANC 00 =00 0 41' 2T 0 roe u0 kv 0 %Ollie) .41 jet !o alla I or M#L-.) tj a 3, 1, 10 1%,4 it It 0g go 0 a 0 4 0 000 0 0 a 0 0 0 a so go It Is go* 60 Vp Mil WAM03INX304141 do 0 A.0 obapeallis I.W. cbm. propaiks of fiLwdtt drpWts and ecoomakel Simi trauspnostion a*wt4 ipt minint are 4iwuwd. C. D, I mS L a 041ALLkWAAL talasual CLASUPKATWO lie- sires&- se"Vo -0 1 191403 40 a" cog 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 v 0 0 0 0 ist .-D Ito cooM JIMC www-Ait- I Ar at I, A 0 .1 0 9 4 0 0 w 0 coo see be* Rf 9000*00990064P* lip' A 03 j 1 4 1 a S is u to sp A 21 D -a J~f is V? A it jpjI iju jab ifl? ilips; 81 All) 644,40 I A - W - ... -is cc, CP -11. A-4- .1-9- cm:'fel ele 0 010 00 Fluol'au depouts in OA&t*M 11`4111-HAIIIIII. N. S. 00 00 1). -Thc vurisiu, dw,ritc dep4mits atul t1jor *41 Ell 1-111, and thv.. prujivrti.4 air 00 all 00 a Zoe roe *0 jk 00 0 0 0 1,90 -mItA%.LvM4KAt LITIOA1014 CLOSIPPICATION tjo 0 .8 61c,I two II.. A.". it Qv #lisll) iiiiIII am C., lt~ 00 JA A S a &d 0 0 u is AT so U]" A 1, it a It a a It x w 00 0 00,144 0 1 : 0 00 00 000 a 0 o : : : 0 :!: o : : : : : : 0i a 0 06 0 a 0 It 0 0 0 00 0, a 006069990000 go 0 : o0 a 0 00000000*0 0 0111100 0 0 0040 000 97 ~ 44~ Soo 0 & 0 I wjiP,- it a 13XIa 9 11 Ill 13 its 1003030441 A A-Z -2-4-1 AK L a AAL 00i A'. its ist *-!p Isq, "t-tot -is So. tis .v 00 -00 SO A now flibodle depait Uplar sedlawayi station an the 00 9. No. 4. 44(IIU4). 00 004 064 -00 SO 8 .00 *00 0.0 =00 coo rob SO OOW goo 160 Got SON ~;oo Soo ~00O sit, 0 0 0 '.00 1:00 Asal.ska pt I ALIVIMICAt LiTtlAl "I CL &%%it Khlf*$- !Woo Wo AnIIaad 0-. .--1 ie -i0 As Is u AV It 4ma 0009OV66060646*00*000 00041104111000000coooo 09; Oooooolooooo*oooooooooo~loo-goooosooooooo*ooooo 001A 1'e C;- lav i BRITATIT, M.D., redaktor; GERASIMOVSKIY, V.I., To or; 0 , A.D., redaktor; KONSTANTINOV, M.N.; NIFONTOV. R.T., glavnyy redaktor; SAAKTAN. P.S., redaktor; SMIRNOV, V.L. redaktor; SOL0,11m. b*'V*, redaktbr; CHMOSVITOY, Tu.L.. redaktor; SOMNIKOVA, H.S., redaktor vypuska; SARGEYBYA, N.A., redaktor izdatel'stva; AURKIUVA, T.Ap,'tekhAi6heskiy rddaktor. [Fluorspar; (fluorite).] Plavikovyi shpat (fliuorit). Moskva, Goe. wmohno-tekhn. izd-vo lit-ry po geol. i okhrane nedr, 1956. 133 P. (Otsenka mestorozhdonti pri poiskakh i razvadkakh, no.16). (71norite) (MLRA 100) 7. Sh* ti-efrOf of 40~j d clay-time 2tr-jCtjrzI maw-izt&-.F- P. 'Bvj)- KULALR, fjoklzidy -,;,*!jd- Noul S S S R . 87 f6l weTe car. riml Ou! with kaolin, clays and triprAi Thc addition of lear clays and argillaceous so;ls to a lane-sand raixture improves Lhe physical properties of the 5truclural material steatiaLd under pressare. During stemming under prmure~ the iree sifica. whk-b is fmcly dispum-i in -ilm clays~ -7- -vilioutisi tbM h1irti i4 iiiiitrl to a smaller extent A definite !rlationshlp exists t*tween the ex, pallsion of the hrr&L-Clay Structural Material during its wetting, the frost resistance, and the amovnt of cakciurn hydrosilkate k4" M Cd CUY con;Pontats on ~ ~ ik iit d r d t to P B d Me P ' oub- n l . u o t . . ". ly p li &'.UVMV lail'i'D , :1 ~: -Rup. SUMA liudop Va AL 447 -YI)h Shod. Makriall* 103, lio. 6, 3-14, U T Rt ' Zhur., KkiM. 1954,-ND =99; Cf. C A 49# treqfth showed that-addn., of camprenlon. a Of lwwasW eby irwreastt the strengtbvherew addn, of, . MUSIC 406ciratilm CIS- fMC Of SAnd IDWM. the Strength Of CC Tkirmogru~hk investipfl=.sbowed that after jk lyeatirg inliM Of 85% quartz smd and 15% Ilme with steam them vria au endothm;ual effect at 18D and at~exotbermtl effect at 9001:~ A deam-treated mixt. oi ka*Un 02 mid Ilme 8%' bid im endothtimal effect at SM'.* ThesnitabffitybfaravC suaterial for limeoclay. brick deptua-landy on its minerav Ogled CoMPA 77 b'z a I jai a 1c, tiom of the teractian of dRY miner with lime under. hydrothermal, trestmesti .1. M.- rpars ~r . xxllcr- and: 0.: S. LELvrovkb. Sb 'is - I - - I - I I vr~ik- pu - - ~ Na"k I 1-20; zhar~' KUM, 193S. No. mr ti6n vras carried out undu C=dltlani of autftlave, ; - b f i Eme-cl ~'. uixieving-o As stsult a the iatdAdlon y bfla 9 Of CACOU X with washed uttiminerel chys. Ca hy4rosilimtes nd C h h d w a - ruviluminates rwe formed. W en na"a a y '4ayi "d lizue react. first to rtut a q tz saud ?be" Uar ! Prith lime d6iJnds extent cl tbt intffattiO4.61 CUY MintIT113 I an the *ecific -surf= a! the quartz sud In the day. When tbt~cohtcpt of finely difPersed zand in list thy is hIS11, then the, formation, of ~ the vM vating: s6stance, is: attrfttaWc PrImadly, to the sand. Hoseh IAVROVSI Mlarats; VAIDERS. Leo; KRILDVA, N.9 red.; ix2,IBERGA tekhn.-red. 1 .9 A.) [Viruses] Virusi, Riga., Latvijas FM Zinatnu ak-aderi-tas izd,-,v- nieciba, 1961. 72 p. d (VMSES) (MIRA .15:3) a,*= 80911M- Y. %',vvvvd" AM G, Vsxk S.S.Sj M of 01, .~ - &tam vdina U -0 imms d&aW M nn w~ p _ &W 6nd. by The rise d On temp. an tk;;Si d a BN v apillary connected with the, disebarga tube. Pv to , UC3, or KeHA. fairly intirow an sairlaces coated with; so's qyAtcnd 14, Zn0.Crj%. or ASNOb. The temp. n-4 mauss, pnevically cool. wkb The danadas Irm i u 6- 0 It i h 3 OW l h i ,: 43 . sm. to m s arp y at t nt wk s. r at pa btr ' decreaviat prnsm. On Pt. the cavese of the temp. wkWa an cupMary 0 a, da, temp. of the extarml w&U b amb or about 30M. at 40 miftimp., of the code of IDWOK. &I the. date. as sad the dtpu of dissocu. -y for differtnt ues IND 0 3W-M -M-sap- It. at this stav. the carrew b t I ' of E. Possak vWu" of -f. ie. 7 < 100%. Cormpum. 0u as dire" b 5100 4 F < MM f t 0 O C s R off. OW a low CWTVIII Of 40 C~Mkwp. is WtdW M wbge r o ace, . a vAr ; , y a zQ r# o e qq~* ft temp. bbIlins, tbeclItso &-va"M theawat "W dam.,y - W70%. am Lu E - UM a 100 cal./mok ajul I 0 A d A k d 3 400 thtlowcass. listwattlea; ' F h i la b 2 R u ca a. . . r sa - t. E - 4M an 0.-0 I of the f;co~ubinzdon of If atoms on ZnO.CrA at "' 00 e te=P. cont Dues to to a ., t oat 0 at mn own . 410,x the temp will rim to tkw forsoff IDWIX. ~ TbM ' aft" E --~ _WW, so -.0-3. The pro-txponentiall factor . . mi. W;S CM ia~ Int3sper ed to ft bub of Fraa. has the und Agnifirsuct, of a -Wwt of a sterk factor and ' 00 it Kamess"Okils tMory of bit-.%.-, 4he but evolnd per awl thoe bein 0, an CF1,7 + b). 1S). 