SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT VASILYEVA, M.A. - VASILYEVA, M.YA.

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86-00513R001859010002-5
Release Decision: 
RIF
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
100
Document Creation Date: 
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 1, 2001
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 31, 1967
Content Type: 
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86-00513R001859010002-5.pdf2.97 MB
Body: 
6 5 S/058/62/000/006/061/136 A061/A101 AUTHORS: Stepanov, I. V., Vasillyeva, M. A. TITLE: Control of the heat factor in growing optical single crystals PERIODICAL-. Referativnyy zhurnal, Fizika, no. 6, 1962, 10, abstract 6E83 (In collection; "Rost kristallov. T. 3". Moscow, AN SSSR, 1961, 223 - 238. Discuss., 501 - 502) TEXT: This is a detailed report on the results of work conducted to im- prove the techniques of Kiropoulos and Bridgman-Stokbarger, which have led to the creation of a series of apparatus for the mass growing of optical single crystals. The most accomplished design of a furnace, permitting high-quality optical crys- tals to be obtained, is described. The most important conditions of single crystal growth are the stable maintaining of the isothermal surface of crystal- lization on one constant level and its convex shape. These conditions ensure the homogeneity and the high purity of the growing single crystal, and allow high growth rates to be used. Abstracter's note: Complete translation] A. Makarevich Card 1/1 S/056/62,/000/006/059/136 A061A101 AMORSt Stepanov, i. v., Vi~sil'yeva, M. A., Sheftall, N. N. TrTLE: The effect of the temperature drop magnitude at the crystal - melt Interface on the growth of single crystals. I. Experimental data PMTODICAL: Referativnyy zhurnal, Fiz' ~ka, no. 6, 1962, 9, abstract 6E78 (In collection: "Rost kristallov. T. 3". Moscow, AN SSSR, 1961, 239 - 243. Discuss., 501 - 502) TEXT-. Experimental results of an investigation of the optimu,.i thermal con- ditions of the growth of single crystals from the melt by Tamman's method are presented. An apparatus with a "mobile thermocouple", ensuring the shift of the crystallization Isotherm in the furnace and permitting the precise control of temperature and crystal growth rate, Is described. However, the quality of the optical single crystals grown in this apparatus is not satisfactory. The Tyndall effect in grown UP single crystals has been found to be remarkably reduced under conditions of a sharp temperature drop at the crystal - melt interface and of considerable overheating (up to 250 C). It is stated on the strength of experi- Card 1/2 The erfect of the... S/058/6P-/000/006/059/136 A061/AI01 me-As.. that the sharp and signif icant temperature drop at the boundary of the growing crystdl, as well as the high temperature of the melt, from which the single .-ry5tal Is grown. are powerful factors acting very markedly on formation and en;--,utrig crystal properties. A. Makarevich [Abstracter's note: Complete translation] Card 2,12 NT~~' IT, T I Z, 07 3 2 3.' -3 '011 arric- -n junction--i m --sured -v a c--:r- as to cnsm;.-~, a cl- ;-,cc I oft: c d~"vclop,2,1 in ithe diride shc,-ldi -"-)I ex- an V cu- a; Io -ctic)n capLc:;-al-cc~ c t:;.L a 2, CU a `0 1 ovi e - 1/2 I, al _5 C Vo s C 0 C) r i:: C) or -3t, 1'o Z e Zero i j- vi S/070/60/Cy) 5/CV003/003 E132/E9260 AUTHORS:i Stepanoy I. V. Deceased Vasillyeval M. A., and Sheftall, N. X TITLE: ystals From the Melt in Conditions Obtaining Sin5le Cry of Sharply Falling Temperature PERIODICAL: Kristallografiya, 1960, Vol 5, Nr 2, pp 334-335 (USSR) ABSTRACT: The authors earlier formulated the Droblem of growing large single crystalsllin the following form: -"One of the most important conditions for the growth of a single crystal is the strict control of the direction and quantity of the heat flowing to the crucible from the melt and from the crystal. The whole thermal system must be arranged so that the amount of heat supplied at each element of surface limiting the crystallising mass should compensate its loss, with a certain small excess, except at the surface of separation of the crystal and the melt (the growing surface) which should be the place with the greatest heat deficit. In such conditions the possibilit.