SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT OKON, I.M. - OKUN, L.B.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002202310004-7
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RIF
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S
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99
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August 9, 2001
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Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
Content Type:
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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:212 031 IJNCL~ASSIFIED PROCCSSING DATE-160CT70
-.:-"IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0105655
ABSTRACT/ EX T RACT-- (U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. 'EXPTS. WF-RL= CARRIED OUT WITHA
.-CYCLOTRON AND TARGETS OF PRIME204 P13 AND PRIME2013 PB PREPD. BY
ELECTROLYTIC METHODS, BY SIMULTANEOUS DETN. OF CROS5 SECTIONS OF SIGISA
SUBF OF THE (ALPHA* F) PROCESS AND OF THE ANGULAR DISPERSION) W(THETAI
OF THE FISSION FRAGMENTS. THE ENERGY DROP OF ALPHA PARTICLES WAS DETD.
BY AL FOILS WITH ACCURACY IS LESS THAN 10R EQUAL TO PLUS OR MINUS'0.2
..~MEV. ANGULAR ANISTROPY W(ODEGREES)-W(90DEGREESI WAS PLOTTED AS A
FUNCTION OF THE EXCITATION ENERGY E FOR PRIME208~PO, PRfME2L2 P09 AND
PRIME210 POr wITH E EQUALS E SUBX NEGATIVE E SUBF 't WHERE E SUBX IS THE
INITIAL ENERGY OF EXCITATION OF THE EXISTING NUCLEUS AND E SUBF IS THE
HE:IGHT OF THE FISSION BARRIER. E SUBF FOR PRIME2,08 PO WAS 19.8 MEV 3Y
DETN. OF THE FUNCTION SIGMA SUBF (E SU8X)l. VALUES ASSUMED FOR PRIME210
PO AND PRIMEZIZ PO WERE 20.5 AND 18#8 MEVt RESP. iIS. G. THUMPSON,
!EXPTL. RESULTS AND THEORETICAL'ANAL. OF THE ANISOTROPY PROVED
19671,
~THE WEAK DEPENDENCE OF THE ENERGY GAPJ)ELTA SUBF ON THE NUCLEUS
DEFORMATION IN THE FISSION PROCESS* FACILITY: INST. YAD. FIZ.,
-A A~ATA-j USSR.
LM
UNCLASSIFIED
Sep 1-3
UDC 5311.,P3
MOLUT1 Or AT; RWIC&TING (XA(11;TAULIZrR ON KG71ATW4 OF A WRU-STAGE CrROSC.Ope
[Axtitle by S. H. ZCVA-4~U. T " n6o= Leningrad, Institute of Prc=.41~
w-
Mechanics and Optic.; Lmingr.4. IM-S N ~Yeniva, B,
No 6. 1973. subnittO 10
-.6mitliark of stability of an todicAting stobUixer in rho
presents of vlazosity in the suapeasion of a forced rotatIng
thrae-4tsga gyroscope is obtained,
0" of the effective vicans of Amproviag the acc:ur"y of 1.n4ic:A&ct-V,&
gyroatobi.Lizers As the method of forced rotation, of the 4toultive tlA=,mts
around the kinatLe unwat vector (see the biUIUVaphyt_ he ths at"ica, La-
dicate. the locreAss Ln_ angulav, valotfty of- Us a P",.Uvo
affect, an tho efficiency. of thlq~ TAthod.
Figure 1.
In thin article 4 study vas mAda of the possibility Of intreddi=Z thift
USSR UDC'577-10i5-7/9
and NUMWMETOVI, YE. K.
"Vitamin A and C Content of Animl Organism in Experimental Fluoride Intoxica-
tiolp,
Tr. Alma-At. mad. in-t (Works of Alma-Ata Medical Insti-tute), 1970, 26t PP 340-
344 (from IiZh-Biologicheskayay Xhimiya, Ito 22t 25 Nov 7.1, Abstract No
22=~6 by ii. sH.)
Translationt Data axe presented on the content of vitsain A in the livex,
and oxidized and reduced forms of vitamin C In the liver, adrenal glands,
lungs and blood of male rats when inoculated daily (6 hours eaeb for 3 arA
.6 months) with varying concentrations of HF (0.1s 0.5, 1.0 and 3 mg/cu M).
