SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT ATANBAYEV, S.A. - ATTAROVA, I.N.

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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR Y44FCHM, G. 1. Academician, and ATANTBAYEV. :5.-A Comr)uter Center of -the C _k Siberian Department. of the Academy of Scien es USSR Novosibirs - "Certain Problems in 'Global' Regularization" LIOSCOW, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol. 190, No. 3, 1970 pp 527-530 Abstract. If G is an ra-dimensional region with boundary ro and L2(G) denotes -ion G with the the space of all functions squared and summed over the reG norm, it 11 U (X. x X2. t < 71, the following problem is considered in.the region Q:= G x [0, TI with the end surface f ro x [0, T], 01 YU, U (Z' Un (2) where L is a linear,positive,definite differential operator of (2) of the (s-1) 1/3 USSR M A. G. 1., and.ATANBAYEV, S. A., Doklady Akaderid atr- RCHU, i N SSSR, Vol. 190, NO., 3 1970, pp 527-530 order and self-conjugate under the boundary conditions T 2201) T, I( if) 0. (3) This problem.is correct in the Tikhonov sense in a class,of solutions linearly bounded with respect to t in the metric L2(G)., An appro:"Cimate solution of the problem (1)-(3) has been made using alocal method of calculation in which equa- tion (1) is replaced by the difference equation (4) W-1) At OW-1, ~k where At TIM, U u(x, kAt) (k = 1, 2, and equation (4) is solved for each fixed k. In this article, a global method of calculating is used to 'Lind a.solution,and the idea of this method is,.tbe following:~ Assume that a dif- inz-zoduced into the,region G with uniforri steps h. (i .6.1m). Equation (1) is replaced by'the difference equation 2/3 -51:518 USSR UDO 5320 .5 XT A1911 Donetsk 1.1 A! Mumerical Investigation of the S er onic Flow in a Hydraulic up s Gun" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk USSR, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No 1, Jan-Feb 73, PP 155-158 Abstract: The supersonic flow in a hydraulie.gun 3,ias investigated -he.numerical method of characteristics with timed fixed pitch. by t U f The flow is described by Lunctions of.gas dynamics in quasi-univa- ..riate formulation. Some presented results of.calculations are dis- by reference to diagrams. Flow characteristics, particularly the development of splittings-off, ar'e indicaited. In comparison vrith a stationary outflow, minor pressure values are required to obtain a snecific efflux velocity.- Reasons are given for the Drin- cipal advantage of producing super-jets by nicans of a hydraulic gun-, in comparison with a uulsed water jet.~Five figures, eleven formulas, five bibliographic references, USSR ''ATANOV,_L..K., KATMAN, A. K., VASIL'YEV, 'G. F., SAPRONOV, V. I., SILANVYEV, P.-P. "Single-Pole Transistor Flip-Flop" USSR Authors' Certificate No 250997, Filed 14 May 1968,1 Published 3 January 11970 (Translated from Referativrtyy.Zhurnal Avtomatikai Telemekhanika i Vychis- litel'naya Tekhnika, No 10, 1970, Abstract No 10BLIOP, by N.V.) Translation: The flip-flop suggested differs in that the load resistors are connected in series with tke source-drainjunctions of blocking single-pole transistors, the gates of which are combined and connected to the control Izziput. The substrate of the blocking transistors is isolated from the sub- -,strata of the remaining flip-flop circuit.. This allows the speed of the flip-flop,to be increased while decreasing the dissipated power. one illustration. 6 MW "Ai IWI s~ggwi 44i W,11~6191!14 i~, 1 a; i~ 149 ;;~!;6 "0 w USSR D21-317-335:621.317-738:531-787.084.2 AT*NaV-r~ A., VORUNOV, V. A. "Dielectric Hiah Pressure Transducer" Tr. Xetrol. in-Tov SSSR, Vyp. 104(164), [Works of Xetrological institutes of USSR, No. 104(164)], PP 53-55 (translated from. Referativnry Zhurnal ~Ietrologiya I izmeritelinaya Tekhnika, No. 4, Abstract No. 4.32.725, unsigned) Translation: The design of a high pressure transducer C;onsisting of a coaxial cylindrical condenser filled with the manometric fluid is described. Recording -of pressures is based on the change in dielectric permiability of the fluid w-ith pressure. In contrast to ordinary capacitive transducers, this dielectric transducer has no elastic metal membrane an can be used for measurementof high pressures on the order of 10.000 kg/crr' and higher.~ The dependence of the electrical capacitants of the tran,~ducer on pressure is'established as a result of calibration using an absolute piston manonoter.. Non-polar or slightly polar fluids having low temperature coefficient of.dielectric perr_iabJ_lity ard~recom- mended for usage as manometric fluids. ~The transducer.6an be used in systems for automatic pressure regulation, since the output para meter:-- electrical capacitance is used.in high-sensitivity resonance devices.. One illustration, -four biblio. refs. USSR UDC: 531.787 IVANOVA, le. M. "Study 6F Manganin Resistance Manometers at High Pressures" Tr. VNII Fiz.-Tekhn. i Radiotekhn. IZRICTeniv [Works of All Union Scientific Research Institute for Physical -Technical and Electronic Measiirements], No 5 C35), 1971, pp 52-69 (translated ftom Referativnyy- Zhurnal MetTOlogiya i Izmeritellnaya Tekhnika, No 2, ll_)I_Z, Abstract No 2.32~.686) Translation: Results are presented from studies of the metrological charac- teristics of a large group of identical ma.nganin resistance manometers. An interpolation 6quation is produced, correct for. any manometer of the group in the'pxessure intemral -up to 15,060 kg/cm2 with an error on.the order' of �0.5%. It is demonstrated that one-time pressing of coils with a pressure on the order of 28,000 kg/CM2 reduces the spread of pressure resistance coefficients by a factor of 2. A number of manometers are cross chacklod at a pressure on the ordOT of 28,000 kg/cm2. 4 figUTes; 4 tablds;' 3 biblio;refs- I It. .lift I-, PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 015 UNCLASSIFIED rITLE-- OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS OF AWALLOYED JUNCTIOW:TRANSISTOR'BASED ON N ._!.ANDIUY ANTIMONIDE AT- 78DEGREESK -U- .4UTHOR-(03)-GALAVANOV, V.V., RAVKOVq A.Vt ATARBEKOVP S.Go tPUNTRY GF INFO-USSR wSCURCE-_-RADIOTEKH. ELEKTRON* 1970t 15(4), 868 OATE, PUBLISHED---70 SUBJECT AR'EAS--ELECTRONICS AND ELECTRICALlNGR.,-PHYSICSv MECH.r IND., ~CLV I L-AND MARINE ENGRi 'TOPIC:TAGS--ALLOY TRANSISTOR, JUNCTION TRANSISTOR, INDIUWANTIMONIDE, MANUFACTURING PROCESS _~6-NTROL-:MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED pIRoxy RtELIFRAME-2000/2186 STEP NO--UR/0109170/015/004/0868/0868 CIRC ACCESSICh NO-7AP0125766 I C Li USSR UDC 547.26'118 ATAVIN, A. S., TROFIMOV, B. A., GAVRILOVA, G. M., and KORATAYEVA, 1. M. 0_rrrut9k7M*itute of Organic Chemistry, Siberian Branch, Acad. Sc. USSR "'Cyclization Occurring During Homolytic Addition of Dialkyl Phosphites to -Divinyl Ethers of vic-Diols" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obstichey Khimii, Vol 41 (103), No 4, Apr 71, pp, 804-810 Abstract: It has been shown that dialkyl phosphites reacted with divinyl ethers of ethylene glycol, 1,2-propylene glycol, and 2,3-butylene glycol in presence of benzoyl or tert-butyl peroxides or azoisobutyronitrile produce methyl substituted 2-(dialkylphosphonemethyl,)-1,4-dioxanes rather than the expected 6-alkoxvethyl phosphates. In addition to these 1:1 cyclic addition products, phosphorus-containing olig6mers were obtained in 35-100% yield, depending on the ratio.of the reagents. In general, the main course of the addition of dialkyl phosphites to divinyl ethers ~of vicinal diols under homolytic conditions is the telomerization of ethers. d Acc N Abstra6ting Ser'vi "K ef. Code: AP 00.5 3454 CHEMICAL ABST4 (3,6,6 esi 110704b Vinyl ethers of halo alcohols. V, Synth of rnew functional alkoxyethylenes by nucleophilic substitution of the hal~geu. Atavi , A. ; Gusarov. A. V.; Tro mov. B- A.; Shamarina. 