-., of further nucleation is excluded. The regular displace- ment of the isothermal surface of crystallisation during Caxd 1/3 the growth of the crystal and the convexity of its form Lk-1, 80 187 S/070/60/005/02/003/003 B132/E260 Obtaining Single Crysta-'s From the Melt in Conditions of Sharply Falling Temperature are just as important. These conditions ensure a high uniformity and purity for the growing crystal and permit a high rate of growth to be used". To these conditions must now be added one emphasising the importance of the steepness of the temperature drop between the melt and the growing surface. The earlier Stockbarger furnace did not give a sharp drop in temperature at the diaphragm so it was modified by cooling the diaphragm and the lower chamber. This stabilised the crystallisation isotl~erm at the diaphragm. The melt could then be made very hot. Imperfections giving a Tyndall effect in synthetic crystals are often found but they were almost absent with this system of growth. The purifying effect was also marked. The optical properties were improved, in LiF, for example.vl.LiF crystals could be grown at 60 mm/hour as compared with 10 mm/hour formerly, This is not the limit but the mosaic nature of the surface Card 2/3 increases, The points to emphasise are the great 80187 S/070/roO/005/02/003/00-7, E132/E260 Obtaining Single Crystals From the Melt in Conditions of Sharply Falling Temperature superheating of the melt and the steep temperature drop across the growing surface of the crystal. ASSOCIATION: Institut kristallografii AN SSSR (Institute of Crystallography, ASUSSR) SUBMITTED: November 25, 1959 I, L4/ Card 3/3 2081e S/048J61/025/003/003/047 B104/B201 1/1 3 ro 0 .7/ / 13e1 / 3 P r) AUTHORSt Vasil'Z~va,_M.A , Kuprevich, V.V.9 Ste;anov, I.V. Z~6e-ceasWdl-,_i~-d-~Feorilov, P.P. TITLEt Single-crystal cathodolumineseence screens PERIODICALs Izve8tiya Akademii nauk SSSR. Seriya fizicheakaya, v. 25, no- 3, 1961, 321 - 323 TEXTs This is a reproduction of a lecture delivered at the 9th Conference on Luminescence (Crystal Phosphors), which took place in Kiyev from June 20 to 259 1960o The authors developed and studied aingle-crystal cathodo- luminescence screens, prepared from fluorite (Car 2)9 fluorostrontium and fluorobarium, and activated with uranium and various rare earths (SMP Eut Tbq Dy, Hog Erg Tu). The single crystals were bred in accordance with Bridgman and a method proposed by I.V. Stepanov. The activator was depo- sited in the form of a first layer of UO 2F2 or fluorides of the rare earths. The green luminescence of uranium-activated scroens could be excited by an electron beam or by ultraviolet light. The color of screens activated with Card 1/4 .3 20815 S/048/61/025/003/003/047 Single-orystal cathodoluminescence B104/B201 rare earths changed somewhat on the passage from fluorides to fluorostron- tium or fluorobarium, and a variation of the rare earths gave rise to va- rious colors of the luminescence. The spectra of cathodolumineacence of the screens were found to be practically identical with the spectra of photolumineseenos. The single crystals of the fluorides of alkali-earth metals possess a low surface conductivity, and therefore the screens were provided with silver or aluminum films at the excitation side to prevent them from being charged elect:~-ically. As an example, results concerning the CaF -Eu screen are graphically illuotrated in Figs. 1 and 2. Pig I shows t9e light