91herv No. of C'41WOM; a a* (ob'rrmkj)(S P a Do. of won points PC cm. M MI', of the Atorn, ' M ke~ - when 0 C430M. cc 0 *taw at a amagi 1 hion the star. ornotric aurf"-v AFCA. tkw X MW J, rvP .. the trur P_ dw *aid. JV/ becaw, with *a' - 1. P - 100. for I't a ms 410A 40, for XnO.CrA IM. test of tht formula to givrn Ass to 0 Sao" vO.Snv - -- a&,&, _3990M. M *0 a'. 0 i~ V. 79 :4 a MIT ~ * al, '" 0 16 41 9 e 0 411 0 04 94 W w1j" 10 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .'-,W*_.OZAjW7O_A_O 0 11-41:01,411, 0 iIIII-1354-66.0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 tISM/Chemistry - G" Kinetics S eip 51 Catalysis "Reactions of Atoms of Hydrogen and Oxygen on Solid Surfaces," G. K. Lavrovskava, V. V. Voye~- vodskiy, Acad Sci USSR, Inst of Chem Phys, Mos- cow State U imeni M. V. Lomonosov Zhur Fiz Khie Vol XXV, No 9, PP 1050-1058 Studied recombination of H or 0 atoms into mols in. the folloving systems: H + Ft; 0 + Pt; H + ZnO.Cr2O3; 0 + Zno-Cr203; 0 + Cr203; 0 + M90; M003; 0 + M003; H + carbon; 0 + ZnO; H ZnO; LC 192T4o USSR/Chemistry Gas Kin ics (Contd) Sep 51 R -f Cr203;'O + PbO; H + PbO; H + MSO; 0 + quartz; 10 4 K01 on quartz; H #. X0407 on quartz; H or 0 + MCI, LiCl, or HNOI on glass. Describes methocls of depositing astalyst, conditions of cowftrsion (including occurrence of the so- called "burning surface.." i. e.,, a sharp rise of ~,~tenp to 1,0000 and bLigher), and other observa-' tidns. LC P4 USSR/Chemistry - Isotopes, Hydrocarbons Nov 51 "Hechani= of the Exchange Reaction of Ey'drocar- bon Radicals Vith Molecular Deuterium," V. V. Voyevodskiy, G. K. Tavrovskiy, R. Ye. Kardaley. shvili, Inst Chem Phya, Acad Sci USSR "Dok Ak Nsuk SSSR" Vol LXXXI, No 2,pp 215-218. Annumes that high dog and speed of introduction of D atows, part4pularly intv' CH 'radical, are due to participation of D2 in adan to that of the fev D atoms.in tbe''reaction. Investigated inter- action 0 radicals vith D2 In the absende of f C2U5 l9qT6 LMR/Chesistry - Isotopes Hydrocarbons. Nov 51 (contd5 D 'itbcis .Found there'vis siibstitutf6fi in CH2 groups 6f-ethyl: 'fi-butane substituted in the CH2 groups could be isolated. 199% LAVROVSKAYA, G. K. USSR/Chemistr7 - Catelysts Aug 5 2 "The Recombination of Hydrogen Atoms on solid Surfaces," G. X. Lavrovskaya and V. V. Voyvodskly, Inst of Chem Phys, Acad Sci USSR Zhur Piz Xhim, Vol 26, ro. 8, Dn 1164-1166 A study was made of the recombination of H atoms on MoO3, aluminosilicate catalyst, and activated carbon. The probabilities of recombi.-iation on thene catalysts were detd and found to be related in the ration 50:5:1- The correctness of the mechanism nostulated.for the recombination of the atoms was confi-rmed, The principal ;hase of the rechanism is the interaction of atoms absorbed on the surface with atoms approaching the surface. 263 T 11 LAVROVS..-AYA, G. K. "The V chanis-n of TSot5n xchancre in ~Ivl Rad;cal .1, __e _iC . irdro-en E. '7CF I Cand Chem Sci, Inst of Chem cal physics, 'cad -71ci UZS:-,, A-, 51-- ak- Nauk SSSR, Sep 54) SO: Sum 432, 29 'J%r 55 AgTO EN'N FREE I ridleal rclzrll=a Ace- arv roi:cflow af rald-i- 0 ft- IlossibLIttylof chuig me-cholirra in t V. Vorvoti-kil, C, K. Lavmvtkuya, ~nlj AA - bf -Uv~ iveT&fu Pam YA -11w 9vt -Its at6idati6t pre:vturc d C'31apa. '01 the tirwUlilill t1liAl, I fe mlijl~ 4vtA),,t s,~dicL t;f V . . . H tpc r, ~-,naavd, the 11 1 . i 1 1 % : I , I P ! ;, .- I 4244~ 2 - - ~, ~. ~- -.- ~ , 7-177177~~ AUTHORS: Lavrovskaya, G. K., Skurat, V. Ys., Tallroze, V.L.,20_),,_27/5'2 Tantsyrev, Go Do TITLE: Mass-SpectroBcopic Investigation of the Products of Discharge in Steam (Mass- spektro skopiche skoya issladovaniye produktov razryada v parakh vody). PERIODICALt Doklady AN SSSR, 1957, Vol. 117, Nr 4, pp. 641-644 (USSR) ABSTRACT: The here discussed measurements were carried out with a mass spectrometer specially constructed for the determination of free radicals and atoms. The peculiarity of this apparatus is the introduction of the mixture to be analyzed into the ion source in form of a bundle of molecules. The molecule bundle is here coaxial with the ion-bundle. The system of the form- ation of this molecule bundle and the scheme of the connection of the apparatus of discharge with the mass spectrometer is demonstrated in a diagram. Further particulars are given on the design and calibration of this instrument. The authors then discuss the results of the mass-spectroscopical measurements of the concentration of the atoms and radicals in the discharge- -products formed in the steam. Measurements were carried out at pressures of from 0,5 to 4 mm torr. and with a discharge Card 113 amperage of from 100 to 150 mA. The intensities of the Mass-Spectroscopic Investigation of the Products of Discharge 20-4-27/52 in Steam, currents of ions 11 and I" for m/e . 1, 2, 16, 17, 18, and 32 were measured. With a steam pressure from 0,5 to 1,5 mm torr., H-atoms and the free hydroxyl, but no O-atoms were observed in the discharge. An evalua:tion of the sensitivity of the apparatus show that the concentration of the O-atoms is in each case smaller than the concentration of OH. O-atoms were observed with an increase of pressure to 3 mm torr. . The results of these measurements were slim arized in a table. The intensities of the current of ions I depend only on the atoms H,O and on the free hydroxyl. The concentrations of the atoms R and 0, as well as of the free hydroxyl are numerically given. The mass spectroscopic measurements confirm the ex- istence of an important concentration of O-atoms in the pro- ducts of a discharge in steam. At least two processes must contribute to the occurence of O-atoms with this discharge: Oe + H 20 -.+ 0 + H30' + 58 kkal/mol; OH + H20 0 + H 30 + + 47 kkal/mol. With an increase of the pressure these pro- cesses must play a steadily increasing Aole. There are 2 figures, 2 tables, and 13 references, 8 of which Card 2/3 are Slavic. Mass-Spectroscopic Investigation of the Products of Discharge 20-4-27/5-0 in Steam. PRESENTED: May,-16,.1957,, by V2. 