1, ~.. ~tsk. LUst--Or-g. Khim~. Irkutsk, USSR). _Z=rg. Khim--. 1970 , 6(2). 228-32 (Russ). The~reaction of HtC:CHO(Cff0.X (P (X is Cl ~r*-Br) with KSQN gave 47- 65% H2C:CHO(CH2).SCN (n. is 2. 3, or 4). ~i Similarly, I reacted with AcCI-12CO--Et to give 32.5 and 48.0% H2C:CHO- (CH,).CHAcCO-,Et 1(n is, resp.,-2 or 4). The:reaction of I with Et2NC(S)SK gave the previously unknown HC.CHO- (CH2).'SC(S)NEt: (n is 2 or 4). NaCNT with I gave H..C:CHO- (CH2).CN (n is 3 or 4) and Kaj,% with, I gavi 1112C:CHO- CPJR CH S j 12. 02 ( . 7 REEL/FRAME 1983.0479 'ICESSUNG DATE--17JUL7C' UNCLASSFFIEE PRE jlTL.E.-VJNYL ETbERS OF HALOALCOHCL I V G~ ~L VE THCD FCk SYNTHEZ I Z ING _ uTHOR-7-ShOSTAKOVSKlYt M.F., ATAVIN, A.S., TRCFlMG-V,' B.A., GUSAROV, A.V., V.P. CCLNTRY OF-INFC--USSR ~SC,URCE--ZF. CESHCF. KHIM. 1970, 40(l)? 70-77 AT EPUBLISF.ED------70 SUBJECT AREAS-CFEMISTPY TGP.IC TtGS-HALOGENATEC ORGANIC COMPOUND, ETHYLENE, ORGANIC PHC-SPHORUS ~,:,COIIJPOUND, GLYCCL, HETEROCYCLIC GXYGFN (31, C POUNDi CHEIVICAL SYNTHES I S, LUCRINATED CRGANIC CCMFCUNO, BROMI'NATEE CRCAMIC COMPOUND C-CNTROUMARK[NG--NC RESTRICTICNS DOCUMENT CLASS- UNCLASSIFIET PROXY PEEL/FRAVE--1990/13-'j2 STEP NC--UR/0079/70/OfiO/001/0070/0077 CIRC ACCESSI(h NC--APOC~i9502 Ul'-'C LA S S I F I F C. ~Acc. N Abstracting~Servf Ref. Code: X40qg 02 ice: 5 CHEMICAU ABST.S 110 47 99938h Vinyl ethers of halbalcohols. IIV. General method p'., rior synthesizing mon.ohaloAlkoxyethylene6. �hofita4oY4kjj, T& -- - J Trofimov, B. A.-.. Gusarov A V.; Ni F. Atavin, A. S.; t kitin, 1. -(Irlcutsic. Inst. bko zato A ~g~ . Urg bftim., KhInt., 1970, 4Ukl), -iU-I:kIeuss). :jitsk, UbS ). Z A synthesis of (haloalkoxy)ethylenes was developed from the Arbazov rearrangemerit of vinyi6~yalk~l glk~61 phosphites. Heating 100 g (CH2)i-(OH)2 and 10 k KOH underI0 ml tetrahy- drofuran in an auto lave,4 hr'*at 120* gave 54% HtQ:CHO-L c (CH2)gOH,bi3g5a,-d2uO.89Z6,n2c~1.4460.' Treating 0.228 mole vinyl glycol ether in 0.3 - olt pyridine 6d 200'm1 EtjO, with M a 0.228 mole ph0sphorochloridite of a glycol at 15--~20* gave,after removal of C4H54.HCI,. (1) (k, R', and R' given): (CH2)2, H, 0 lime C11;U10ROV 0) 0ximalpi'd , 0 0 1/3 REEL/ FRAME 19801342 IW 1-4615; (CH2);, H, Me, b, 88-7% Me, b, 96-P. dO 1.1000, n 1.0730,1.4580; (CH2)4. H, Me,'b2.,105a, 1.0509'1.45M; (CH2)s, AP0049502 H, Me, b2 135% LOSW, 1.4605, (CHg~, Ale, Me bt 87*, 1.0500, (CHI)4* Ife.. Me, bi 105-9-0, 1.039V, YA595' (C-H-02- 1 A 577 2 CHMe, H. Me, bi 901-50, 1'.051L: 1.4520; ~ (CH2~-O(CH2). H, Me. b? 145*. 1.1106,,1.4645,,-, (CHI),, -H,;Ib, 93- 1.17(35, E. 1.4710; 11, b2 65*, ~ 1,1334, - 1.4614. 1 These wid'i 5 moics alkyl halide heated in a sealed tube at.90~450*sever~k7h'gav' 20-8570 ir e H2C:CHORX (R and X show'n):'- (cl-r~),, F.1ib. 790, 0.9745, 1.3860; (CH2)2.- Cl,:~ b. 1060,.1.0470, 1.4375, ~i (CH2)i',~ Br, b5i 1.4051 1A710; CH2CH2j 1, b~-r,71*, 1.7585,:! .5263~ (CH:t)j, F, b. 95-80, 0.9534, 1.4003; (CH2)3, Cli b4~! 52-3", 1.0273, 1.4375; (CRO3, Br bi~' 550, 1.3484, 1.4705; 1 (CI12)3, 1. b9 54-50, 1.6368, 1.5193; Cl, bL' 6 _5 0..'0965, 1.4458;~ (CH.)4, Br, b:s 72-30, 1.2860, L4710;' 1_bj 70-1.50,' 1.54 ,'1, '14478; (CH2)o, Br, b, 54-5*, 1.2049, 1.47008; (CHI)g', 1, 6i S4-6-,*" 1.3947,1.5015; (CH,)2CHNIe, Dr, b~o 76-8',1.2671, 1.46-50; (Cli~)2CBNle, 1, b7 62-4% 1.5056. 1.5080; (CH-j)20(CH2)I, C1, bu,69-71', 1.1040, 198C-1343 1.4535; (CH:);O(CH:)2, Br, b~ 73-5*, 1.3564, 1.47,50; (CH2)10- 'AP0049502 (Cli,),, 1, b, 58-9 1.5893,~ 1.5139. Exchange of the, iodo Members with KF gave the fluoro analogs: (CH,)2, F. described abovt; (CI-103 Fi described ~ above; (CHt)#,: 14 j b. 115-20', 0.9272, 1.4045, Rearrilngement of I'JR - (Clit)j, RI =i: R2. H] with li:C:CHCH2Br resulted in ring openingjonly and gave H2C: CH CH!P(O)(OCH 2C-HtBr)O(CH2)t0CH:. CPA (Pr0)2p0CI-l:CH20CH:CH* and Etl similarly kave only the open-chain H-C'CHO(CH2)2OP(O)~.Et)0Pr, b~ $7-9*, 1.0476, 1.4417. 111, bi 144-5', 1.3630,:1.4890, was obtlined ab6ve in 67(' yield. Reactio of 2 moles ' h1orohyd n"with 1 inoles n c ri ~, AcH and dry FICL at --~&~O' jave the requisite~~chloro, ethers, which with 2.2 niole Et3N;, at this temp.,'then 5 hr at 80--90*, gave the (haloalkoxylethylenes 112C: CHORX (R and X.Micown): (CH2),. CI; Cl wid and (CHj)j~ Cl, described above. Triethylene glycoland Br.with red P gave (BrCHICHI- OCH:)* bi.s 103-50, 1.6638, 1.5010,: which with po~vd. KOH in it Cu. vessel at 95--110' in partial.vac'u'o gave 1&5% 112C:CHO- (CH2)~O(CH2)211r, described above. G. M.~ Kosolapoff ..6 19801344 USSR UDC 547.3"1+547.26'118 ~TROFINMOV, B. A., NIKITIN, V. M., and,&TAY44ma", Irkutsk Institute of Organic Chemistry, Siberian Department of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR "Vinyl Ethers Containing Trivalent Phosphorus. V. Particulars of Hydrolysis of 2-(w-Vinylhydroxyalicoxy)-1,3,2-dioxaphospholans" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 42(103), No 2, Feb 72, pp 346-350 Abstract; The authors studied the hydrolysis of a new group of five-membered cyclic triorgano phosphites -_ 2-(w-vinylhydroxyalkyl)-1,3,2-dii3xaphospholans -- in anIattempt to define more precisely the hydrolysis of molecules of this type and to derive additional information on their reactivity as compared with their acyclic analogs. It is found that 2-(w-vinylliydro-cyalkyl:1-1,3,2-diox- aphospholans are hydrolyzed by the stoichiometric quantity of water, primari.y with the ring intact, giving the corresponding alkylene phosphites regardless of the presence or absence of substituents in the phospholan ring. The rate of hydrolytic decay of five-membered cyclic triorganophosphites exceeds the rate for acyclic analogs both on the stage of conversion to alkylene phosphites and on the stage of conversion from aLkylene phosphites to monoorganophosphites. It is proved that the first stage of the hydrolysis is autocatalytic, and 1/2 USSR UDC 547.26'118+547.371 TROFINW, A., XT-KITIN, V. -V., -ATAVT1N ~A. S., and KHIL'KO, M. Ya. "Vinyl Esters Containing Trivalent Phosphorus. IV. Hydrolysis of Dialkyl (w-Vinylhydrocyalkvl) Phosphites. Effect of the Vicinal Hydroxyl Group" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 42(103), No 2, Feb 72, pp 342-346 Abstract: It is shown that uncatalized hydrolypis of d1alky](w-viny1hydrox- yalkyl) phosphites goes through a stage of.formation of,dialkyl- and allcyl (w-vinylhydroxyalk-yl) phosphites in a ratio determined both by the structure of the initial triorganophosphite and by the conditions of the reaction. It is proved that further hydrolysis of alkyl (0-vinylhydroxyalk-yl) phosphites is limited by the decomposition of the viny1hydroxy group. It is shown that the vicinal hydroxy radical is a specificaccelerator of- hydrolysis of alkyl (0-hydroxyalkyl) phosphites. 