SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT ZOLOTAREV, I.D. - ZOLOTAREV, N.I.

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86-00513R002065410004-9
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RIF
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
100
Document Creation Date: 
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 20, 2001
Sequence Number: 
4
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Publication Date: 
December 31, 1967
Content Type: 
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP86-00513R002065410004-9.pdf3.11 MB
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I A L i llihiALIIE iTillf, -1 A H I ZOLOT REV I.D. _:A Analysis of phase establishment in the sxcit*-'4nn of' a tuned amplifier by radio i with rectangular envelope, Izv, vyseuchebezav.; radirtelkhse.07 no.6s672-678 K-D 164. (MIRA 184) ACC NR# A1,7066033~ SOURCE DI, i 0 Krasnoyarsk Polytechnic Institute (Krasnoyaraldy politakhnichooklqrl "Response of the Multistage Resonance Amplifier to aSine-Squared Radio Pulse" 'Novosibirsk, Izvestiya Sibirskogo Otdeleniya Akademl,i Hauk 58311 (Zlews of the ,Siberian Division of the Academy of Sciences SS$R),, No 6j 1966o PP 43-52* 'Abstract: The article analyzes the perfortmace of the n-atage resonance WVII- 'fier in the case when it responds to a sine-squared signal (such a nigual.app :imates a bell-shaped pulse and is characterized by highly concentrated energy .both spectrally and in time). The transfer function of a eir%le stage is de- rived on the basis of its equivalent circuit diagram; it appears that a sine- ,squared radio pulse may be treated as the resultant of three sinusoidal signals ~whose frequencies are W CO C1411 +LOa, with the same initial phape, np n- 4~4a) n simultaneously switched on at a -time t =0 and switched off at a t1me t -The output signal of the amplifier is exwdried over the perlo(k from It - 0 to and the transient process which continues after the tirria't is also i considered. As a consequence of thia analyaio) e2q),ressiona and fotwilue werv it ~obtained which can be very useful in desl6ning modern.-radio Gisteltill. It is :furthermore shown that the phaGe variation is maiu1tained evert in the cdoe of ,sharp tuning, unlike when known approximate relatiOns for unit-st~p reoponoe are applied to this sine-oquared type of excitation* Finally# the graphs Card 1075.32. h3285 /,3j/62/000/008/o06/o16 E192/E382 dov, V.I., Nemirova, O*F- Fialkoi Ye I Peregu . an4 polcrovskiYg L,A, AUTHORS' Zubarev, G.S:11 Zolotarev, 1-0 at Tomsk rvat ions 11ndor equipment for meteor obse Sbornik st"tey, TITLE: ye issiodovaniYa ("jejeory)* era) - ~Iezhd"v0d- SOURCE: jonosfern) del programmY MGG (iOnosr 1' 1962, no. 8. V raz R. 17,d-vo AN 5351 , Seofiz. kom. AN SS6 for 45 - 50 pe 1-no -2 (TPI-2) , hns been used Radar equipment, ty ince May,# 1957. Apart from that, T EXT: eteor observations at Tomsk jined and built for opera- m equipment 1 type M-3 , was deW ui,meit operates at the additional or 4 m. The TPI-2 el he range of a ting at thelravejength s determblation of t e drift wavelength or 10 m and pex-mit the radial component or th .k its Velocity and of the radar transmitter meteor trac , The PUISC-Power (j0() .p.s, (0,ch Velocity of the track. frequellcY The s 100 1, ,tion 5 'As, Puls'"S x-ange is 40o km. .i W, pulse dur I)and 1~sWm,axtihmeum nna being ill the pulse being doubleC 10- anto f X/3 above the alternate of t he receiver is a height 0 sensitivity alf-wave dipole situated at form of a Card 1/4 low 7 (02./00 t i, 0a ~Cc toy", M(3d'a of* it . 'r i.,o oj~vr, ij, t 5 stag", Ceti- . f ~ e1C t oxxt Pklt t,7 r-, 9 ter C, 010 1 lot; CjaVj-0Y t Cir tra'a C(j%1 6 t if 30it ID04-rvS C~Csl tl-f r . t.Ifle rec 0traTt. e colt" e ol! st (IS , 1: cjr fee Jt M; %% 0x1t j.,Ctc ~ef -Vo c jets -tt P 5y%% OLt ,j'-,7,er- t tr te cr C600 1.0 fief C stOL t 'res 0a r Cotl tj.C 9 D- 0 t J:or 1, r 3.01, t. tor thp- t 9 Tv jL ual or 0 "N LDL re Ists 1%eobe CITI .att 0 0 OrLs 91: at e5 xx 'IT11 119C Ver olp C .1 r -,% . 1, ""Od 1: 5 tes trol &C I 'arlitC alle .0vt ~1, er , ej,,cy 0 j-O!r era 3 t at -L ri-1 trol Iof Do 100 ~-LJL.Ze eq," ;!kV0V e o? tili-5 xjj~%b er . V ill'-A 5 t ab e-~Cc' fl: er stas ,a Of S3. tz EL ba-c f A Ses Cku CLr tes ter "ta ,Ie 'VIle "r OL rbe .0. i f -0 lc/ - - capa Vill' '.4 e ell lat of 1P 0,4 er 00Cxt% c,apt Ait3-0 0 -,jc /5. OL Ir 1A (117 10 9 1 c0 --fier eric t-Ao 0,1%6 s eOLOVI-3- rr 'ki 0 d to the f0 aj:reCVtjl1?; 0t lExtor WWI *- .,j e PS j's 6%1 P. 5 blIf 1: cc 6t V'S'- 13,06 djr, 0 IN 1.3 -Mo pro Cxxl,t rr Cl ef t%1AX of a nod -40 C 3. T , (I tT.'IP 01me"Y sto a7aode t sr, tyx e f r C(I . c0lj-,41 41r j.V en W.~tyj(:)u Ss C1 )n%CT%t b C -i- fl 6' 3.a. -i.l:v 0.to ttj Ir qvl,- cx dx1j.0LtiL0~!- dul- nX0 sx), '0-00 tvj e atol: I ard 2-0 S/831/62/060/00B/oo6/oitS Padar equipment .... E192/E382 duration of 5 Ila, the vrid 1~ulses having a durilition Of 7 Ila or rnting- wilses of 50 to 70 Ils duration. The moftlator proditcoa powerful output pulsea in the output stage anti Is baned on discharging a storage capacitance. The output pul."ea from tKe modulator transformer secondary is applieii to the ak2odes of tile output tubes. The receiver equipment comprises a devic "e for coherent pulse reception, range-measuring devices for amplittide and brightness, rieteor-velocity indica~tor, drift indicator, noise suppre*ssor, a synchronizing device, a photo-synchronization unit, coherent-piilse drift indicator and power supplies. The meteors are recorded on a photogrnnbic film moving with a velocity of 3 cm/min; under npecinl conditions this.enn be incrensed to 70 cm/min. The rartfre-indicAtnr is u-sed for virii.ial nbservation of thp reflected signals. The velocity of meteors is meastired by the diffraction-pulse method (J.G.Paviea, C.D.Nllyett. Pbilos. Mag., ser.7, v.40, no.305, 1949). the time-base being trigizerpii by the signal reflected from the meteor. The e(lisipment operates nt a wnvelengtil of 4 M and is 118fid fnr recording the nt-Imher, range -ind (hirtition or meteor refloctinhai, Tho, equipmont CAI'd 1/11 S/831/02/000/008/0(,?6/ol6 Radar equipment .... 1,192/%382 has a pulse power of 100 W, repetition rrequency of' 6(-,0 cps att