11. Kondratlyev, Academician. SUBMITTED: April 28, 1957 AVAILABLEs Library of Congress Card 3/3 5(0), 24(7) sov/63-4-2-4/39 AUTHORS: 0 ., Candidate of Chemical Sciences, Skurat, V.Ye., Tallroze, V.L., Frankevich, Ye.L., Candidates of Physico-Ma-thematical Sciences TITLE: Application of Mass-Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis PERIODICAL: Khimicheskaya nauka i promyshlennost', 1959, Vol 4, Nr 2, pp 154-163 (USSR) ABSTRACT: Mass-spectroscopy employs two methods: a static and a dynamic method. The first uses r~ectria and magnetic fields for the separation of ions, the second alternating fields. Molecular mass-spectral analysis is applied to substances which are easily evaporated, e.g. alcohols, al- dehydes, organic acids. Multi-atomic Molecules show a great number of spectral bands. To avoid this difficulty, ionization by low-energy electrons is recommended CRef 5-8-7. Group analysis is made use of in the analysis of petroleum fractions containing aromatic and sulfur compounds. In these cases the bands are placed one above the other so that differentiation is difficult L-Ref i1,7. These complex mix- tures can be analyzed by combining mass-spectroscopy with chromato- Card 1/4 graphy CRef 15, 161 and in infrared and ultraviolet spectroscopy Applic~tion of Mass-Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis SGV/63-4-2-4/39 Z_Ref 17-18.7. T-he composition of analyzed mixtures is determined by absolute or relative methods. The absolute graduation coefficients vary in every spectrometer, the relative coefficients are more stable. A measure for the content of a substance is the "complete ionization" which is the sum of all band intensities of the spectrum of the mix- ture. Recently electronic computers have come to be used for calculat- ing the composition of mixtures Ref 24 7. Mass-spectroscopy has also been used for the analysis of esterifieCfatty acids,.condense~es from industrial fames from the atmosphere of bi cities, etc Z Ref 29, 3o_7, metals ?R f 31-33 7, etc. The dis- for the determination of gases in e tribution of the band intensities usually corresponds to the structure of the molecules. The theoretical calculation of the band intensities is possible only for the simplest case, i.e. the molecule H2. A theory of the mass-spectrum must still be developed. The kinetics of chemical reactions is determined by taking samples at the beginning and the end of the process or by the continuous method in which the reacting mix- ture is directly passed into the ion source of' the mass-spectrometer. The last method can be used for the determination of intermediate pro- ducts, like free radicals. The use of low-energy electrons avoids the dissociative ionization of molecules. It has been proposed to use Card 2/4 photoionization, because the monochromatization of light is simpler Applioatlon of' Mass-Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis SOV/63-4-2-4/39 than that of slow electrons Z-Ref 9.,7. Free radicals are passed into the area of ionization in the form of a molecular bunch in order to avoid reactions with metal surfaces, etc. The mass-spectroscopy of free radicals is applied on a broad scale. It is also employed for the de- termination of ions in the flames of hydrocarbons and hydrogen Z Ref 91, 92_/. A system for the determination of the composition of free radicals has been developed by the authors fRef 73, Figure 3_7 * RecentlZ the cross-sections of ion-molecular reactions have been determined ~ Ref 98, 99-7. Levina determined the izotopes, of Fe, Zn, Mg, N1, Cr, Pb and Sb by means of mass-spectroscopy ZRef 10-- -7. Solid bodies are evaporated in a vacuum spark. In substances with low ionization potentials sur- face ionization may be used. Admixtures of lo-3 to jo-5%- may be de- termined by these methods. This is important. for the production of semi- conductors, pure metals, etc. Mass-spectroscopy is used in the USSR for the control of the evacuation conditions of ele2trovacuum apparatus Tantsyrev controlled -the purity of inert gases by this fRef 116 7 method. Improvements of the method consist J-1-1 the application of new cathodes, e.g. a thorium-iridium cathode fRef 9_/, and the utiliza- tion of an electromet-ric amplifier, a secondary electronic amplifier measuring currents of less than 10-15 a. In the USSR the mass-spectro- meters MI 1301, MI 1305, MKh 1303 have a resolving power of 400 - 600, Card 3/4 the apparatus MV 2301, a power of 5,000. Application of Mass Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis STr/63-4-2-4/39 There are 3 diagrams, 2 tables and 126 references, 36 of which are Soviet, 55 Ehglish, 11 American, 8.Canadian, 5 German, 5 Belgian, 3 French, 2 Swedish and 1 Polish. - card 4/4 86746 S/120/60/000/006/ozl/o43 9032/951~ Y.L., D.kabru., L.L.. Franhavich. 0.D.. T.r.f.r. Y IQri bl. V D . . , . .. . TXTLH t The, PMC-2 (X~0-2) ken. Designed for gtadyiag~chaa~icnl-RA&cticaa -ad the D.twr%Ln&tln or True, Ra"Cal. PSAXODICALT "Ory I takb.Lk. k.parlaugat., A_160 x A do b1: waS.*tjc -.o-mp.ctraa,. t .r designed for study- TUT,..,I ' th I a on n it. 0-0. ph..* ad. A. V . , t ti.-IM r-r the In O=stlo: or free radicals Is described. Two O.tbods or* us" to Producs the Ions. IN the first ..thd the nixt-. to be &"IYD*d is lowited by charge transfer to specialty produced Ions. The Latter are forued in a separate too Can by means of electron `b*ftb-d::*t and are wa.-malys.d In . small, magootto xx the 0 1 4 "Uld the I.tur. under .... Id-tic. A. lanksed ly 4 . ,1 ,treat ontron bam,Uardnest. 1. ; scklov~od by a P.tba. based an that reported by fox at al. The &w. from the -roact.r. is int-4.904 Ant. the Ins, Our.* Is the card 2/6 a- The PmC a (W0.2) momm Spec tr.awt-d~r-b-"- Ajiiid-roi Studylax,cheftLea Rosati.; and the Dateralmat"m of From Radical. ram of a mal*cuZar be" which Is mechanically LutOr"Pt" cr. IS dl.tioati.. to the ..thod deocrib*d by Fee- knone fr*que and Rod*.* ( ef.s). 