1/1 Nr Abstraclting,~SerVice: Ref. Code '0041853~ CHEMICAL ABST.. 89688n Rearrangement in.the thiolysis of ~2-rnethyl-2-(by- droxymethyl)-1,3-dioxolane. Trofimo-~. B - A. - Mik-haleva'- A -I.; Lc (Irkutsk. Inst. Org.. Irkutsk-, :USSR).'-:Zh.' Org.-Kltbis. 1970, 1), 190-1 "(Russ). T f '2-inethyl-2-(hydrox3- ( lie reaction :o - 6 methyl)-l;33-dioxolane with RSH (R' := Pr..Or iso-BU) in acid, inedium gave 5-10% (RS);,.CTNleCIf20Tl and 80-9VI (RS~- CHCHMeSR. The expected --nornial" reaction. products (RS)--CTMeCH-SR %V'ere notformed- CPJR REEL/FWIE 19751134 19 h, 11. a i I., i;f QN 1; Uri UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DAYE-30OCT70 113 011 ~JITLE-REACTIUN OF l#3vDlCXOLAi%ES WITH ACETYLENE UNDER 10TSICCH REACTION ONS -U- C`GNDITI ~AUTHOR-05)-SHOSTAKOVSKIYP M.F.r ATAVINt A.S.t.TROF:IHOVs B.A., KOROSTOVA9 NEKRASOVA, L.P. CUNTRY OF INFO-USSR "SOURCE-IZV. AKAD. NAUK SSSR, SER., KHIM. 1970, f) 8--~73 _"'~DATE FUBLISHED~-70 SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY TOPIC TAGS-COMPLEX-COMPOUNDs ACETYLENEr HYDROXYL RADICALs ETHER, DIOXANEv '_L~CYCLIZATION, CYCLOHEXANE, CHEMICAL REACTION TEMPERATURE MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS -DOCUMENT CLASS-U NCLASSIFIED ':PROXY REEL/FRAME--1999/176Z STEP NO--UR/0062/70/000100310668/Cj673 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0123562 r-_-2/3 -011 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSINC,* DATE--3COCT70 ".C I.RC ACCESSION NO-AP0123562 ABSTRAC,T/EXTRACT-(.U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. 1 3 D 10 XO L A.1%, E SREACT AT -80-120DEGREES WITH TH ~2 AND GIVE LOW MPLEk OF. C SUBZ H sur E LOTSICH COI :-..-~.YIELDS OF HYDR,OXYETHYL ETHERS OF ACETYLENIC HO COLIMPOSS. ~ F~,Cti .11R DAVA WAS EVIDENT THAT IN A NO. OF CASES CYCLIZATION TO~lrltlDIOXANE OERIVS. JOOK PLACE. 2,METHYL,1,3,DIOXDLANE (9 ML) AND REACTION PRODUCT OF ETMGBR AND C SUB2 H SU82 (FROM 4.8 G MG)~GAVE AFT~R -3 Hk, UN A STEAM' BATH IN MEPH 16.7PERCENT 3,METHYL*3,(2,HYDqDXYETHYL).,I,PROPYN;-:, B SUB24 141LAR REACTION.IN WHICH THE ORIGINAL COM .68-71DEGREES; A St, PLEX WAS i,-PREP0. AT 37-50DEGREES AND THE REACTION.WAS RUN IN A STREAM OF C. SU62 H Z_ SUB2 2 HR AT REFLUX GAVE SEC-BU CELLOSOLVE, 8 SUB19 60-30EGREES. WHEN ili: ~:_:_THE ABOVE REACTION WAS RUN IN THF THERE WAS FORMED AFTER 3 14R AT 1200EGREES CRUDE HC TRIPLE BOND CCHMEOCH,SU82 CH.SU82 GH, a SUB19 50-62DEGREES. 2,METHYLt2tETHYL,1,3#DIOXOLANE IN A SIMILAR REACTION BOMPLETED BY HEATING 3 HP, AT 120DEGREES GAVE 18.ZPERCENT 3,METHYLt3,ETHYL,3,(2,HYDROXYETHYL)91,PROPYNE, 8 SUB15 82-50EGREES, IMPURITIES, ALONG WITH 8.9PERCENT B~SUBL 118-20DEGREES. :`i.'--WHEN THE REACTICN WAS RUN IN A CONTINUED STREAM OF C SU82 H SUB2, FINALLY AT 80DEGREES, IT GAVE 19PERCENT 29METHYL,2,ETIiYL,3,MF-THYLENEtl,4,UIOXOLANE MIXED WITH MEET SUB2 COCH SU82 CH SUBZ OH. 8 SUB3 50-50EGREESs WHILE THE REACTION RUN 3 HR AT 0-50EGREES# THE 3 HR AT 100DEGREES IN MEPH GAVE MAINLY THE LAST ETHER (IMPURE). OIL ASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OC170 UNCL ~~.'.CIRQ ACCESSION ND--AP0123562 -ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-PASSING C SUB2 H SU82 HA INTO E TJ4GBR' IN UT SUB2 0 A IN 0 TREATING THE MtXT. WITH 0.5MLE SPIR0(4*4,lLt4rDl0XONONANE IN MEP" GAVE AFTER 3 F.;? 'AT 6C-95DE-GREES IS' 2PERCENT MIXED -.1, ETHYL1 2, HYDROXY ETHOXYJ CYCLOPENTANE AND HOCH SUB2 CH 2 CET SUB 0 (c ~-`SU35:Fv,SU3lG--CYCLQ) SUR2, B SU81 60~30EGREE-S4 AS DWELL AS SOME _s(1 (ZthyDRuXyETHu! Y) 1,CYCLQPr:NTYNYL) ACETYLENE 8 SUBI 1.40-53DEGREES. ~.'SIXILARLY SPIRO 14.5% r1 s4v DIOXOD-CANE GAVE I,E-THYL's lit ZtHYDFCXY,ETHOXY)CYCLGH4-:XAtIE, CONTG. I -:ES; REINCTION i2p.4'e'P-RGXYET!-OXY)C;YCLOY.EXA,%E,,~ 3 SUB3 U,9-90DEGRC. 'ACILITY. RUK'AT' LOWER TEMP. ALSO GAVE THE:LATTER: PRODUCTS. ITSK. INIST. GRG. KHfM., IRKUT.SK,' USSR,,., LRKL on UNCLASSIF~IEJ) PROCCSSING DATE-20NOV70 'RTIARY j-',i'-IINES. :~:-TITLE~-ROW!UAL P1~0VO,(3,YL FXCHANGE OF hYORG)',YETYL T SYNTI, I E S I S 1,11 FN, IfY[jR'JXYETfiYLf. PROPARGYLAM INES ~AUTHOF-(Cil-ll-t;l~'IT&Iyt--V~A, Z.T. F. f! ATAVIN, A. KASH I K S HO STAKOVSK I V, i-1. _T V TRLFI,%,,CV, 41-I.A. _CCUINTRY UF ljNFG--LSSR 'SGURC E-ZF. U~-G. KFisl;. 1970 6 t 5) 902-'a E UHL IShEC -------- 70 T p 0 ~-SUBJECT APEAS-CHEMISTRY T L .-TOP I L- 1AGS-BROMINA -0 COMWGUNDt TERT I tkY AM I N' G I JE M I CA L 'T I I k -SYNTHESIS, ~Gf,,(~ANIC AU CUsN.11CUND, L OL' fl 0ZENC L)(-,RIVAT IVE 'CU)TROL "iAMKING-ING RESTRICTICNS .~DGCUMCNT CL45S--UNCLASSIFIED -PROXY REeL/FFAME--3CCo/I'233 STFP NO-UF/0-66170/0 /005/0~4120)90i3 !kc 4 1 F . lki]Ct'~i S1: 1 G, DAT E---- NCIV 7 0 CLASS, IF I 1~6 J xj An-STi~'Ua THE LAI* f1 J111 UJ 2 Ch' SUE-2: u-, f.", -4 N, Dik r' P IEl I E N E T ET; C h SUE112; sub2l CH SUB2 2 Ch S,,.16-1, HOICH SUL- 2 C.H L; 6 Cil SUCie-' :CHCH SU6' CH ICHCH su~ - SUb2 UH, Ph, Lli SW32 Ch SubZ (NO W 1 1+1 lic TRIPLE HLONO GLH fIR IN- Cli Li) FLH S(JU'. GAVC 70-9CPE--ACENT rmi-iic~i.:su~2 c,,i! stj42 olt-ijui suij2 c TH HC TRIPLE FC,\Fl CH ~1) HUIN'EVE-R, "l(CFl:SW3Z Of SU82 QH) SUB P E"A C TE U -TRiPLE PBEND CCH SUa-2 6 i~ TO GIVE flGCli SU82 CH SU32~ N (Cil SUL12 C TRHPLE c1l) SOB Ci;t,;PEFS 3ESIDES 1',t:YCLIC SUCH AS BON E 2. A 1 6 3 SOM~ I tit:k-F- ALSO PtE!)t). By 'dzkE FORME-1). REACTI~-~C, FC T.RIPL-E SUB2 i3k lilTifl-WHCH SJk2 CH SUB2 OH (R FQUALS ?:CHOCF~ SU6, ~Cli SUL2 P! ~Ctl SUC-2) ~HOMEtCh :SOE~2 Lli SU62' Criii LH ~IULI FACILI TY:, IRKUTS: INSI. ORG. KHIM.~,, I R KLJ T SK uSSR. K. O~t,i, L ASS I F I E 0 'LA ' -D-- - - -- --- - UN( -- - , PROCESSING DATE--11SEPTO 1/2 010 UNCLASSIFIED T ---SPLITTING OF AN ETHER BOND DURING _]L VIN -U- ITLE Dlqc.VHYLENE GLYCL YLATION -A UTHO R--.A,,,T AV S.t AMOSOVA, S.V.j VYLEGZHAN[No O-N-9 K_EYKO, V.V.t _-JR OF B*Ao I vp COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR AKAD. NAUK SSSR, SER. KHIM. 1970#'(1)v 449-52 .