yield of the cathodolumineacence of this screen as a iunc- tion of the activator concentration at electron excitation (11 kV, j 10-7 &/OM2) # Fig* 2 shows for two screens the resolgtionn, as a function 2 of the electron energy at a current density of j - 10- a/cm . The tempe- rature extinction of luminescence and the duration of the afterglow were determined under ultraviolet light. Apart from the CaF _Eu screen, where a temperature extinction was observable at 50OCp no extinction was observed in any of the othe screens up to 2000C. The afterglow in Eu-activated screens lasted 10-1 seconds, and 10-4 seconds in uranium-activated ones, Card 2/0 3 J.L-) S/048/61/025/003/003/047 Single-crystal cathodoluminescence ... IS104/B201 while these times ranged between 10-2 and 10-3 seconds with the other screens. When rigorous breeding conditions were observed screens und Ir the action of electron rays with current densities of 10-1 - 10 8 a/cm conserled the brightness of luminescence for dozens of hours, The screens described are very stable against atmospheric actions and tefLperature fluc- tuations. There ore 2 figures and 6 referenceet 4 Soviet-bloc and 2 non- Soviet-bloc. The 2 references to English language publicatio-is read as fo' lows: Bridgman P.W.p Proc.Amer. Acad.Sci.t 60, 306, (1925), Stockbarger D. J., Opt. Soc. America, 22, 731, 1949 Card 3/4 3 S/169/62/000/007/065/149 D228/D307 AUTHORS: Vasil'yevaq 1,~. A., Vlasovaq 1. 1. and Rymanov, V. M. TI12LE: Some problems in the compilation of a composite small- scale map of the USSR's magnetic anomalies (Discourse theses) PERIODICAL: Referativnyy zhurnal, Geofizika, no. 7, ~962, 30, ab- stract 7A199 (V sb. Sostoyaniye i perspektivy razvi- tiya geofiz. metodav poiskov i razvedki ~olezn. isko- payemykh, Vt., Go,stoptekhizdat, 1961, 516 TEXT: Defects in the method of regional surveys*were ascertaiiied when compiling a composite magnetic anomaly map on a scale of 1:1,000,000 for the eastern half of the USSR's European part. Re- commendations are given for the method of s!zrveys, their tying in to absolute valuesq and for the preparation of,compoeite maps. It is expedient to create an All-Union reference aeromagnetic network. /-Abstracter's note: Complete translation._7 Card 1/1 VASILIYEVA,, M.A.; VLASOVA, 1~1. Some problems in compiIirig an adjusted map of Wnetin anom-lies of the U.S.S,R~ at a scale of 1:1.,000,,000. Razved.i. prora.geofiz. no.44.4111-116 162. (MIRA 15:7) (Maenotism, Te rrestrial.- -Maps) BMY32V, A.A.; VASILIYEVA,, M.G.; IEZHEEV, N.B. C= ---- - - -------, Absorption of ultrasonic waves -In some liqvdds. Trudy fiz.-tekh. inst. AN Turk, SSR 8:19-48 t62. (Ultrasonic waves) (MIRA 15:11) BLPRDYYTV, A.A.; SHIRDZHAIIOV, If.; VASILIYEVA, M.G. Results of investigating the absorption of ultrasonic waves in certain liouids and mixtures. Trudy Inst.fi2.i geofiz.AN Turk. SSR 5:137-145 '58. (MIRA 13:6) (Ultrasonic testing) O~ylene) (Benzene) BERDYYEV,, A.A.; VASILIYEVA, M.G. I Absorption of ultrasonic waves in viscous liquids at high fre- quencies. Izv.AN Turk.SSR.Ser.fiz.-tekh... khim,i gool.nauk f no.2:3-12. 162. (KERA 15:4) 1. Fiziko-tekhnicheskiy institut All Turlmenskoy SSR. (Ultrasonic waves) (Absorption of sound) YASILIJL 'A, ',.~ I.; IMAKHARASHVILI N.A.; SOKGLOVA, v Y - gj _L 1,; LAMINA, VX A.L.; SCJYFER, V.M.; TSKIRIYA, N.G.; BAFON, Te.Ye., doktor khim. nauk, red. (Analysis of boron and its inorganic compounds] Analiz born i ego neorganicheakikh soedinenii. Pod red. E.E.Baroni. F.oskva, Atomizdat, 1965. 