11 nal-lar ad or ; perpendicular. is re. to. the twe be- OX. skimb ao- "Ller wattages or* soce-sarl rar the tkat a to r of I free. the A X1,stion region and At is possible : the intonIty of the b:ckground ws*A-.p*ctVaa- A pOrticul (in the part of the 1m.trument 1. tb or t%. pro.sat : ope6trea.ter) r star. such a the tab"Isatio per" . I : t.r ties . . aesolor-Uns 1t& . the voting. --Fplying the d t " g "dosion e~rmt Or the Jos gas Zatb*d.. ead the supply war th ing, son, go cathode. This ". described by the C--d Or the ad froM 20. The usea.unueberm or: d PC: ..at watrr. tKa :!:mlb d 'I tar. Itkk the . kmawl.48. or th &a to old which in urn A w old or a Bell probe (germanium crystal). The basic mass p"tr*- arr goon-t savloy.4 in shown 1. FIX-2- Product of matrA ; .r..Ct.r- X eat. the L abuml I M aclass taking tb z. regl" ZX through a wMell op t or. the this glean dl-Phr-g-8 Card 2/6 . rc,e or a be-. Thl- O,ol-cclar be- is C.llimi.ted tl' 1% g. 6 uhich Operates t - "I-s 11 r"u ftrtb.r by the 4j pb" the region In sbi b I jenti.. take. pl.... A -,.able across 7 : : dI.phr^5,w 6 and let:-Pt. the ..I.ealor th fra t r n, L. * is pla . *f by :arge transfer. n ;. th .:. , . t 3 c 1 S'O . 1 , ; : T. X. too boost . 1. goI t d An I*p: ex. prod .. Z b 7vrL.&" fermod there 1. -a- analysed 1. the 60* _C..ti. maely.or 11 Prl-" A . be". e-*L~ - which has a warkI.z radium or 100 - 'rb , , lag Or loss of the ro4vir-d so.0' ij.r .the be- ad :: or io.k..tic,n by -100troft a the cA charm. transfer to&-. PI---. X t 4 ... 'Jb-d by the first , th an onto *, I,,& the O~C. a : t: A" ''- r t ,he,. A "a fourth or the pro a .9 electron be-, t;. "PI 7*4. The Ion curr:ut 7 is -0t 'b P-r ' be- b' chop Ad.t. amplici.r r . .. t or is 0 .-.d .tb; . ::. m An the *Pee O:t br .1 the ck.. c,- r by an *I. r t an ltipl! n: :, , . A it t... or. at . th as , : .0 a all- t .ca to, 1. ; 300 t; J50% before the Operation is began. A. an iLl-.tr-tl*- Of Card $6746 a/lao/60/000/006/021/043 9032/X514 The PMG-2 (W0-2) Km. Spectron.ter 0..1... Studying Ch-Lc.& Reactions and the Daterinatl-or Pro. RadicL1.10" the -*:!"!; 11pli::t t M. 1-trumet. data or. quoted as tb fornst. free di In the pyrolysis OXV*rim-St. the hydr..Ln*...t:rod free . ,.:.f Th. C.Pill.ry ... heated f which the hydrasine :ev, temps Stu . do "P. ad Into nitrogen, hydrogen, anamonta and am. ...*.big F.::r and mudson. Rer.18). Fig.? the distribution products ( o hw: or Liao tat ltLOm Is the 0646-mpe%trua of hydr,xi : obt !a 1:4 by tb:.Gb"XOtr*mnf.r ..th.d using UH' I... f-m-d r: assa: . Th. pr r. the *Sure. wa. 5 1 10-5d. Us Ind the prow.- to the olsa-ber~ *r the o"ll ."Iys.r no. % x 10- - US. For cs.p.rj.... the dottod It.. bows th . ..... pact 7 obtained as b-b.rdls with 50 ~V electr no. Fig. a shows the intensity d I:tri- hF't'LwSl:b.L..l odor statist, *,d!tl*n t.~.O-C (dtt.d It...) an " 0 k.. As t or. .pr-wd to 4 -2!*C !:..Ati. on ) . d.:., To. z an a, 0. T. To " 0. G. 0*1-. N. X. X-0, and N. 1. Narki. far ...Lot ... :dl; this work. There are 8 fl&-Aroo and 20 r.f.r.m-l 11 S.,i.t -S-L.t. Card l&/6 -0 PMC-2 CrJIS-2) X.. Sp.etro..t.r D-ig.sd far Studying Ch"Ic.1 Ra.ctlons and the Deterxinati.n or pro. Rod .-L. -~ASS~CXAT`IONI X"titut khLoichoskoy fLsLkI AN SSSR (Institute of Ch-Ic-1 Physics, AS. USSR) sus)aTTZD , O.t~b.r 15, 1959 Fix.2 I r"ct0r- III - IOn gun, IV SmOll nagnOtIc anoly.or. V lArte negnatic analy.or tZA i. , 77,rl~, 71 card -3/6 --ZG32/z5l% Th. Pmc-a ('RM'-2) Xas- SpQct"-Ot;r.Dssign::Lfor Studlo,& Chwaje&j Reaction. and the Dt.rmin.tl- of r .Rdi . I rim.7 FIX.5 COSPA lose or am.-p.ctr. of Chars tr nmr*r was. b7dr.'in:.obt.ln.d on else tron of hy:r. -,-::.tr: 8 t boals. (dotted) and charge Lti- pr t rds trans far rr- M to-. (full line.). (dotted) end 2$*C (rull line). X.Y2 r.Z. lnt...Lt~.- 12 t! --b . r. -------------- Card 6/6 20.98.9 s/1 95/61/002/001/003/006 ,9 20 1 o2 B101/B216 AUTHORS: Lavrovskaya, G. K., Markin, 14. 1., Tallroze, V. L. TITLE: Exchange of chaxge between ions on complex molecules PERIODICAL: Kinetika i kataliz, v. 2, no. 1, 1961, 21-37 TEXT! Processes within the enerizv ranae 10- 1 to 10 1- 102ev involve two elementary processes: (I) exchange of heavy particles and molecular regrouping, and (II) exchange of charge which may be accompanied by dissociation. Process (II) which may occur in the case of comparatively slow ions has been little investigated as yet. The present work was undertaken with a view to clarifying this process on complex systems and establishing the extent of competitive occurrence of (I) and (II). It studies the exchange of charge between monoatomic and polyatomic ions in the energy range 10-500 ev. The mass spectrometer used is shown in Pig. 1. Primary ions produced in the ion source 1 by ionizing gas with 60-ev electrons were accelerated to 110-500 ev and separated according to mass in the magnetic analyzer I (angle of deflection 600, r = 100 mm). Ions of specific mass were passed through the collector slit 2 (2x 8 mm) Card 1/15 20989 Exchange of charge between ions S/195/61/002/001/ V'03;'~306 B101/B216 into the charge exchange chamber 3. The secondary ions formed in it were deflected at right angles to the beam of primary ions by a weak magnetic field extending into the chamber, accelerated to 1500-2000 v, and separat- ed in the magnetic analyzer 11 (600, r = 200 mm). In chamber 3, gas ionization could also be excited by electrons emitted from cathode 4. The vacuum in the charge exchange chamber was 10- 6_ 5-10- 5 mm Hg. The primary ion current was 10- a- 10-7 a, measured by an electrometer amplifier (a). 5 is an electron multiplier tubet 6 are the deflecting electrodes. Charge exchange was measured on CH C H H C H CH COCH 1 4 P 2 60 C3 63' C2H4P 3 6 f 3 30 NH , and N H . As primary ions the authors used (1), NH NO+. CH + + + + + , CH , Ccl , Xe , Zn , Hg+ (for which tha;*xeoombination energy 4 3 3 1; was lower than the ionization potential of th'erriji-Olecule), and (2) He+, Ar+, N 2+, H+, H2 +, H 3+ (possessing high recombination energies). The experimental data are listed in Tables 1-5. The first columns of these tables indicate the values of m/e in atomic mass units, the potentials Card 2/15 20989 S/195//61/002/001/003/OC)6 Exchange of charge between ions B101/B216 at which ions of that mass occur being given in parentheses. The second columns give the mass spectra as obtained by ionizing the respective molecules with 60-ev electrons. The following columns indicate the mass spectra as obtained by exchange of charge with the ions listed in the first line. The recombination energies are given below the symbols of the primary ions. The amperage I of the