-DATE, PUBL ISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT -AREAS--CHEMISTRY :JOPIC:TAGS--ETHYLENE GLYCOLt CHEMICAL BONOIN,(;i,,ETHERv ETHYLENE CnNTROL MARKING--N0 RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED z~PROXY REEL/FRA4E--1987/1055 STEP NO--UFt/0062/7.0/000/001/0149/0152 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0104453 UNC LASS IF IED--------- 2/2 010 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--11SEP70 CTRC-ACCESSION NO--AP0104453 :~~ABSTRAtT/EXTRACT-LU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. HEATING O(CH SUB2 CH SUB2 OH) SUB2 WITH KOH AND 'C- SUB2 H SUB2 2 HR AT 160DEGREES (17 ATM INITIALLY) ..GAVE 53PERCENT DIVINYL ETHER 4F THE GLYCOL,, 8 SUB13 890EGREES,, WHICH WITH 1- PERCENT HCL REGENERATED THE PURE.GLYCOLt B~SU82 90-DEGREES. HEATING I WITH KOH AT 165DEGREES IN C.SUB2 H SUB2 115 ATM INITIALLY) 3 GAVE, AFTER CHROMATOG. OF THE MIXT.J.8PERCENT (CH SUB2 OH) SUB2 ~:::IDENTIFIED BY--SILYLATION. THUSt'DIETHYLENE GLYCOL IS CLEAVED BY KOH TO ACH.SUB2 OH) SUB2...AND THE PROCESS IS ACCELERATED BY THE PRESENCE OF C ','~,SUB2 H. SUB2. - THE EFFECT-I S% POS-S I BLY CAUSED BY CL EAVAGE''DF- THE ETHER: - BOND -:THROUGH.ACTIC)NIOF tHE ETHEREAL 0 AS A NUCLEOPHILEJN REACTION WITH C SUBZ.__H~SUB2.AND~FORMING AN INTERMEOJATE SUCH AS tHOCH SUBZ CH SUL32) SUB2 0 PRIME-,POSITIVE CH:CH PRIME-NEGATIVE. NELAS-S-l U l USSR UDC 547'A1:538.27 KALABIN, G. A., ATAVIN L GAVRILOVA, G. M., TROPDTOV, B. A., and Correspondir4~'Mtft Wer 'o" f the,Academy of Sciences USSR SHOSTAKOV- ~SKIYY, M. F., Irkutsk Institute of.Organic Chemistry, Irkutsk, Ea3t Siberian Affiliate,.Siber-ian Department, Academy of Sciences USSR "Structure of the Products Resulting From the Addition of Dialkyl- phosphites to Divinyl Ethers of Gem-diols" Moscow, Doklady Akade-m-ii Nauk SSSR, Vol 190, No Feb 70, D_D_ BLL9-852 Abstract: On the basis of PMR data the authors conclude that the addizion of dialkylphosphites to 1.1-divinylhydroxyalkanes occurs stereosDocifically yielding 1,3-dioxolanes with cis-oriented sub-st-1- tuents at CL, and C5. The PMR spectra indicate absence of free rota- tion.around,the P-C and C-C bonds in the (RO)2-P'(:O)-CH - fragment-- 2C furthormoro, the cycle is not planar.~ An assum-6tion is made that one of the carbon atoirs of the cycle (0 or G Pticka out of the pip-ne of luhze ring by an angle of more' bi n 09 3 I , ! 11 1 , 1 11 1 1 x I . I . ~ ~~. i a USSR UDC 621.821.6t612.825-1i612.833-81 ATAYEV. 4.M., institute of Evolution-U7 Morphology and Animal Ecology, Academy of -sciences L!SSR "Interaction of Variations in Intensity of the External Electromagnetic Field and the Intensity of Nervous Excitation in the Central Nervous System" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademil. Hauk SSSR, Serlya Biologicheskaya, No 1, 1972, Pp 119-134. Abstracti The structural variability of the central nervous system is connected with sequential phenomena which arrises during the process of acquiring new adaptive forms of behavior. The existing theory of the formation of inter- central channel morphophysiological connections during the formation of a conditioned reflex is under disucersion, and the new idea ha:s been advanced that the occurrence of structura1traces is caused by intracellular movements sterotypically repeated in time and space. These movements are caused by internal forces the nature of which is connected with the interaction of electromagnetic phenomena on the subcollular molecularlevel. It is asswned that as a result of an increase in excitability by reinforcement, reorienlla- tion of the subsellular polar macromolecules of the neura.1 constellations concerned takes place. A chango also takes place in the vector of the total 1/2 USSR ATAYEV, if. I.,., Izvestiya Akademii Hauk SSSR, Seriya Biologicheskayay, No 1, 9172, pp l19-134 polar moment of the central nervous system which Is fixed in the polar memory in the specific environment of the organism. 'Experimental.data, are presented in this article aimed- at establishing the.correctness of the above-presented assumptions by discovering the interaction of the external and internal elec- tromagnetic oscillations with respect to the behavioral response reaction of the animal. An electromagnetic field was used as the conditioning agent. The conditioned reflex was developed in two.subjects differing sharply Ath respect to level of cephalization -- molluscs (Planorbis corneus var. rubra) and cats. The external electromagnetic field in the superlong.wave range can serve as a ronditioning signal for the.adaptive-protective,reflex. The electromagnetic field in the 20 to 100 hertz band was the most effective. These data indicate that both in the case of lower and higher representatives of the animal world, inthe mechanism of adaptive activity the largest pol4r macromolecules the natural relaxation period of which is quite large are,primarily conerned. 2/2 Acc. Nr: Abstracting' Service:.. Ref Code: V003421Z CHEMICAL ABST. 7 -1 71248j Complexing in cupric nitr'Ate-2-methylblenzothiizole- methanol and cupric nitrate-2-hydroxymethylbenzoth Ijuole- r Methanol systems- Sly~ftrenko, K. F.; Ateirtenko. AL - V. Tekhnol- I-st. , c M.. :-M, 7- (Kiev- n Pro iveorg. K"-Z,.,n..1970, 15(11, 10t-11 (Russ). - It is contirmed spec- troscopically that a 1:2 c`omplex (1), having an instability const. of 4 X 10-6, is, formed between Cu(NO3)-. and 2-h-~droxybenzo- thiazole (L)-in MeOH solus. Absorption niax.'of 1 (-14.W) -1) correspond to d-d transition and'indicate di5- and 10,800 cm torted octahedral stnicture of 1. 1 is more stable: than an an- alogous complex of Cu(NO3).- with 2-methylbbnzothiazole- MeOR. HMJR REEL/ FMME - -op -c7f----- _015 UNCLASSIFIED PRCCESSING D A T E2 7P40V 7 0 T I E!',J T S .Tt-TLE--ANTIBIOTIC POLYRESISTANtf. STA.PitYLOCOCCAL CARRI,ER STATE jN PA WITH TUBERCULOSIS ANO IN HE4LTHY PERS014S. -U- L.A., ATOPEK, S . YXA"Y K A L Y U K ,~A .,N. S 0 KO L OV S K I Y , ~CCUNTRY. OF INFO--USSR t7SOURCE-PROBL TUBERK 48(l): 49-53. 