267 p. (MIRA 19:1) VASIL'YEVA, M.G.; SOKOLOVA, A.L. Determination of boron in technical borcn. Zhur.anal.khim. 17 no.4:5*-531 J1 '62. OMIRA 15:8) 1. Physico-Technical Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Georgim.n S.S.R., Sukhumi. (Boron-Analvois) B/202/62/000/002/001/002 D207/D301 AUTHORS: Berdyyev, A.A.9 and ~~111svap_,B%G* TITLE: Absorption of high-frequency ultrasonic waves in viscous liquids FERIODICALt Akademiya nauk Turkmenekoy SSR. Izveatiya. Seriya fi- zikoteklini.cheakikhp khimicheskikh i geologicheskikh nauk, no. 2, 1962t 3 - 12 TEXT: Absorption of 16-159 Mc/s ultrasound was investigated in gly- cerin, caster oil# cotton seed oilp transformer oil, spin6le oil 121, try I (ISUI) oil, Absorption wae measured with the appa:~atus described earlier by A.A. Berdyyev and N.B. Lezhnevq visoosity with a capillary viscometer, denaity with a pyknometer. Temperature was kept constant with a thermostat U-Be Glycerin was investigated in the 19-600C range at 27-159 Vic/s and the ultrasound absorption in it was found to obey the Stokes' law only up to 1.9 poise; at higher viscosities (lower temperaturea) relaxation phenomena produ-' ced departures from the Stokes law. The shear and volume (bulk) vis- Card 1/2 S/202/62/000/CO2/001/002 Absorption of hieh-frequency ... D207/D301 cosities of glycerin were of the same order: several poises at 30- 600C. In the oils the ultrasound absorption coefficient ~a) did not obey the Stokes law at all) i.e. departures from a = f(w-) ware ob- served (here w is the angular frequency of the ultrasonic vibrat- ions). In all six liquids the absorption of ultrasound was affected both by shear and volume viscosities. There are 13 figures, 1 table and 9 references; 6 Soviet-bloc and 3 non-Soviet-bloc# The referen- ces to the English-language publications read as follows: T.A. Zito- vitz, J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 23, no. 1, 1951; C,So Venkateavaran, Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci., A 151 1942; B*J, 17uench, T.F. Hueter, and M. S. Cohen, J. Acoust. Soc. Am.9 1B, no. 2, 1956. ASSOCIATION: Fiziko-tekhnicheskiy institut AN sico-Technical Institutep Academy Turkmenian SSR) SUBMITTED: November 10# 1961 Turkmenskoy SSR (Phy- of Sciences, of the Card 2/2 Z4T(.,)/a,Piq)/EWT(m)/BDS AFFTC/ASD/APGC Pq-,4 W11 1ACCESSION NR: AT300208Z S/2728162/008/000/0019/0048 r Valli UTHORS: Be dy*Vvj, A. AA, 11yeva, -M.G., Lazhnev, N. B. TftLE# Investigation of the absor iion of ultrasonic waves in several liquids 'rOURCE:_ANTurkmSSR. Fiziko-tekhaicheakix institut.- Trudy, v.8,1962,19-48 I ;TOPIC TAGS: ultrasoniewave absorption, ultrasonic property liquids, ~1 !Optical measurement, ultrasonic absorption, pulse method, ultrasonic absorption t imeasuremen ABSTRACT: The paper reports the results of experimental investigations of pulse-type equipment for the measurement of the absorption of ultrasonic (US) waves in liquids$vithin the frequency range from 5 to 200 mcps. The investigation i~ igenera=es the iesults of similar studies made over the'past two years. The ~'Iabaorption investigations were performed by optical and pulse methods. The optical -me a a urement methods were based on the phenomenon of the diffraction of ~llght passing through a medium in which US waves are propagating. The source nd the equipment used in the present instance was a spherical extrahigh-pres A sure: ;Hg quartz lamp, SVDSh-500, capable of operating In the frequency range from 5.0 !to mcps. The acoustic generator consisted of pie zo-qRai~tzplaf-e lets. The US J gid 113 1-;L~'i7985_63 CGESSION NR: AT30OZO82 aves were propagated vertically downwafd. The liquid investigated was placed la,', a.vessal made of high-grade optical _gjUg~with plane-parallel walls. The bottom os the vessel was lined with glass wool to avoid the superposition of running and ieflected waves in conditions of low absorption. The measurements were f parformed in monochromatlc~ light. The measurement of the absorption of US avea wag accomplished by a measurement of ths brightness of the image of the i US beam at various points, It was assumed that at the low acoustic amplitudes i ru employed, the intensity of the diffracted light would be proportional to the square- of th~ amplitude of