secondary ions is given relative to the sum of amperages of all ions produced. The thermal effects of ion formation also appear in the tables. The last line refers to the relative cross section calculated from arel ~ a/(OA+ - A) = = iA+(dI/dP)/i(dIA+ /dP A)' where iA+ denotes the current of primary A+ ions, IA+ the current of secondary A+ ions, i the current of primary ions, I the sum of currents of separated secondary ions fromed at exchange of charge of the primary ions on the respective molecule, PA the argon pressure, P the pressure of the gas under investigation. The mass spectra were taken with primary ions of energy 300-500 v, and a potential of 206 v applied to the drawing electrode. It was found that in the energy Card 3/15 20989 S/195/61/002/001/003/006 Exchange of,charge between ions B101/B216 .range 101- 103 ev the~transition of kinetic energy to internal energy by charge exchange becomes.easier with increasing complexity of the molecule. The cross sections of the charge exchange processes are, therefore, considerable even close to the threshold of endothermic .,processes, and must be large for exothermic processes, even at low temperature. Consequently, these processes are of considerable importance in real systems (radiation chemistry, reaction during discharges, ion formation in flames, processes in the upper layer of the atmosphere). Basing on these results, all ion-molecule interactions may be divided into processes with and without formation of a long-lived intermediate ion. One of the two mechanisms is realized depending on the kinetic .energy of the collision. The authors thank A. K. Lyubimova and A. A. Bulatova, Technician, for their assistance, G. K. Karachevtsev, Student, for cooperating in several experiments, and Academician V. N. Kondratlyev for discussions. N. N. Tunitskiy, Ye. L. Frankevich, Yu. F. Bydin, and A. M. Bukhteyev are mentioned. There are 5 figures, 5 tables, and 23 references: 9 Soviet-bloc and 16 non-Soviet-bloc. The 3 references to English-language publications read as follows: E. C. Melton et al., Card 4/15 ......... 20989.. 113/195161/002/001/003/006 Exchang6 of charge~betvjeen ions B101/B216 J A -Chem. mero 0 Soo L6 9 1302.9 1957; F. 11. Fie 1d, P. 1-7. Lampe, J. Amer. Soc.:,. ~Rov _ '5587P 1958; -D. R. Bates, Proc. 22, 1960. Roy. Soc., A2 .,ASSOCIATION. Institut khimichookoy.fizi.ki AN SSSR (Irlotituto of Chomioal. Phynilas of the AS USS SUBMITTED:, October 31s 1960 Card 5/15 4 2 13/044 6T/20O0/OUO/O06/129 D290~D(307 AUTHORS Lavrovskaya, G. K., flarkin, M. I. and Tallroze, V. L. TITU-: The elementary processes of charge transfer from slow ions to polyatomic molecules SOURCE: Trudy 1I Vsesoyuznogo soveshchaniya po radiatsionnoy khi- mii. Ed. by ii. 3. Polak. Moscow, Izd-vo Ali SjSk, 1962, 48-51 TEXT: The authorp utudied the process of charge transfer from SlOW i0IIS to JIILIltiat0MiC molecules in many different reactions in order to infer char6e tranofer cross-sections at thermal ~,,nergies in endot1mrinic reactiuns or to deduce the behavior of the cross- sections near the t1ireshold energy for endothermic reactions.*The effects were investigated of He+, A +, Xe+, N+, H+, H2 +, H 3+, NO + + + + + + 12 iffl CH t CH I an p Zn+t Hg , and other ions on molecules 3 3 4 3 such as OH41 02H69 02H49 COW 03H61 (CH3)2COI NH3 , NA, and oth- Card 1/2 The elementary procesLjes 6/p44.1/62/000/0j0/006/1 2j J2)0/D307 ers; the energies of the ions ran~,,ed from 10 to 1000 ev. A special double mass k3,~ectroiaetur wau used. The authors discuss the v:ay in which the experimental results provide evidence for the occurrence of dissociative charge trariGfor, the ease of conversion of kinetic and internal energy, the efL'~'eCt Of t"o presence *of metastable ex- cited ions in the oricrinal beam, and the formation of complex in- U termediate ions. It is couciuded that the ease of convers-ion of kinetic into internal energy and vice versa increases sharply with increasing complexity of The molecule and that, therefore, the charge transfer cros8-sections in exothermic reactions become lar- ger at thermal unurgies. '.L'here are 2 fi-ares. ASSOCIATION: Institut xhimichesKoy fiziki AN JJJR (Ins~titute of Chemical Physics, AJ USSR) Card 2/2 A JAVROVSKAiA, G-.X.; *RKINI t,1.; TALIROZE., V.L. Using th~ ion recharging method inthe mass opectrom4r4c daterminatio of radicals formed in the pyrolysis of acetone, di-tert-butan peroxIde and hydrazine. Trudy K m-a"T khim. 13:474-482 163. CkRA 16-5) 1. Institut khirdeheskoy fiziki AN SSSR. (Radicals (Chemistry)) (Mass spectrometry) ACCESSION NR- AP4016514 S/0026/64/154/005/1160/1162 AUTHOR: bPmmskqya,.G.- K.; Skurat, V. Ye.; Tallroze, V. L. TITLE: Radiation synthesis of xenon fluorides SOURCE: AN SSSR. Doklady*, v. 154, no. 5~ 1964, 1160-i162 xenon difluoride, xenon TOPIC TAGS- xenon fluoride, radiation, tetrafluoride, Infra red apectrum, xenon fluorine radiation ABSTRACT: A mixture of fluorine and xenon*as irradiald with a 1. 6-Mev 'beam of electrons (electron current 30- 40 micirocqps , 10 mm. Hg pres'sure reactor liquid-air cooled during reaction). AMr irradiatiamunreacted F and Xe were measured an d remove& from the reactor vhlle cooled with liquid nitrogen. After removal ofunreacted gases, the reactor pressure at room temperature was 3 mm. Hg$ coriesponding to the valxr WC*bs=O -Of XeF2 and XejF4,. , After i remaining in the reactor, the Xe fluorides decomposed to F and Xe. Xenon reacts to the extent of 30-50%. The xenon fluorides were identified by their IRI ACCEdSIONI NR: AP4016514 spectra; it.waq found that XeF2 bind XeF4 were formed to a lesser extent. The radiation dose was about 3000 m~garads.. The radiation yieldt based on xenon consumption, is 0. 4-0. 7; the came yield is obtained with larger doses. Orig. art. has: Itable. ASSOCIATION: Institut khimicheskoy fiziki, Akademii nauk SSSR (Institute of Chemipal Physics, Academy of Sciences SSSIR') SUBMITTED. =43-, DATE ACQ: 12Mar64. 'ENCL: 00 SUB CODE: PH, CM-., NO REF SOV: 001 OTHER: 017 . .......... . 