1970 .DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 AUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES ANTIBIOTIC~, DRUG RESISTANCE- 'TOPIC TAGS--TUBERCULOSIS, STAPHYLOCOCCUS, ,-CONTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--U,"4CLAS5fFIED -!PROXY REEL/FRAME--3006/0450 STEP NO--()R/0000/7()/044/0()I/C)O,(t-9/0053 _CIRC ACCESSIOIN Nf)--AP01342t8 ~2,/ 2 015 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--2"l'OV70 ..,_C'.,_,ACCESSION NO--AP0134218 --ABSTRA(T/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT BY TU3-E-RCULOUS PAT[ENTS EXCRETION -OF IYLOCOCCI AND ALSO THE STAPHYLOCOCCAL CARRIER STATE ISTANT STAPf POLYRES L IN TUBERCULOUS PATIENTS, MFDICAL STAFF MEIMBERS AND HEALTHY PlERSOiNS ~i7i,OUTSIDE THE HOSPITAL WERE STUDIED. IN 'LOOKING I NT IJ THE CARRIER STATE -PRO BL EM ,THE !TO ANTIBIOTICS WERE STAPHYLOCOCCI CULTURES MOST RESISTNAT IN THE GROUP OF PATIENTS, WERE LESS FPEQ()-N-rLY OfASERVED:INI THE -MEDICAL STAFF GROUP AND EVEN LESS IN,HEALTHY PERSO~4s. IN THE CLINIC, "THE POLYRESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCAL CULTURES_.SHOWFD CbNSIOERA13LY HIGHER ~.RESTSll"ANCE LEVELS AND WERE MUCH MORE FREQUENT ( IN ~RR.5PERCEINT OF -.PATIENTS AN/IN 66.9PERCEjNT OF THE,14EDICAL STAr-F MEMBERS) THAN WAS THE ~'.CASE IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS. IT 15 OBVIOUS THAT WITH~LEPIGTHY STAYS.IN AEDICAL ESTABLISHMENTSAND LONG TERM MEDICATION AIDS THE OCCURRENCE OF INTENSAVE CROSS TRAINSMISSION OF MICROBLAL FORMS RESISTANT To ANTIBIOTICS :-!BOTH ON THE PART OF PATIENTS AND MEDICAL STAFF MEMBERS. BECAUSE:OF iTHIS, MEDICAL PERSONNEL SHOULD BE SUBJECTED TO SPECIAL EXAMINATIONS, AND _'PRIATE SANITARY OF RESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCI BE11NG EXCRETEDF APPRU MEASURES SHOULD BE UNDERTAKEN. ~FACILITY: 9EP. EPIOEMIOLot N. R. :GAMALEYA INST. EPIDEMIOL. MICROBIOL., MOSCOW, USSR. USSR uDc: 681-327 YATf I KUDRYAVTSEV, 0. M. ,LITVPN, A. B. MALOVICHKO, V. V. MUSATOV, I. F., PuKOV, N. P., YAROSIIEVSKIY, I. D. "A Miultiple-Reel Tape Transport Mechanism for Memory Devices" USSR Author's Certificate No 288051, filed 5 Aug 69, published 20 Apr 71 (from RZh-Avtomatika, Telemekhanika i Vychislitel'n--ya Tekhnika, No 10, Oct 71, Abstract No 1OB344 P) Translation: Multiple-reel tape transport mechanisms for mehlory units are known which contain a reel casette, reel drive spindles',~ find a drive for moving the casette. A -istinguishing feature of the described device is arrangement of the reels in the casette by pairs in two groups coayially with eachother and-with their drive spindles; and the casette contains a bracket with guides for displacing t:,,ie casette along.the axis.of the spindles,which are equipped with releasable cartridges containing cams for locating the reels with internal tapers. Fastened to the reels are spring-loaded gear sectors which engage in the initial state with geared rims fastened on the casette housing. This speeds up data sampling and. improves the reliability of the device. Two illustrations. I/I USSR UDC 681.327.66.002.72 E.. ANFMOV, M. A., VYUGIN, V. A., KOLOBASHKIN, N. I., LITVAN, =VM'jAbT_ Ab.Wr., A. B_., blAZAN'KO, B. P., AND SOLOVYEV, V. A. "Device for Checking Bunched Conductors" USSR Author's Certificate No 277858, filed 27 May 69, published 6 Nov 70 (from R7h-Avtomatika, Telemekhanika i Vychislitel'naya'Tekhnika, No 6, Jun 71, Abstract No 6 B153 P) Translation: A testing device containing a memory, coincidence circuit, and a display circuit is well known. This device does not provide for automation of control of bunched conductors during the manufacturing process. The pro- posed device for similar purpose is distinguished by the fact that it con- tains two ferrite cores with an open magnetic conductor, into one of which wires corresponding to the code 'T' are introduced, and'into.the other, wires corresponding to the code "0." These are the primary coils of transformers the secondary windings of which are connected to the first input of each of two coincidence circuits respectively. The second input of each coincidence circuit is connected to the memory output, and their outputs are connected to the interrogation device connected to the conductors:of the tested bunched conductors and the interrogation current control circuit. The control of the bunched conductors during the production process is automated in this wav. There is I illustration. 69 USSR UDC::681.3-001.019.3 ATOV14Y-AJI. T. 0and ARSHAVSKIY, M. I. X, '"Diagnosing Defects of an Information Search Device Using External Media" Riga, Avtomatika i vychislitellnaya 'Teklinika, No 1, 1972, pp 32-36 Abstractt Because the problem of devising diagnostic tests for automatons with memories is too complex to perinit setting up al- gorithms that can be used by computers, the a:Lithors concentrate on the problem of diagnosing defects in partial automatons widely used in computer systems. The aea:rch~device they consider is -part of a device for introducing information, :the basic problem of which is to find) througi a shift in the information carrier, the address deSC2,jp4 ion of' block co.=unicated to the device by the Tcentral r=chine. A this search device is given, toltether with a block diairram, and the operation of its camonent parts analyzed. The system developed'by the atithors fox- diagno3inr, the defect is described. USSR UDC 681.326.658.562:533 ATOwff&N,__T. 0., and ARSHAVSKIY, M. I., Moscow Engineering Physics Institute "A Device for Setting the Address,in the Peripheral Units of Digital Computers" !Moscow, Otkrytiya, izobreteniya, promyshlennyye obraztsy, tovarnyye znaki, No 23, Aug 71, Author's Certificate No 310249, Division G, filed 31 Jan 70, published 26 Jul 71, p 151 Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces a device for setting the address in the peripheral units of digital computers. The device is based on the use of pulse potential elements and contains flip-flops with counting inputs, a ripple-through carry circuit with ripple-through carry ampl3ifiers, and a circuit for setting up the initial code. As aidistinguishing feature of the patent, the capability of localizing malfunctions is increased by adding a test mode flip-flop and a group of differentiating diodes whose potential inputs are tied together and connected to the one-output terminal of the test mode flip-flov. The pulse inputs of the differentiating diodes L -responding flip-flops are connected to the zero-output terminals of the cor - for the digital places, and the outputs of the differentiating diodes are connected to the inpuL[j of the ripplo-through carry ImIP111fors of the ad- jacent most signIficant digiL. 1/1 USSR UDC 548.736 ALIYEEV, Z. G., ATOVMY.Or, L. 0., and PONOMAREV, V. I., Branch of the Institute of Chemical Physics, Academy of Sciences USSR "Crystalline Structure of the Monohydrate of Pyrazine-1,3-dicarbonato- carbonyltriphenylphosphine Rhodium (1)" 4oscov, Zhurnal Strukturnoy kliimii, Vol 14, No 4, Jul/Aug 73, pp 748-749 Abstract: X-ray structural analysis of the crystalline [Rh(pyrazine-2,3- dicarbozilic. acid) (CO)pPh3)1 showed it to be of monoclinic syngony: a 11.200 + 0.005, b = 27.87-+ 0.01, c = 7.695 + 0.005 K,le = 99.5 + 0.1", d = 1.~3_ g/cm3, Z = 4. The structure of a crystal consists of discrete Manomaric molecules and water. The pyrazine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid forms a flat five-membered ring with the metal atom. The Ph c 'bordination is flat, quadratic, the carbonyl group beiug oriented trans to the oxygen atom of the organic acid. A/2 016 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 0ATE--Z3jcr70 CHOICE OF A PRINCIPAL SCHEME:OF HIGHLY M031LE GAM,4A THERAPEUTIC :APPARATUS -U- 'AUTHOR-(04)-~ATOV,TANY ~A F.? GORDON, V.1.1 DAVYUOVAI,I.A., L[TVANp A,Bs -COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ..-SOURCE--MEDITSINSKAYA RAOIOLk~ly~l 1970, VOL 15, NR~5, P.P 28-31 ..DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 _SUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES '-TOPIC TAGS--IRRADIATION APPARATUS, MEDICAL APPARATUS't GAMMA RADIATION MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS, DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PkOXY REEL/FRAIRE-1998/0282 STEP NO--UR/0241/70/015/005/0028/0031 ACCESSION NO--AP01?0971 UNCLAWFIED 016 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120971 ABSTPACT/EXTPACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE PROPERTIES 0F A KINEMATIC ~PRINCIPAL SCHEME ARE A FACTOR DETERMINING THE QUALITY OF THE GAMMA JHERAPEUTIC APPARATUS FOR MOBILE.IRRADIATIOW, THE ISSUE DISCUSSES ~KINEMATIC DIFFERENT GAfAMA APPARATUS AND ANALYZES THE INFLUENCE OF PARAMETERS OF THE RADIATION HEADON THE TECHNICAL C~ARACTERISTICS OF 7~ APPARATUS A NEW SCHEIME OF MOUNTING OF MECHANISMS. OF THE RADIATIOq HEAL) .~--lS.PROPOS;D AS A POSSIRILITY OF ESSENT'IAL IMPROVEAeNT OF THE DESIGN Of: GAMMA.THERAPEUTIC APPARATUS FOR MOBILE IRRADIATION. FACILITY: RADIOLOGICHESKiY INSTITUT MIN[STERSTVA -~.":4DRAVOOKHRANENIYA RSFSR. --UN C-L A-S-S-1-F-I E 0 I 012 UNCLASSIFIE'D PROCESSING DATE--090CT70 J-ITLE--FATTY ACID AND GLYCERIDE COMPOSITION OF BUTTtRFAT -U- AuThOk-(03J-YAKUBOV, M.K., GLAI)KAYA,.V.F.t ATRAMENTOVA, V.G. ................ "COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ~SOURCE-MOLOCH. PROM. 19709 31(2), 19-21 -VATE PUBL ISHED---70 SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLuGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES JOPIC TAGS-FATTY ACIDe FAT, FOOD ANALYS.IS, GLYCERIDE CONTROL MARKING--NU RESTRICTIONS .~DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~PabXY REEL/FRAME-1993/OZ53 STEP NO--UR/0333/70/0311002/OLII'3/002I CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0113188 UNCLASSIFIED -Z/Z olz UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-090CT70 C IRICACCESSION NU-AP0113188 ABSTRACTIEXTRA CT-W) GP-0- ABSTRACT. BUTTERFAT CONTG. 23.65 ANIO 36.05 MOL. PERCENT UNSATD. ACIDS OF Dl~~ ANO TRISAT01. CONSISTE.0 MAINLY GLYCERIDES. MUNUSATD. AND TRIUNSATD. GLYCERIDES WERENOT FOUND IN INTERi FAT W AND IN SUMMER FAT- ONLY: 8, 17 AND 0.31PERCENT RESP. , WERE . _~FOUND- FACELITY: KHARIKOV, POLITEKH. iNST. IM. LENINA, KHARKOV, ~:_USS R.I UN CLASSIFIED USSR UDC 6z?3-621.3!?1.6'25:621.'-:)~71/39 ATRAZHEY, 14. P., Candidate of Technical Sciences, IL1111, V. A., Cnamdidaate of Technical E~~iErces, and MAR'Ffl, N. P.., Doctor of Technical Sciences Bor'ba c Phdioelektronqvi.,ii Sredstvami (litilitary Electronics Countermeasijres), Moscow, "Voyenizdat,' 1972, 2(2 pp Translation: Annotation- This. book, written on the basis of unclassified foreign sotirces, briefly characterizes the contemporary air defense status of tht- capitalist countries and examnes countermeasure techniques in this defense. The procedures for applying various types of active counterreasures are listed and the gear they utilize is described. The methods. of~ obtaining passive jam- ming, false tarfvets, and decoys are considered. The ba~,ic techniques for sur- veillance of hostile electronics systeric are presented plong iith procedtires fom appraising communicat ions cotiritermeasure effectiveness. 'IThe book JLs Intended for the broad circle of readem interested in the fun(burientals of electrcnics countermeasares. Candidate of Technical Sciences V. A. 111in ~wrote chanters 1-3 arid. section 6 olf chapter It. Doctor of Technical Sciences IL P. Marlin wrote chapters 4-61 and Candidate of Technical Sciences M. P. Atrazliev wrote c1LaT)te21S 7-9. 1hble of Contents: Page Preface 3 1/5 UISSR ATRAMEV, M. P. and _TL'TJ1, V. A., Bor'ba c Radioel-ektronnylyd. Sredstvaipd, 1972.. 272, pp Cha-ater 1. General Prirci-oles of E-mploying Electronics Systems in the Military Ajr Defense of Capitalist COU11tries 6 -1. General Characterization of Air Defense 6 2. Radar Warning Stations 11 3. y ~darn Target Direction, Range, and Velocit Traching.Ra 21 4. Peculiarities of Near-Suace Radiavrave Pro-paigation 36 5- Catepries of Electronics Countermeasures 310 Chapter I!. Active Electronics Measures Against Warning and Gui, dance Ra-dar Stations 42 1. Continuous-1.1ave Noise Jwmning 2 2. Block Diagrai~,,,, of Conti mious-1-1eve Noise Jir_immerg 50 Narrowl-,an(l Spot With Noise 55 It. Palsed Jamming 5- Urbriodullated and Tone-Modulated Continuous-liave jar',-_mi_-,;' 6--.) Chapter -III. Active Measures for Jarming Radar Stations riperatill.- ill Autox-atic Tar,-,,at--Tracking Modes 66 1. Int=_rference S-_7gnals Madulated at the Antenna Scan 'Trem,,ency of the Hostile Radar 6; 6 2/5 2. Jawviing Radars With Knoim Scan Frequencies "h 72 USSR -ronn,,nT. ATRAZIPE. V, M. P. and ILI IN, V. A., Bor ba c Ra d i o e 1 e k Ld Sredstvami, 1- 72 272 pp 3- Noise Barrage Jamming at the Scan Fruq~uency 74 4. Jamming at the Lobing Freqixency 78 5- Jamming the Range Circuit of Pulsed Automatic Tracking Radars (Range-Gate Stealers) 80 6. Jaming the Velocity Circuit of Continuous-Wave Autorkatic Tracking Radars [Velocity-Gate Stealers] 85 Active Electronics Measures Against Control and Communications Radio Links &8 .8. Sweepthrouj- -i Jamming 90 Chapter IV. Passi-v-c Electronics Countelmleasure 14athods 98 1. General Passive Janjnnina Characteristics Q5 2. Radio-wave Scattering by a Half -Wave Dipole (Chaff) and Long W'ire 99 3- 11ndiowave 8cattering Propertler, Of Ll Cl)ftff Corridor 103 4. Using Chaff to Jam Warning and Guidance Radar Stations IG3 5. Using Chaff to Jam Target Direct Aon and Ran[:e Rstdar Tr, cking Stations ii6 6. 1,44thods orL rrotectinG Radars Against Passive Jamming 124 3/5 USSR ATRAZHEV, M. P. and n'IN, V. A., Bor'"ba c Pb4ioelektr)nn1wd Sredstvaird.1 2. 97 272 PP 7- Passive Deception of Reentry Warning Radars 131 8. Interference Noises Produced by a Jet Engine Wake 134 9. JaimmiDg Obtained by Bursts of Nuclear Ammunition 137 Chapter V. False Targets and Fx-dar Decoys 19 2 1. General Information Pbout Radar Decoys 152 2. The Radar Cross Section of Dacovs 15-8 3. False Targets Based on Plasma Formations 16? 'Chapter VI. Reducing the Radar Observability of an Object 165 1. Methods of Lcrwering an Ubject's Radar Cross Sect ,ion 165 2. Properties and Methods of Using Absorbing Coat~ nr's 16q 3. LowerinB the Radar Cross Section Th 7h Proper Velricle Shapin- rou , 172 4. The Effect of a Plasivi Sheath an the RadAzr Cross S,~ction of all object Chapter VII. SQ1ectinir I/Qthols of Daar~troying nnd Jow.-minf, Electrordes, 1. Destroving ElectronicG Installations 1811 2. 'Elie Role of Comhat Formations and Evanive M,.