the US oscillations. The brightness was measured by means of; -~,~photographs taken on fine-grain photographic plates with uniform emulsion. All photographs were developed with the same type of developer under identical devel-' conditions. Control measurement@ of the absorption coefficient in toluene -lopment howed that the error of the measurement did not exceed :0 percent. The overall'. S ! scheme of the pulse equipment comprised a synchronization block, which, on the bone hand, controls a sweep generator which'at various sweep rates affords a measurement of the absorption for various lengths of the acoustic path, and, on the other hand, controls a modulator which. in turn. produces rectangular pulses 1which serve for the actuating of the high-frequency ,HF) generator. The HF its radio pulses which are delivered to the quartz radiator. The !generator em Itra-acoustic pulse thur, obtained propagates in a delay line and. after -.!,sing C-~d 2/3 ...... L. 179657631 'ACCESSION NR: AT3002082 ~thrbugh the test liquid, is again transformed Into radio pulses by means of a lquartz receiver. This signal subsequently is amplified in a RF receiver and '-Idtilivered to an oscillograph. The absorption is determined by varying the thick- ~,ness o The I f e test liquid and measuring the resulting damping of the signal. 1equipment operates on 12 fixed frequencies in the range from 5.5 to 200 mcps. iThe component electronic circuitry and the acoustic system employed are ~Iaescribed. The investigation of the absorption of US waves in nonasaociating ~rpixtures (~,enzol, m-xylol, p-xylol, chloral) is investigated in detail, and it Is-,. Ifoend that: (a) The addition of a small quantity of weakly absorbing liquid to a sirongly- abserbing-liq~aid-docreases-the-aboorption-coefficient a-h-a-rply;- -,b) -lequation Is developed on the basis of simplified considerations to explain and predict the observe i sharp decrease in absorption coefficient in such circum- stances; (c) the absorption ooefficient increa!9es linearly with the temperature. The* investigation wab also extended to the absorption coefficient of associating mixtures (methylalcohol, ethylalcohol, iso-ainyl chloride), and an absorption ;Maximum was found to exist in all the mixtures Invest!gated. The presence of Ithis maximum is explained by the formation of a new compound. Orig. art. has 10 numbered equations, 12 figures, 3 tables, and a 3-page electronic -parts list. 1ASSOCTATION., none -ISTJBMTEP,. 00, DATE ACQ: 29Apr63 ENCL: 00 tSUB COM. Al PH NO WBOV3 002 Orm. 000 C Ira 313. L 33397-66 E7WT(l) TG 2- .j WCC NR,ARW231 SOURCE CODE: UR/0274/65/060/M AUTHOR: Vasillyeva, M. G.; Berganov, I. R. TITLE: Redundancy in the long-distance equipment SOURCE: Ref. zh. Radiotekhnika i elektrosvyazi, Abs. 1OV20 REF SOURCE: Tr. uchebn. in-tov svyazi. M-vo svyazi SSSR, vyp. 22, 1964, 152-158 TOPIC TAGS: system reliability, carrier current communication, communication equipment ABSTRACT: Two reserving methods -- hot and cold - are considered for the most important units of carrier-current communication equipment. The hot-reserve method largely used in group amplifiers has the following shortcomings: (1) the Aiverage t1i of operation of the equipment is shorter than the sum of possible average times of operation of each amplifier; (2) energy used for maintaining the reserve amplifier under operating conditions; (3) equal tube wear of the main and reseve amplifiers. The cold automatically switched reserve is free from the above shortcomings. The principal circuit of a monitoring-and-switching device is presented. The nonlinearity coefficient or the transmission level is recommended as a varying parameter which predicts the amplifier failure. Both reserving methods are compared by their mean times between failures. It iB pointed out that the efficiency of the cold reserve is equal to 1.4 and 2 with an