1cand 2/2- EPSHTRY11, YA.A.; LAVROVSKAYA, N.F. Nffect of Ionizing radiation on protein metabolism in fish. Biokhimila, 24 no.4:592-599 JJ-Ag 159. (MIRA 12:11) 1. Hadiobiologicheakaya laboratorlya Vaesoriznogo nauchno- lseledovatellakogo Instituta, ozernogo I rechnogo rybnogo khozyaystva, Leningrad. (COBALT radioactive) (BLOO PROTEINS radiation eff.) (FISH radiation off.) EpSjnynp Ta.Ae; AVETIKYAN A.; ROGOZ HNI KOVAP V.M.; ARTEMOVAl A.G. Biochemical changes in the organism of the carp produced by the administration of antigens. Biokhimiia 25 no. 3:427-435 *-ge 16o. (KUa 14:4) 1. Research Institute of Jolm and River Fisheries and Institute of Experimental Medicines Leningrad* (ANTIGENS AND ANTIBODIES) (nSHES-PHYSIOIA)GY) 5(3) 950) SOV/62-59-9-32/40 AUTHORS: Freydlin,- L. Kh*# Gorshkov, V, 1o9 Lavrovskayal To Ko TITLE: Selective Hydr~ogenation of Acetylene Bonds Conjugated to Ethylene Bonds on a Zinc Catalyst rERIODICAL: Izvestiya Akademii nruk SSSR. Otdeleniye khimicheskikh nauk, 1679-1681 (USSR) 1959, Nr 99 pp ABSTRACT: In the present paper the catalytic properties of zinc in reactions of conjugated double bond systems are investigated. The following compounds are investigated: Isoprene, piperylene, vinyl- and isopropenylacetylene. The method of investigation and preparation of catalysts are described in reference 3. The course of the reaction was determined by means of the number of moles H 2 consumed. At normal pressure and temperatures between 60 and 1400 :Lsoprene could not be hydrogenated. Thus it is concluded that the hydrogenation reaction on zinc catalysts does not proceed beyond a system of conjugated double bonds. The reaction products were analyzed by means of gas-liquid chromatography. Chromatogra.~hs and analytical data are given in. figures and in table 1. The zinc catalyst proved strictly selective. Vinylacetylene was hyaro- Card 1/2 genated only to divinyl, butane and butene were not formed. Selective Hydrogenation of Acetylene Bonds Conjugated to SOV/62-59-9-32/40 Ethylene Bonds on a Zinc Catalyst By a side reaction, polymers formed, owing to the rapid deactivation of the catalyst A 75% yield was obtained under optimum conditions (800, 93-9% H2 , 6.1% vinylacetylene). On a Zn-Cu catalyst vinylacetylene was hydrogenated &own to butane. Results and experimental conditions for the hydrogenation of -isopropenylacetylene are given in table 20 Isoprene was the final product. There are I figure, 2 tables, and 7 Soviet references. ASSOCIATION: Institut organicheskoy.khimii im. N.D. Zelinskogo Akademii nauk SSSR ( Institute of Organic Chemistry imeni N.D. Zelinskiy of the Academy of Soiencesq USSR) SUBMITTED: February 27p 1959 Card 2/2 5.3620 77409 SOV/D-30-1 -70/78 AUTHORS: Balandin, A. A., Marukyan, G. M., Seymovich, R. G., -Lavrovskaya, T. K., Levitskiy, I. I. TITLE: Catalytic Dehydrogenation of 2-Ethylthiophene PERIODICAL: Zhurnal obshchey skimii, 1960, Vol 30, Nr 1, pp -,21-'224 (USSR) ABSTRACT: Catalytic dehydrogenation of 2-ethylthiophene at 500- 60o0 over copper-chromium oxides, copper-iron oxides, and copper-iron nitrates forms 2-vinylthlophene. Accord- ing to the multiplet theory, catalytic dehydrogenation of the ethyl group can be represented by the following: UFF--C1111 S I Card 113 t. Catalytic Dehydrogenation of 2- 77409 Ethylthiophene SOV/79-30-1-70/78 where the reacting atoms, In contact with the catalysty are within the square. The reaction was conductlez! in a flow system (at the space velocity of 0.15-0.--18 hr-1) at.- atmospheric pressure in presence of water vapor and car- bon dioxide as well as In absence of these diluents. The product was collected in a -ieceiver provided with a con- denser and analyzed by bromometric titration, making a correction for bromination of the thiophene ring; the gaseous products, collected in a gasometer, were analyzed in the Orsat apparatus. ~2_~he 2-ethyl~biophene (bp 135.0-135-50 (741.5 mm); nD 1.5130; d4 0.990) was submitted by Ya. L. Golldfarb.7 Best results were ob- tained by dehydrogenation at 525-5750 using copper-iron oxides as catalyst. Under these conditions, the de- hydrogenation was not accompanied by side reactions, such as breaking off of the side chain (only O.2-O.:J" of unsaturated hydrocarbons--saturated hydvocar-bons wei-e not determined--were found it) the gaseous prodLICtS), and Card 243 yielded 50-60% of vinylthlopliene. Addition of CO~) Catalytic Dehydrogenation of 2- Ethylthiophene ASSOCIATION: SUBMITTED: 77409 SO1,T/79-30-1-70/78 enhances decomposition (resulting in .6-2.8% unsat- urated hydrocarbons). Preliminary experiments have shown that under rhe conditions of the experiment the thiophene ring is not opened. There are 2 tables; and 19 references, 11 Soviet, 2 German, 1 U.K., 5 U.S. The 5 most recent U.S. and U.K. references are: Ch. Walling. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 70, 1543 (1948); Synthetic Rubber, N. Y., 694 (1954); W. S. Emerson, T. M. Patrick, J. Org. Ch., 13, 729 (1948); Am. Pat. 2689855 (1954); Hartough Howard, Thiophene and Its Derivatives, London, 02 (1952). N. D. Zelinskiy Institute of Organic Chemistry (Institut organicheskoy khimil imeni N. D. Zelinsl~ogo) December 22, 1958 Card 3/3 S/062162/000/011/009/021 BIOI/B144 AUTHORSs Balandin, A. A., 'Marukyan, G. M., Lavrovskaya, T. K., -77 Seymovich, R. G., and Gryzlova, L. TITLE: Catalytic dehydrogenation of chloro-ethyl benzene -PERIODICALs Akademiya nauk SSSR. Izvestiya. Otdeleniye khimicheskikh nauk, no. 11, 1962, 2031 -2036 TEXT: Chloro styrene, an important raw material for polymer chemistry, was obtained by dehydrogenation of chloro-ethyl benzene on a mixed oxide -1 catalyst at 6000C, volume rate 0.2 - 0.35 hr .. The dehydrogenation was, carried out in a continuous apparatus; the chloro-ethyl benzene was di- luted with water vapor or C0 ' Preliminary.tests with chloro benzene 2 showed that it was not changed by.the catalyst in the presence of water vapor whereas about 50% of it was disintegrated to benzene and HCl in the , presen ce of H2' The catalyzate, which contained UP to 36% chloro styrene and, on heating, formed a solid polymer, was analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography. The chromatograph contained a detector for thermal con- ductivity, the column was filled with diatomite and 15% dinonyl sebaoinate Card 1/~ S/062/62/000/011/009/021 Catalytic dehydrogenation