-trieiiverin,-, 18,( 3- ,e, Integrated ~Jso of Diverze ElectrorAct; Counterv s!;- 19,~ 4/5 6,~ IISSR ATRAMPI, M. P. and ILIIN, V. A., Bor'ba c Radioelektronnyini Sredstvamd, 1c,)72, 272 pp, Chapter VIII. Electronics intelligence.Systems 194 1. General Knowled_~e A.1bout Electronics.intelligence Aids 191, 2. Data Obtained ThrouGh Electronics Sunreillance 197 3- Surveillance of Radio Signals 199 4. Separation of Signals 20-51 5- I-leaunring the Signal Carrier Frequency 208 W. 6. Mieassuring.the Direction of a Radiation Emitter 215 7. Yeasuring 1,11oditlation Ctaracteris tics 221 8. Fecordipg Systems 224 9. The Pange of Electronics Reemmaissance Coverage 10. Characteristics of Electronics Intelligence-Stations 233 Chapter IX. Bsti:mating the- Effectiveness of Electronics Counten~.,--asures 24o 1. The General Ccacept of Appraising Jar-i-ning Effectiveness 24o 2. Tactical Factors in Radio Jamming Effectiveness fai, Coordinated Trcop end Weapons Control Channels 24o 3. Deteimiining the Zones for Jaanming Electronic Facilities 251 4. The Power Factor in Js.,.wirrr Effectiveness 264 Bibliograp. hy P67 5 /5 V111-9A. PERMCTIOH OF T1115 STgUCV.'RC )6%0 IEOWNICAL STKLH=t Or SINCLE CRTS- TALS OF 7119 distill" TYPE GROWN FROM A MELT 01) N04 'nil: VAPOR HIASE lArticle by 1_.Ao Sinovey, D. V. Jsstru~hcllenko' 0. A, Fedr-rSn$,.Q. V. -Y_Lu~~ki , grata t int~tx roiu-r~ 'har'kovt N.vosilitiss-k.'Itl jo' Protgo.-W V vodnl$,-vykh Kriatallov i Pienoksru~sian. IZ-17 .1mir, V47.1, p 110) The Ainslie CdS And Use cr,qtaln Sr~t from a m-It under 111%ert gas soure have the structure of vurtzito And ZnSe. We and Zn e have the strue- pre _ T tu r, otsiphalerite. Th~ otn 611mved-ainItIc crv&tA]4 of Zn.S have the structure of--.p h4 letite Vilt they contain ~ large number of trTurfections cr~"necttd with the at4tintical di9ordering and errors in the superpoottLon v! the atomic lx~ urn, 'Chr type of cr-fnt*l of ZnS single cryttals grown from the vapor ph*-.it a determined by the aynthexis Conditions amd, above all. by the temperature. The etching pictuTtA of different pInneq of ZnS aingle crv%t*L* Sre~m from a melt and from the vapor phase are compored. A Ptudv was made of the mictantrength characteriotica of single'AIISVI crystalo a" a functien of the Crystal. otructure, the dtgTt. of its peritction and the lattite Parameters. tt van demonatrate4. that alloying otngle Znl cryatala with a- itixturem (aluminum). stabilize% the vuttsits at ructu us and alloying vith , acceptor admIxtures (copper). the aphalvirlte structure. For alloyed single clystAls. a study w4S made of th* amisetTopi of the sicrohardne.., and c, c usions were drawn regarding th* 11110's of Plastic flov caused by the lodentor of the aLLcrohardn*&a masister. 114 Q, Phisical Properties USSR UDC: 620.18:539.4.019.2 ATRQSHCIMK0, E. S., KOSOVICH, V. A.1 5.FDYKH, V. S., and SHORSHOROV, M. KH., Volgo- gradl Moscow Me Physico4lechanical Properties of Blanks Produced by Explosive Pressine' Moscow, Fizika I Khimiya Obrabotki Materialov, No 51 Sep-Oct 73, pp 123-127 Abstract: The authors study the densityt electric conductivity, and hardness of pressings after the explosive, matnixIess pressing of iron, nickel, and titanium powder. It is shown that the physico-mechanical properties of pressings obtained by explosive pressing m-e determined primarily by interparticle contacts with a metallic bond. Simultan*eously the inadequate meta-Llic bond of the particles in the briquets is indicatedl showing the necessity for the subsequent sintering of the briquets. VIII-2. MEMMISM OF THc accunua, or rnrk:s IN CRYSTALS rRVVM FKPI A C)6- S&TUILATLU MELT (Articlo byb, It. hLrrulls, Yll.,R. 0vtorovinuka-, V. V. Fishchli,l, L. l_,finvv~, i and L. V,.Atr-jSjLS~nkO. All-UnItin Scit-ittific kv~earch ".n.,ttitute,of cr,- talm, Khar'kov, Havanibirak, III Slr-r "1 1,10 go-t. I 5-=te-4 r,*.- uprovotinikovykh krintAllov I Plenv~,j Hflsh., H-li juve 197.', r. 1,;;; A atudv von made af the physicAl procellAvq 4efitlij t - the per, fOr". tIan , In sinsle c"qtnim for C le r grmt1j from a,x"-atur^ted ~cjt. TtNv:,~J,~ Z A- 1 tjon and paturation of tile rallf VI Lill tilt! go" solution CvrTOnv"t&# Virir geRrt- Rr go Lion on the phana Interface and teproce,mem of rertmval of tht"r zr," 0i,erill. dlep In the relt o6 a remult of diffumiun And convection are Inmx-.jc*tvd. A PtUdy W411 MLIC Of tllv prob1cm of tho occurrence of nucleating cChttz Of e ,,, gas t)114141- fit tile CryStAlItlAtLon front And their effect Olt tit* rorv !r~clon in tile Itnuld rilofte Ilip morphology of pores In minP.10 Cr!,It&lm Of C4dMi= sultidt, zinc sm1f1de And leucclampphlre wmi inveatigntr4l. In the.cmstAlo rorts Of arherica Columar And drop shoot were observed. Studje% were leade of tit* problem of tocetinn of the pore A during the protpam of high-ter-rerott=m Ce r- toin problatm of the growth itinetice, 'of bubbles in the 7ft1t and the rolvarnr parts in the cr7stel are discussed. : Th Atneral Is" of the occurrence of paroa, in sinitle trv*talx of a li_ a C....,t in; ionic compounds Xtown from a dissociating volt were fo%oad~ lob - R Rix 43 USSR -)LB. -5 UDC -,) L. rl L. P. SYSOYEV, L. A. All Uri fo-Ta Sc i6lit 5 ~T~c~ e s: ~ercii ims `6-1-at a of Single crystals, KhriarlI.,ov "Single C2.-ystals Of 1n2T With a Pro,3ressively va-:vYfn- e3 of Deviatbio n Frorm Stoichibmetry" Mosco-.-r, Neox-ganichesici -e Materialy )fly 70, pp 860- Vol 6, 11.0 5, 864 Abst--ac~,-. The auth-o--rs studied alloys t-In c. a r e a o homogen6a. -ystal'sarun Ity us n. ;.es an 1e ci oa ~~ir; recul ts -ied -h data 'Prov-1 7polycrystalline obtaii cryst""-1 T,.,ara obtained by,zone r. --, a -1 i r Tl-.o Its L U COrrG-"O1:iatCC-L T,hO b-on d-iagram plotted fr-cm, da'a. UU for the 1-n-Te sy-stem, closP to the ln2Tc--,. 3 4- *,. 4- e-4 -M?Opert';-5 cif zi'orlz; c---l in t,-,- emtii--a of the exist-aIncO Of 1r-2Te- are 4 d,- - 0 1 -r -p-7 4-.-, a, I * U- wit'-n- the a rz Dc~via-*- ~Dn-- 1,2'y no ef cct tne c.-, j, -f -t -U`i~.-s of the doloct've phan-a o~' -In2TQ3. us 13 R U DO, S, 7 C, 8 _5 0 9 7. -C, S17-, %f. '77T.., -(:. I -ANT IA pi S ute o4: e n v r Li's C -3. - CeMV OF Sciences, T V-' nrt SS:Z Us e o EMULSIOZIS COE Or-lnosil-LCOL- COMDOUMdS PraC C el I MIOSCOW, VOPrOSY -~Y- so -;,I Cf I 'o n, "I abstract: ra-pIdly coa-,,ulati-- plnz-,ai o-, L:- L =-onn -thle bloc"', of7 L' L: m, a n d soule aai r-als variety of cmul t~~ ~om-e c-*,.--;c-s hor-~.C -1. 0. Z M a Lie P Fuzat-, .Ln a reEriiacrator 4 C. Ti- plasma coa,~ul.eateif Lrd 4-,C u, a. i2 Q. 'i CO-LSLGL-en-Cy. ClOttill-1- tiMC -.-'I tCSt silc-,anc -as considerably lon-er as comapred with CO;17--01 8-10, and more t-'Llan SO mirt -for hLlman, rp.Ms and I)L-ood, res- p C- c -4city tests, pla-ma o b ii (,- dwt L t of s2AI-cones was aa:--;ed ro cuLtures of Inuman er,,br,,-or--"c -n--w-d c h c 'k e rab ro s In so-mic cases cell suspen,3io-IS dircctlj '14co cs. to test tub, cz, 'Croal te-d wi t-h s- n k T S o -f n i-- n 01 other s-Lmificant chann-us wcre noted in the ~isz~uo 025 UNCLASSIFIED: ~PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70 ,]:.TITLE--USE OF EMULSIONS OF SILICO.ORGANIC COMPOUNDS, IN VIROLOGICAL _u_ AUTHOR-(041-KRISTAPSON, M.Zli., RUMYANTSEVA N.P., REZNIYEKS, A.A., ATRENA, Ks - _~COUNTRY. OF INFO--USSR .