allowance for restoration. It is claJ.med Card L 33397-66 ACC NRoAR60 12312 that the cold reserve time between failures entire channel. Four abstract] SUB CODE: IT, 09 with the monitoring-and-Bwitching devices increases the mean of the.amplifier equipment and enhances the reliabU "t of the figures. Bibliograpby of 2 titles# D. B. [Trs~ ~latlc~n of BELITSOV, V.H.; KHARKHAROV, A.A.; YEREMEYEVA, R.F.; ANANIYEVA, Ye,B.; VASILIYEV~A, 11-~. Bleaching of cotton yarn and yarn products with sodium chloride. Tekste prom. 23 no.9:70-73 S 1639 (MIRA 16:10) 1. Sotrudniki Leningradskogo tekstillnogo instituta imeni S.M. Kirova (LTI) (for Belltsov, Kharkharov). 2. Pryadillno-ni- tochnyy kombinat imeni S.M. Kirova (for Yeremeyeva). 3. Pryadillno- nitochnyy kombinat "Kraer4eya Hit"' (for Vasillyeva). (Bleaching) (Yarn) DXRZHAVIN, A.V.; VASILIYEYA, H.I. - New winter wheat varieties developed from soring wheat. Agroblologiia no. 3:118-119 Ify-Je 058. (MIRA 11:7) 1. Opytnoya khosysystvo OlAd'ino% Knlininakoy oblastie (Wheat--Varieties) 1 n50-&- - _-M (m)JRF ACCESSION MR: APS023686 UR/0076/65/039/609/2192/2187 620.191/.193 H. K. MYTHORt lofa, Z. A.~ Huo Hgo-pa; Vasillyeva TITLE: Effect of sulfur-containing compounds on Iron corrosion In acid solutions 7 1; ~F I M YA ~SOURCE: Zhurnal fizicheskoy khimi*i, v. 39, no. 9, 1965, 2182-2187 TOPIC TAGS: coiwosion inhibitor, iron, sulfuric acid. hydrogen slilfide. organic sulfur compound, sulfur compound, thiocyanate ABSTRACT; The effect of hydrogen sulfide and other compounds containing sulfur on the adsorption of corrosion inhibitors (organic bases) by iron from sulfuric acid solutions was studied by means of the drop in the differential capacity of tha double layer. The differential capacity was determined by an alternating current. An analysis of the polarization curves showed the mechanism of adsorption reinforce-- ment and the generation of a strong inhibiting influence of organic bases an the corrosion of iron in acid solutions in the presence of corrosion stimulants such as~ hydrogen sulfide, sulfo acids, and other sulfur-containing compounds. The affect of poteAaluw tblocyanate and thiourea and its derivatives on the acid corrosion of Card-1/2-- IOFA, Z.A.; MHO NGOK-BA; VA.51LIY~NA, M.K. Sf." r I - te , t of the iu-Ifur-containing conpulmdo on I-rrn (,(,-r -r;:,ron ! r acid solutions. Zjhur. fiz. k-him. 39 no.9:2182-2187 '17 16-5. (14I]-.A 18:1 -1) 1, Moskovakiy gcsudarstvennrj unlv6roitnt Imeni M.V. Lamonosova. r 'Ar TH. V c-o. UP a ~j -- . Ao o o via 4.9 3 "o no lo 34 .64'-Q go xr. W ~cv 11 o~l -A 11)1.U o. -4~ I. i . 3. lie It KOZAK, Yu.A.; IVAITOV, B.I.; VASIL'TEVA, M-M- Prospects for processing furnace ghale tar. Trudv VNIIFSS no.4: 175-189 '55. (MIRA 13-4) (Oil shales) (Tar) BEZMZGIN, E.S.; BARSHCIIEVSKIY, M.M.; VASILIYETA, M.M. Prospects for the use of oxygen In the 4hale-gas Wuatry. Trudy VNIIT no.3:66-74 '59. (MIRA 13W (Oil shulan) (Oxygen) BARSHCHZVSKIY, M-M-; BEZMOZGIN ~ Z-S-; VASILAYEVA, M-M-;-.ZArLODIN. I.3.; SINELINIKOV, A.S. Efficient system of processing Baltic oil shaleq. Trudy VNIIT no,g: 4-9 16o. (Oil shales) (MIRA 13:11) KOZAK, Yu.A.; IVAVOV, B.I.; VASILIYEVA, M.M. Prospects for processing furnace shale tar. Trudy TMIPS no.4: 175-189 '55- (MI1RA 13:4) (Oil shales) (Tar) fir 14 alit J .4 VASILIYEVA, M.M.; SHKODINSKAYA, Ye.N.1 BIMLIN, A. Ia. Sarcolysine isomero and their derivatives. Part 2: Synthesis of o-bis (2-chloroethyl)amino-.'PL--phenylalanine. Zhur. ob. k--*m. 31 no*3;ID27-1033 Mr 161. (MIRA 140) 1. Institut eksperimentallnoy kllnichaskoy onkologii AMN SOSR. Wanine) 0000000 0 0 0 W-6-610 4 44 0 so 0 0 000 0 * * 0 0 is $i4 00 so go 0 6 0 0 0 0 o Is 11 of L a A If If 14 Is If I' to 1, bill Z? a Jod n :7 ;A 29 111 11 w 3i is is U V is I _L_.L IL x J alt I I so CZ AD U 1 d is 4 1- a a w 4A F _ ._ .-so That ismil of w6wa In The i6*G;fiuff- ::I - by. K. M. Mal Lille will M. MWO193111, . r, Mo. 5. Ml-=. Aho". m4fw. ZA.f. J. N-- 2. 