of... B100144 as solid phasei-and nitrogen was used as carrier gas. The analysis was made at 1300C. For deciphering the chromatogram, mixtures of possible components of the-catalyzate were subjected to comparative chromatography. Ethyl benzene could not be separated from chloro benzene. The chromato- graphio analyaia of nix vxporimonto yioldod (in % by woight)i- oomponition of the initial substance: o-ohloro-ethyl benzene, 48-57; p-chloro-ethyl benzene, 43-48; ethyl benzene, 0-4. composition of the reaction product: benzene, 0.1-0.8; toluene, 0.1-0.8; ethyl benzene + chloro benzene, 1.7 -13.2 (the-higher values with CO 2 as diluent); styrene, 0-5-7.71 (the higher values in the presence of CO 2);chloro toluene, 1.0-4.0; o-chloro-ethyl benzene, 28-5-44-3; p-chloro-ethyl benzene, 18.06-33-5; o-chloro-styrene, 10.1-18.0; p-chloro styrene, 8.2-19.3. There are 4 figures and 4 tables. The most important English-language-references ares S. Freeman, Analyt. Chem., 32, 1304 (1960); H. Nadeon, D. Oaks, Analyt. Chem., 33, 1157 (1961). ASSOCIATIONs Institut organicheskoy khimii im. N. D. Zelibskogo Akademii nauk SSSR (Institute of Organic Chemistry imeni N. D. Zelinskiy of the Academy ef Sciences USSR) SUBMITTED: April 3, 1962 Card 2/2 BALAWDIN, A.A.; HARMAN, G.M.;-LAVROVSgAXAA__LX.; SEYMOVICH, R.G.; MYMVA, I..V. Catalytic dehydrogenation of chloroethylbenzene. Izr, AV WSR, OW.khim.nauk nooU;2031-2036 N 162. (MIRA 15:12) I* Inatitut organicbeskoy khimil im. W.D. Zelinskogo AN SSSR. (Bmzene) (Dehydrogenation) LAWW'sill-Ml, 11. 1% "Antigennyye svoystva asvotsirovannykh valtsin. Xateriuly p obi;et-lu oj.~,tuv.. mezY.du institutarri elFidemic1cl-ii I llrr~pc-.rtief- rf` t' ." Yatr;ria'LE:.for lpiercha--n c' E7-eriercrj -7'.-f-tween the lr:&tit.-ute;3 of Vaccine3, I &- Epider-io-locy and EicrobioloE' ' I Y), IS, -48-4C, I9q,8, -I- LAAMOVSXAYA, V. M.) IVANOVA) 14, A. and ZHITOVA) 'Ill , 1, "Filterable F of Bacteria.." Sbornik Trudav Gorlkoviskogo Instituta .I Epidemiologii i Mikrobiologii, Gorlkiy, 1951 IAVROVSKAYA, V. M, jun 53 USSR/I*dicine - Dysentery "Correlation Between Some Biological Properties of Flexner Dysentery Bacillip" V. M. Iavrovskaya, Gortkiy Inst of Epid and Microbiol Zhur Mikro, Epid, i Immun, No 6, p 88 - tq.(-3 When cultures of Flexner dysentery bacilli are kept in agar (under a lkyer of vaseline oil) in a refrigerator, their virulence, toxicity~ and immunogenic properties are lowered, while their agglutinability increases. Not only virulent strains, but also some-non-virulent strains are immunogenic. Generally immunogenic strains are also toxic) while nonimmunogenic strains are nontoxic and have a weak virulence. In order to compare the immunogenic properties of different strains, a highly virulent strain must be used as a standard. 267T33 LLTROVISKLYA, T.M. Nt-- Changes in the properties of intestinal group bacteria upon aeration of the nedium. Zbnr.mik:robiol.spid.1 1==. no.4:81 Ap 134. (KI-RA 7:3) 1. Is GorIkovskogo Instituta vaktain i eyvorotok. (Bacteria, Pathogenic) (Bacteriology (Cultures and culture media) LWJ-11OVSKAYA, V. M. '1A Study of the Biological Characteristics of Bacteria of the Enteric Group Darin-, Cultiv3ticn Under Aerated Conditions." Cand Med Sci, Grorlkiy State Medical Inst imeni 3.111. Kirov, Gorlkiy, 19_55. (KL, No 12, 'Mar 55) SO: Sum. No. 670, 2.0 Sep 55--3tirvey of Scientific and Technical Dissertations Defended at USSR Hivher Educational Institutions (15) of al-.Jnc, 1%. w0 chroviritography. Ilsnv t wa~ t~!)Tarm7n C-C A Z-Z,tf- ,I, m,hiltil. It, Lill rtllt~ within hr, nl.p ~~r-pps-i cd fr-m the im-ilum gr- up dk~apprarauc-- of v,:rtLtr, j,~ J~ L', k %,;6N,%:: 4.. T11w K;z.,:z4- im tl,,c atmzncr. of giuK%--C ill the mi-i'liuw., d;4.1 V-~b(:= gjj7t~l-,e W:11 M-2 E-r 4 ;j ppca-.cd j-! tl-,c p-, v~mirt of Shic-ora. Durlqg mmizu- car ~~emOon of Om muthum., much gre-atcr c:f zii- -a,tfc i3cid, E-, id, M-11ne, at-i jr, !~~r aj I J In: grOW111. imhoz-I ai,~v ing i ," &~201,lapphmwlll LO CJ -LA'VROVSKAYA., V.M.; BLANT, M.Ys. udy of the cholera antigen. Report No-4: Effect of the initial ', N culture of Vibrio cholerae on the quantity and specific activity of ant-11gen connlexes. Zhur. mikrobiol., epid. i immun. 41 no.1;108-i!2 Ja 164. (MIRA 18:2) I. Gorlkovskiy institut epidemiologii i mikrobiologii. -W#W# "Is 20-r#61#16 woes lee of mWcWy In organk, 0. Korshun and H. V. La Nhim 3i , modifimum of the lWtWi procedure (C.A. 33, I='). The chsotics made in the packing of the cumbubtl4m tube snake it suitable for dctg. Hit rrS;~rdk-%s of other tknicut~ -0: iisch a bottle filled combustion train com Th t e . prese p b ti b d fl &Cl l sorp- us on tu e, an a owmeter, a com with ,,a d d d 9e uatc a cra tion, tube, a CAC1, tubeb a AlAriatte 9446, an ed with metallic. , The ctinthuxtiori tube Is char li d cy n cr. g 21$ C A O ll l- u ic # W, meta C%A tat), it Cu opiral W. PbCr , - h Vi jaw roilted Ceramic 40 min. At cath end of the tube = of "ed quartz tuWaS. The Jig there Is a plas absorjition tube is Made of LrAmparcut quartz HU Min. 00 is long. It comiltz of a &)-Mtn. portion having an internal diam. of Sb min. and a 2D.mm. portion having an internal diam.oflmm. The wider portion of" tube istined for *a 20 mm. with sWps of Au foil. Weigh a 3-6 mg, sample and the adsorption tube. Place the sample in the com-' " Ali bustion tube which has been heated to 700* and pass N through the app. at a rate of 4-5 mt./min. Ileatwitha - trring ends and then move it movable burner until & toward the metallic Cu packing. Increase the flame and ' rthrat this pon"tol ibetubc. Whrnallthellg6driven frous the combustion tube beat the end of the adsorption h h It i A f ii C t f i d i ve t nto t e e u u . oo or 3 m n. Iubc to r s and pass3ouxul.ofdry ulrut a rate of 7 mi./min. Wcigh the adsorption tubec. M. Mich todo too Alia-SLA KT&LL4jWAz& LMRATWS CLAUNKATM too to a aw Doti 0 V 16 AS t is 0 4 0 9 A 0,1i 1 9 I r141 f 0.04-6 000 0 0 Oe 0 4 : d., , , , _111-0111 111- 0 0-0-0000 40 &UL a a Ask ft LAVROVSKIY, A,,A.; PISHVANOV, Z.I. History and present state of mamals on the islands of the Caspian Sea. Zool. zhur. 41 no.9:1386-1394 S 162. (~aRA 15~11) 1. All-Union Research Institute "Microb", Saratov and Anti- Plague Station of the Azerbaijan, Baku. (Caspian Sea region-Mammals) w LAVROVSXIY, A. A. 42211. LAVROVSKIY, A. A., SHATAS, YA. F. - Prichiny kolebaniy plodovitosti malogo suslika (Citellus pygmaeus Fall.) Materialy X. Doznaniyu fauny i flory SSSR, Izd. Mosk. o-vom isp tateley prirody, Novaya seriya. Otdel zool., VY.