-SOURCE-VOPROSY VIRUSOLOGII, 1970, NR I? PP 116-120' PUBLISHED------70 .,.SUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES 'TOPIC TAGS--TISSUE CULTURE, VIROLOGY, ORGANOSILICOWCOMPOUND, WHOLE BLOOD :-C.ONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS .::DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME--1987/0065 STEP NO--UR/0402/70/000/001/0116/0120 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0103745 UNCLASSIFIED TI"ansporTazion RnCL UQnVeY.Ing USSR uDc: 621.643 ATROSHCIMKO, L. S., VORONINA, S. M., Donetsk State University "A Pipeline for Transporting Liquid Oxygen" Moscaw, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniva, Pro=VshleallvVe Obraztsy,; Tovarnyye Znaki No 10, Apr 72, Author's Certificate No 332284, Division. F, filed 27 Jul, 70, published 14 Mar 72, pp 145-146 Translationt Ohis Author's Certificate introduces a pipeline for trans- porting -liquid oxygen which consists of an inner heat-insulated tube end an outer jacket. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the liquid oxygen is transferred without a pump by fitting the pipeline, with a mag- netic circuit and an electric winding.. _j LAIA us S R TJDC 546.48'.,22:548.55:539.4 M V. SYSOYEV, L., A., 0BUKHOVSK4 I YA. A., nd K0SFEKL\Tj V. M1. All-Union Scientific Res earch Insititute of Single ..Crystals "Effect of the Orientation of the Second Phase on the Anisotropy of Brittle Failure in Single Crystals of -,dS:Alloyed With Lithium" Moscow, N'leorganicheskiye Materialy, Vol 6, No 11, Nov 70, pp 1917-10,21 Abstlract: A study was mad of the ariisotrop~ of brittle 'failure in single crystals of cadmium-sulfide alloyed with lithium as a function of concentration. A metallograptiic,:investig-atioa o1r sections, the cleavage structure structure, and tk~e pattern of brittle failure of the crystals around the impressions made by microindentor loading showed that at:Li co'ncentrations of the order of 0.5 10-2 wt- /0 the.cleavage plane-of cadmium sulfide is modified.. If nonimpurity CdS single crystals undergo cleavage only along the I brittle failure 11003 or ti C~ planes, then can otl-car in cadmium sulfide strongly alloyed with lithium only alorw I.-Ine bar-al planca 1_1001 This cf`ccl~ is -:_-,;ociated dth the r,(,',JTr(-ration of the second phase as plt-.itoc nrr,~~,alted in layers, parDllcl to the ~. 00~-, planes of the mntriu was ex per-om,~xrltally nhown that the plates are tho cLy~:i;--.und Li S' USSR UDC 537-311-33:536.7 ATR03hCqENKO, KOSHKIN, V. 14 and L. V., All-Union Scientific Research -Institute of Single CFYf7-s%r' "Thermodynamic Study of Solubility of Impurities in Semiconductors With Stoichiometric Vacancies" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR --.Neorganicheskiye 1,;aterialy, Vol 6, No 4, Apr 70, PP 714-719 Abstract:, The article presents experimental data on the solubility of a number of impurities (Bi, Sb, Mg, Cd, Zn, Cn) in Ga Te , as well as 2 3 .new data on In Te3-impurity constitution diagrams. The experimental 2 findings on the solubility ofimpurities in the'alpha phase of In Te 2 3 aad in Ga2Te3 were compared quantitatively with the thermodynamic mod- ted by the authors et al. for the solubility of impurities e1 construck, I.and deviations from stoichiometry. The results confirm the thermody- 112 USSR KOSHKIN, V. M., and ATROSHCHFAIKO, L. V., izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR Neorganicheskiye Materialy, Vol 6, No 4, lft'Pr~70, PP 714-719 model. It is shown that the maximum solubility of the impuri- ties, as well as constitution-diagram peculiarities are determined by ~the size factor of 1~he impurity. The.characteristic size of the im- purity is determined by its atomic radius, which corresponds to the nonionized state. Impurities in crystals with sroichiometric vacan- cies are localized the latter, remaining in a nonionized state. One of the measurements was made by V. K4 KOMAR o1 --04DEC70 8 UNCLASSIFIED-_ -PROCESSING DATE, 13-ITLE-SINGLE CRYSTALS WIN SU82 TE:SU83.WlTH.A PROGRESSIVELY VARYING ~-"-:'MAGNITUDE OF DEVIATION FROM STOICHIOMETRY] _u ,,AUTHOR-(04)-GALCHINETSKIY, L.P.,.ATROSHCHENKO, L.V.I.KOSHKINt V*M4r SOYEV?~L*A_p SY :,C0UNTRY:OFINFO--USSR ,'.SOURCE-IZV. SSSR. MOSCOWY NEORGANICHESKIYi~ZTERIALY, VOL 61 NO 5, MAY 0, PP 960-863 PUBLISHED----MAY70 _,.SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS TAGS--SINGLE CRYSTAL* INDIUM*CQMPOUNDt TELLURIDE, ELECTRIC PROPERTYP PHYSTCAL PROPERTYr STOICHIOMETRYL~~ .-CONTROL'MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS "-PROXY REEL/FRAME-3005/1.534 STEP NO--UR/0363/7D/O(j6tOO5/086010863 ,:61RC-ACCESSION NO--AP0133461 UNG LkSS If I E 0 Millmn" log -70 -2/2 018 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--04DEG '~,CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0133461 .,ABSTRAC.T/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, THE AUTHORS STUDIED ALLOYS IN THE OF IN SU82 TE SUB3 HOMOGENEITV USINGiSINGLE CRYSTAL SAMPLES AND ,:,COMPARED THE RESULTS OBTAINED WITH DATA~FROM POLYC'RYSTALLINE IMATERIALS~ SINGLE CRYSTAL SAMPLES WERE OBTAINED BY ZONE -MELTING. THE RESULTS :--.,_,.CORROBO,R.ATE&THE COMPOSITION,OXAGRAM PLOTTED FRO151"EARLIER OATA FOR THE TE-T-SYSTEMt CLOSE TO THE COMPOUND,IN:SUB2 TE SU83. 11' WAS FURTHER THAT PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF.SINGLE, CRYSTALS'IN THE ENTIRE RANGE .OF.THE EXISTENCE OF IN SUB2 TE SUB1,ARE: IDENTlICAL WITH THE ;~.~PROPERTIES OF-POLYCRYSTALLINE SAMPLES.-DEVIATIONS~FROM STIOCHIOMETRY :SHOW-PRACTICALLY NO EFFECT ON THE.~ELECTRIC:.PROPERTJES OF THE DEFECTIVE A-PHASE OF~IN:,:SUB2 TE SU63. ~FACILITY: ALL UNION SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTE OF SINGLE CRYSTALSt~;KHARIKOV..l UNCLASSs'FIEO Acc. N Abstracting Service: Ref. Code- ffPi9101521__ CHEMICAL ABST A f- 113422u Kinetics of the conversion of methane by steam under pressure. Atroshchenko, V. I.; Z,V~agintsev. G. L. (USSR). Kht"j. JYr*FtT7-T,4,, v'_rhm+-1'�7o, ~ffk I ), Li6_ (R ss) The catalytic conversion of sulfide-free natural gas in contact with the, GIAP-3 catalyst was investigated at 873-1073*K, 4 1 atm., flow rates of 3000-50,000 vol./hr. and stearn,s~as ratios of 0.5-4.0: 1. The time needed to reach an equil. deg. of conver- Sion of the C11, was 0.20-0.26 see. The rate'const., k, of the reaction in the- presence of an occess of stcarn, cg., at 2:1 [40-C114 ratio wai practically independent,of the pressure betweea 2 and 41 atm and'its value at 10-73'K was 31.6 atm/- see; the eiiergy of activation of the reaction wa~ 90,300 JI'mole. The relation between k and ~ temp., T, can be expressed by the equati6nio.-k = 5.90 - (4720/T). At HzO: CHj ratios