IA
USSR We 615.916. t669-799,015-25
OKONISMKOVA, L YE. ROMMEM3 , YE. YE. , and VOHONTSON~A. S.j Institute
lof~-Labak;hygierid--Idd Occupational Diseasesp Sverd1lo"-k
toxication With
-Prophylactic Effect of Succimer in Chronic Mcpexinenta4 In
)16=1127 V?
metallic
P48COWt Gigiyena truda i ln~-ofe-ssior-alnyya zabolevaniym, No _31 Mar 71, pp 26-31
Abstracti The newly synthesized marcury antidote sucaimer dithiol is higUy
harnaess for the body, and convenient to use. It was stle-Jed
in cases of acute nercurbic chloride poisoning of animals. It effectiveness
in prophylaxis and under conditiona of prolonged expos 'ur-. tQ low concentra-
tions of metallic mercury vapor were studiod. White rats (24) were subjected
to the daily action of T~--etallic. r-ercuxy vapor in a concentxation of 0.1~~tO.01
MW (seven hours per day, five times each week for a~perlod of three wnths).
Half of the group of animalls --cceived sue--imer beSo;re and aftor the ex-oosure
in a dose of 100 nekg. A third &Toup of:12 rats served as controls. No
appaxent pathologic-al &-irees wexe obs-ervedAn animals exposed. to -lk-.hese
relatively lou Hg cancezt-mtionsy Urt Intoxication pheraomena. were observed,
which can rapidly progress to nore pronounced si(,,As of acute Intoxication
1/2
71
USSR
OXONISHNIXOVAl I. YE.f Cigiyena truda i professionalnyye zabolevaniya,
No 31 )hr 71, pp 28-31
when the Hg vapor concentration is increased for a shox-b period "2 hotxs
at 0.76 mdO on the 35th day of the experiment). Re&nLl--r ftvatrient with
succin-.r inhibited development of symptoms Off chronic intoxication as Vell as
aigns of acute accidental poisoning. The normal bloo4 catalaze activity
was riAainea, the content of free SH groups in whole bloodr.blood serum,
Iddneys and liver wore protected, and there was no sha;rp weight loss in
animls to whom succi-ner bad been given, It is zveo=ended.that succiner
arTniniezat-ton be introduced as a prophy1actic meazuxv7: in mercury industry
Plants.,
2/2
-112 008 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCES51"NG DATE--160CT70
~.TITLE-COMPLEXING PROPERTIES OF STEREWSOMERS OF WMERCAPTOSUCCINIC ACID
".~'AUTHOR-104)-OKONISHNIKOVA,r I.YEor.YEGOROVA, LGp MIRENBURGI V.L.,
",'COUNT.RY,OF INFO--USSR
-SOURCE-KHIM..-FARM. ZH. 19701 4(1)1, 21-4
~~',DATE PUBLISHED------70
,-SUBJECT ARE-AS--CHEMISTRYI .&IOLGGI-CAL .-SCfENCES
~T OPIC..TAGS--ISOMERt RAT, MERCURY COMP.0UNO
I~CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DMUMEN1 CLASS-UINCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME-1993/1901 STEP NO--UR/0450/70i/004/001/0021/0024r
_~CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0114341
UNCLASSIFIED
-2/2 008 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--160CT70
'.:.CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0114341
J:~,ABSTRACT/ EXTRACT--( U) GP--O- ABSTRACT, TWO FORMS Or- THE TITLE CDMPD.,
DL-DMSA AND MESO-OMSA, WEkE TESTED AS TO:THEIR RELATIVE EFFICACY IN THE
;REDN. OF PFZIME203 HGCL SUB2 WHICH HAO~SEEN GIVEN TO RATS. THE IS0,14ER
TESTED WAS ADMINISTERED IS LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO 15 MIN PRIOR TO THE
INTRODUCTION OF THE HG COMPD.9 3 DOSES OF THE RESP. ISOMER BEING GIVEN
EACH DAY FOR A TOTAL OF 3 DAYS. THE HG WAS GIVEN S. C, AT LEVELS OF 35,
70,~,,AND 242 MG-KG. AN EXPT. 14AS ALSO DONE AT AN ORAL DOSAGE LEVEL OF
385 MG-KG. THE.PERCENT OF THE HG CUMPD. ELIMINATED WAS CHECKED AFTER I
AND 3 DAYS. IN ALL CASES THE DL FORM WAS MUCH MORIE EFFICIENT THAN THE
MESO-FORM. THE RESULTS ARE GIVEN IN TABULAR FORM., ON ALKALI TITRN. OF
THE 2 FURMSi BOTH IN THE PRESENCE AND ARSENCE OF HUCL SU82t
IT WAS FOUNO
THAT THE.2 TITRN. CURVES WERE ALMOST IDENTICAL. HOWEVERt UIFFERENCES
i~~ WERE NOTED IN THE CURVES WHEN THE ABSORBANCEWAS DETD. AT DIFFERENT PH
FACILITY: SVERDLOVSK. fNST,, GIG. TR* PROFZABOL,
LEVELS,
SVEROLOVSKi USSR*
'00 101, ........