---. 1, 1948, c lc.l.-2C2 -Biblio7ri Y 15 nazv. SO: Letopis' Zhurnal'nykh Statey, Vol. 47, 1943 IA"ROVSKIY, A.A&-, SHATAS, Ta.F. ~~, , Causes of fertility fluctuations in the lesser sualik (Gitelbas pygmeus Pall.). Hat. k pozn. fauny i flory-SSSR. Otd. zool. no.17.- '191-202 '48. (MIRA 110) (Suellks) (Fecundity) XALVP --* SHATAS, YaJo AffAULroh*4 0 .Namti% balbaoina In Dogbestsm [with lkglioh eumms7 In Insert) , Zool,zhur*35 u94BM54-1259 Ag 9560 (MM 9:10) I.Dagestanakaya prativoohmnan tantelyao' (BaShestan-Ram:ts) IAVROVSKIYJA. A. (USSR) "Reseach of pulsations of area). boundaries of animals in relation to present regression of the Caspian Sea. (in Russia)" report presented at the Intl. Sympcoium on Methods of Theriological Investigation. Brno, Czech., 4sept. 196o LAVROVSKIY, A.A. Recent changes in the landscape-faunistic complexes on the shores of the Caspian Sea and the effect of these changes on spreading of plague epizooties. Zool. zhur. 41 no.2:252-259 F '62. (MIRA 15:4) 1. All-Union Research Institute "Microbe". Saratov. (Caspian Sea region--Plague) (Cbmmu'nicable diseases in animals) Alp LAVMVSKjY keandr Aleksandrovich; KUROCHKIN, YU*Yq#.,.otv.red.; LEBEDEVAS, 'kand.blolcg.nauk, red.; BELEVICH, Ye.F., red.; ZABLOTSKIt, V.I., red.; KOBLITSKAYA, A.F., red.w LTJGOVOY, A.Ye., red.; KLIMOVA, Z.I., tekhn.red. [Wild boar in the Volga Delta.) Kaban v dellte Volgi. Astrakhan', Izd-vo "Volga," 1.962. 66 p. (Astrakhanskii zapovednik. TrOy, no. 7)0 (MIRA 17:2) LAVROVSKIY, A.A. . - _-- - . w .: Epizooiiological rolq of mixed rodent colonies at the junction of landscapes of the original seashore and the young coastal plain. Zbol. zhur. 43 no.1.98-1(y? t64 (MIRA 17 -.'1) 1. All-Union Research Institute '11icrob". Sqaratov . LATIQUElY, Technology - Bibliogr, phy I U. Books on '.ie history of national technology for students. Fiz. v shhole, no. 1, 1952. Monthly List of Russi---i Accessions, Library of Conwress, 11-larcli 1952. U!.*C'-~S"-J'IFI:-,D. LAVROIVSKIY . B *'j 0 inzhener-polkovalk. ~Books on technology. T-ekh. molod. 21 no.6-38 JS 153. (KRA 6:6) (Technology-Bibliography) (Bibliography-Technology) PHM I BWK EXPIDITATION T32 tavrovskly, BorIs Vyacheslavovich Vsesor=naya promyeblenneya natavka (An-Union Industrial Exb1bition) Moseov.. izd-vo "MmMye"t 1958. 63 P. (Series: Vsesoyuzncye obahchestvo po rwpro- stranenlyu politichaskikh I naucbnykb znazdy, Beriya :LV, 1958, nos. 2/3) 5T.9000 copies printed. SpOnsOring Agency: Vaesoyuznoye obshchestvo po rasprostraneniyu politichesikh I nauchn3ft znaniy. Ed.: Islankin . T, F,,; Tech, Edo Streletskiy., I, A, FLLFd"=: This Is a report on the A.11-Union Industrial Exhibition held in Moscow in 1956 and 195T, CNERAGE: The author descrites the industrial exhibition held in Moscow in 195T., It is said that the purpose of the exhibition Is to show the latest achieve- ments of industry, to present plans for future development., and to make Itnow to the general public the latest engineering developments and methods. Card 1/3 An-Union Industrial Mibition 732 It:is claimed that over 50PDO exhibits vere presented,, and that over 6 1/2 million people visited this exhibition., vhich included lectures., seminars., and technical conferences, The most Important topics are said to have been wtomation., mechanization., ultrasonics,, semi-eonductors., the use of radio- swetive Isotopes and others. There are a mmber of int, rations shoving stands., vigual aide,, and machinery, Them are no refe ego TANZ OF COVEM: Introduction The Coal Industry The Oil IrAnstry Mectric Pover I'letallurgy Ferrous metal2urgy Nonferrous neta.3133 gy The Machinery Industry Machine tools Tractors and agricultural machinery Transportation machinery Automation Card 2/3 3 6 9 32 17 17 21 24 31 35 37 41 M-1-Union Industrial Exhibition T32 The Use of Atomic Energy for Peseefal, ParpOSeB 47 The intro&aetion of Chemical Processes in Industry 56 Conmmer Goods 60 AVAnANZ: Library Of Congress Card 3/3 Go /Mas 10-13-58 LAVROVAly, SINITSYN, V.Pi., kandidat takhnicheskikh nauk; MALOV, N.F., kandidat takhni- cheskilch nauk; KANDRAZMSKIY, M.N.; BORMMOVA, V.D.; IAVROVSKIY. K.F.. redaktor; D2HATIYBV, S.G., tekhnichookiy redaktor (Local air defense; textbook for secondary schools and pedagogical schools) Hastnaia protivovozdushnaia oborona; uchabnoe posobie dlia srednikh shkol i podagogicbeekikh uebiliahch. Pod red. Sinitsyna. Moskva, Gos. uchabno-pedagog. izd-vo Ministerstva proeveshchaniia RSFSR, 1956. 150 P. [Microfilm3 (MLRA 9:12) (1ir defenses) PCRTNOV, Mikhail Naumovich, kandidat tekhnicbeBkikh nauk; IAVROVSKIY, X.F., redaktor; D7,JIATIYBV, S.G., takhnicheskiy redaktor [Yor the young combine operator; manual for students in grades 8-10 of the secondary school] IUnomu kombBinera; Posobie.dlia ucha- shchikhsia VIII-I klassov orednei shkoly. MOBkVa. Gos. uchabno- pedagog. iod-vo M-va proav. RSFSR, 1956. 200 p. (KERA 10:4) (Combines (Agricultural machinery)--Handbooks, mqnu~lv.etc.) BEIDGMKATA, N.I.; GALININ, D.D.;. GPUACM4N, Ye#No; GIAZYRIH, Aol.; DIJBDV, A,Go; YMOPIN, Tu#P.; YENDXWVICH, AsSo; ZVORYKIN, B.S.;'IVANOY, M.; KHAMMIS, V.V.: J6&VltDVSKIY. X.7.- MENSMU, S.F.; MISCHZMV,.Ya.Ya.; HABOXDV, Me.; :E~mykq--N-77'.T'.,'MV, PmI.;'POKROVSKIY, A.A.;' RNZINIEN, L.I.; SAKHAROV, SOMDjbV, I.I.-, SOKOIDVA, U.S.; WIMPRIX, Ms.; MIEDVICH, V.F. Sargai Nikolaevich Zharkov. [Obituary]. Fiz.v shkole 16 no-3:94-95 My-Ja 156. (Zharkov, Sergai Nikolaevich, 1883-1956) (MIRA 9:7) XMINOVSKIT, Yuriy Pavlovich; BIIYJMLI)kUl,- P.D., red.; LAMVSKIT, K.F., red.; F)MO70VA,--A,-.F.. tekhn.red. [Factory laboratagj--%avodskala laboratoriia. MDskva. Goo. uchebno-pedagog. izd-vo 14-va proav. RSFSR. 1958. 130 P. (Laboratories) NIRA 12:3.) LAVROVSKIY, Kj. (Moskva) Physics textbooks Educational State JI-Ag 157. for institutes and schools Publishing House. Fiz.v (Bibliography--Physics) published by the shkole 17 no.4:89-go (MLRA 10:7)