11 Ili IWIll) - - - 00 00 iapti, washilasaW U In the oil (NAII(W,), idgu%r.l 1 1 I 1 141 On, lilt 4xvittlit II the filwis was lh.ll-~Iwll, Ilw lillic 00 so 411 Wilthilif MILINI-I'd AM lilt 14offliilholl 44 CA kMP 1111-- 4 V d Th l 0 e use a vente ml . (, W. Iii Itid-stillimile ilyi-mic 1, 4 00 "alto, pral-flo at Iflirforel. so Kee 0*0 so "'00 'woo u-S-0-10 n 0 IS R 11 01 ff fi 4 -Vii-s- an x s of ad 9 x of POW of a a 3 0 0 0 0 0; 0 0 0 1 o 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 40 ~! 0 *0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 Is 0 of O doe 0 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 *is 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 so* 0 0 0 *is so 0 so q 0 0 0 0 0 w v 696904 osa-060"iboo. T"affoo 0 0 o 0 0 to o o o 0 0 L a -L-1 IV it too A a jj *to (to 1-0 a ix 10 u 4 -d OL I to 0 Al. -00 S~ 0 .60 *ad Its PFO"fU"- b"un Lt4Rd .00 11. mukul=03"11. f A .00 so 6, irwoom~C11-M A. P.-C. jcy~w ,d 9MMI 'I"wu"km' moo *0 '00 coo "Oe So roe 0o goo .00 woo WEI., 00 1119' ft'l Its *A CtASUPICATION AL-i 'all O.Aas. woo FW5 -,.S AV .0 M AV 10 SL W-0 'OooottSl eqo 0 0 14 9, a , '~, 00000 000000&990 0"0660600*0000906 0 eels mw ILMY2Iml~_ *ff2m%=mFmm' 4 0 * goes 16W 0 so 0 e 4 o 4 Alf 0 4 0 4 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 kc it u Is w 11 w 11 to 19 20 a 17 x a , : 41 wAj at axe 1 8 04 yundamestal ga"estims on the sizWq of fabrics of a rayon. F. A. Hubnova and M. N. %'*%d pa.. SM* P. 00 NO. 1. t4 -ISMOv); CAVAA. Z'Wi7itio. it. =mm -2-A 0 an the Fmilva of (~,Ulm for Mize I- given which is based plant operstion. it contains 2.4% potals) stairts. 1.2&T, .00 :0 gel4tia, end 0,24% oicin amp. Pregm. of the fabric anti .0 IS .. xWng oq the Johnson awkitm are described. see 0* of at 00 .400 a see 99 coo Ilk 4i I t 011TALLUKKAL LITINATLO1 CLASSWICAUGO 1 81i 1144, it W. to JAVA " i" . - -, 14.1 410.0. Igoe u 0#61*1 Joe 99 u q 00 060 1 0 o I, a 0 000000!00000000000000ge.. 0 0 0 a 111 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ej 0 0 ( 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 1 0 0 0 * * : VAsILIYEVA, M.N., BUBKOVA,, YE*A* Sizing (Textile) Gelatine sizing. Tekst. prom., 32, No. 4. 1252o jqOnthly List of Russian Accessions,, Library of Congreass June 1952. LRIOLASSIFIED. r~q P L Pitr&ritticin 61 1uw-m0uk&Co Aban; frw-.t mrpin and ele- IftfintVY 'WISCM0 girz dtutnZ ibe firdshitig process Nf N .Vh%iv"m .Ind V. K. Detnitlova. IV. lick, 7,;u, I b I.n Qy im. - Init. 'tr1k. Pto %i 1953. Cb-101; Z.Aur., xhim. IQ54, NO., r ~3F;64.-A tecftLmtn1,A( egimt has bren %vjrkcd Old or AbOIC.WUMS Of 1OW-thfinkilte fitAPle linen 211d Vlk:Ost silk ruilkLM6 11%t Crf melunjine-ITC110 Vejiij (1). The Prepti. of a v-ut--r-Acil. eui~di!ILK~tZ and the thernial c,onflitinni for the pel) condens%tictl G! L he noztllyl givur-s of Inela-inc on the fahtic Pet,- ofirelt. I c1ceru,;es the A;Iffics of ltveiling rtift ikfinkuge -11 the viltCst- Ok 2114 Itil (IC10;l1lation ht Cl~! wd, t A :0; tloct not vlmRi., itq hydrmopirity, 11T- CII-Olles lite strelitih Of the fibm in the It)' state, lm-revk-l fill 007 tht4t lengthming, a:jJ filghiy inmasci (11~, Itrellitll % V*?". 1~of the t'et fibe.%, thusdv"&_;fn% tve wc%ming nutof the st.ple -fabrics dlri#t: AwAhinjr. I of t v~ filic-s of tuAt silk sg~,in-t tilt- dr-tructive effect of 'liflilt,' IM-NoMr, Ilo mwil (ff;-ct I.,, pr~svil. in 1~.C a %e iii tile glr0AY Viii~~A (ilk, The yi0,1 0 tilt loimhrhfl,_3gt.- staple ~fmbtics acwunts for 97-8% v! (ho row mutcrial used, whirls chitucittrimll by the le-t8% shrinkage. NVierlAcki VASILIYF W6&; GRANSKIY, V.I.,, KRYUCHKOVSKIY, S.A.; VERSHIK, A.P... kand. fiz.-matem. nauk, nauchn. red.; TIKHOMIROVA, G.N., red. [Mathematics for engineers; bibliography of recomLended literature] Matematika dlia inzhenerov; rekomendatell- nyi ukazatell literatury. Moskvav Kniga, 1965. 157 p. (MIRA 18:12) 1. Leningrad. Publichnaya biblioteka. GINSBURG, V.A.i DUBOV, S.S,~ MEDVEDEV, A.N.; MARTYNOVA, L.L.; TFTFL'BAUM, B.I.; VASIL'Y'.5VA, M.N.; YAKUBOVICH, A.Yei. Structure of the inclusion compleyes of tr J. Cluoron It. ro.:3 Ofro ,lift no with unsaturated compounds and tho mechanism of their formation. Dokl. AN SSSR 152 no.5t]104-1107 0 163. (MIRA 1r"):12) 1. Prodatavleno nkademLkofn I.L.Knunyantgom. Y . VASILOYEVA M.N.; MIRZABEKOVA, N.S.; GINSBURG V.A..,- VLASOVA, Ye.S., - .-- .. 9 MAKAROV.9 S.P.~ SHCHEKOTIlgiIN, A.I.; YAKUBOVICH, A.Ya. Photoreaction of hexafluoroazomethane with unsaturated compounds. Dokl.AN SSSR 149 no.ls97-99 Mr 163. (MIRA 16s2) 1. Predstavleno akademikom M.I.Kabachnikon. (Azomethane) (Photochemistry) (Unsaturated compounds) VASILIYEVA, 4RLIN, A.Ya. Synthesis of dit"f-chloroethyl) a:-.i.-:o derivatives of p7rzocatechclo -3090 S 162. mlilA I--:o) Zhur.ob.khim 32 no.9:3088 0 1. Institut eksperii;,,entallnoy i klinicheskoy onkologii AIT,885R. (Pyrocatechol) S/08 1 16210001C2410401052 Blo6/Bla6 AUTHORS: )Easillyevgj-lyl,-N,,-Kamerina, T. P.9 Komarovat Ye. 1.9 Zhestkova, Ye. N., Maslova, M. F., Smirnova, Ye. V., Ivanov, N. N., Bikbayeva, N. S., Koptyayeval V. A. TITLE: Choice of a new oiling agent for processing capron in synthetic fiber plants PERIODICAL: Referativnyy zhurnal. Khimiya, no. 24 (11), 1962, 947, abstract 24P979 (Nauchno-issled. tr. Tsentr. n.-i. in-t shelk. prom-sti. M., Rostekhizdat, 1960 (1962), 82-94) TEXT: On the basis of the results obtained in the testing of new oiling agents the authors recommend that 2.5 - 4.5% of the type t~-16o (-16o) should be ap lied to the fiber. The oiling agent consists of 82% Velositetl(L~v 6~ 011-4 (OP-4) and 6% Stearoks-6. Twisting is to be stabilized by low-pressure steaming. [Abstracter-a note: Complete translation-i Card 1/1 VASILIYEVAY M.N.; REMIRUDELI 51 E.M. Effect of a spa:e charge on the electron kinet-,cs in Pemnimgls tub-is. Zhme tekhe M. 32 no.6-725-734 je 162. 0' InU 23 ~, *7 1 lo Fizicheskly fakid"et Moakovskogo gosudarstvennogo I katedra fl.-IL.1 Movakcvsk~go exintsionnogo -=dena 1,-AnjrL,-x J-rin"Itvit?. im. SArgo cUss-hArgeOj (Ele-il'ons) S/057/62/032/006/013/022 B108/B102 ~j >1 AUTHORS: Vasillyeva, 1M. N.L-and Reykhrudell, E. M. TITLE: Effect of a space charge on the motion of electrons in a Penning tube PEaIODICAL; Zhurnal tekhnicheskoy fiziki, V. 32, no. 6, 1962, 725 - 734 TEXT: The motion of electrons in a Penning tube (two cold disk cathodes placed syi-.,motrically with regard to a ring anode) in a longitudinal ma=netic field considered. 'The ef"ect of a space charge is taken into account. It is shown that, owing to the space charge, regions of electron oscillation arise along the discharge axis. The frequency of these (har- 9 nonic or inharmonic) oscillations is of the order of 10 see Frequency, amplitude, and character of these oscillations depend on the place z at which the electron is produced in the discharge and also on 0 ;5~'j ~-l the initial velocity ~ of the electron. If A pr + r/w- 0 0 (where d is the distance between the cathode plane and the anode plane, Card(D S/057/62/032/006/013/OZ2 Effect of a space ... BIOS/B102 and where p-reprosents the value at which the distribution curve of the magnetic potential~,,(z) has its maximum), then when A%> (d-p) the electron perform inharmonic oscillations of a frequency less than that of the harmonic oscillations which arise in the absence of a space charge. If A -,- U ,(d-p) the electron will not r~-.,ach the anode plane but will perform harmonic oscillations of a frequency greater than that without a space charGe. The frequency is independent of the initial conditions. The critical magnetic field in the case of a space charge is always greater than the critical field aithout a space charge. The electron trajectories intin-MOdeplMer,"are confined in the interval r