RE momm''I P
USSR UDC: S77.4
OVCHINNIKOV, V. D. GOTUA, D. A.
I.Wodeling a System of Variable Structure in Terms of a Buslenko
Aggregate for Optimum Control off an Object Under Conditions of
Interference"
Probl. sistemotekhniki--sbornik (Problems of Systems Analysis-
collection.of works), vyp. 1, n.p., "Sudostroyeniyell, 1972, pp
134-143 (from RZh-Kibernetika, No 10. Oct.72, abstract No I.OV394)
[No abstract]
USSR UDC 620.10
MOSKVINt V. G. I Aspi-~-aat, and 2KOPM Yu. A., Aspirant
"Stability Investigation of a System "Ift th Tyro -Degrees of Preedom
by a: Random Parametric Effect"
(Article presented by Doctor of Technical Sciences V. V. Bolotin,
Professor at the Moscow Power Engineering Institute)
Moscow, Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedeniy. Alashinoatroyeniye.
No 3, 19729 pp 31-35
Abstract: The instability regions of a vibratory system with two
degrees of freedom by a random parametric e:Cfect az~a determined,
proceeding from the system of stochastic differontial equations
describing the disturbed motion of the syst=4 The motion is in-
terpreted as a Markovian process in an expanded phar3e space. The
solution is found by the method of moment functions. Instability
regions determined analytically from derived formulas are compa-
red with exDerimental' data fron electronic computers., A satisfac-
tory, coinciaence of theoretical and experim-enta-1 data is shown.
Three illustr., 11 formulas. five biblio. refs.
USSR UDC 669.1.87.2t621-365.5
OKOROKOVj G. N.t SHALIMOV, A. G., AMPOVp V. X., and TUUNj N. A.
Proivodetvo $tall I Splavoy v Vakuumnykh Induksion-nykh Jlachp-kh (The Praduction
of Steol and Alloys in Vacuvm Induction FLumaces), Moanow, 1101allurglyal
191 pp
Translation of Aanotationi The censtruction of various types of contemporzary
vacuum induction fun=as is described, Physlcochemieal prooesses are described
which occur during snelting of steals an(i alloys in vacimm ituiucticn furnaces.
Methods are proposed for intensification of reduction and refining of metalfi.
A detailed characterization of the quaJity of metal is given. The book is
intended for scientific workers, engineering-technical personnelo and highly
qualified workers of xetallurgy factories. It can b-- useful Por students
in.advanced courses of metallurgical institutions of higher education. 98
illustrations, 64 tableng bibliography ofl?2 titles,
Table of Contentas Page
Introduction
3
M&PUr 1*,~ Construction of Vacuum Induction Furnacos
laboratory Furnaces 6
SextProduction Furnaces 11
Production Furnaces 12
22
--- ---------
USSR
CKOROXOV$ G. N., at al.y The Production of Steel andAlloys in Vacuum Induction
Furnaces, Moscow, Xetallurgiya$ 1972o 191 pp,
Metal MiX108
Useof Supplementary Electromagnetic
30
of Vacuun Induction-Furnaces 32
Chapter 2 * Ozygen Behavior During Vacuuix"Induction Melting
Interaction of Molten With the Fanace Atmosphele and the Firr.-
proof Liming 37
Deoxidation of Metal 56
Chapter 3,. Nitrogen Behavior During Smelting of Steel and AalWa in
Vacuum Induction Furnaces
Influence of Surface Active Elemients on the Speed of Vitrogen
Discharge 67
Influ6nce of that Specific Metal-Gap Contact Axtal 74
Influence of Temperature on'the Nitrogen Dichargo Process 75
Influence of the Intensity of Electromagnetic Mixing an the Speed
of Nitrogen Discharee 79
Denitriding of Soelts Containing Strong Nitridizing Blements 81
Chapter 4. Evaporation of Condensed Contaminants and Components of Smel ts
in the Vacuum
Influence of Melting Parazatero on Evaporation of Contaminants in
.2/3 Vacuua Induction Furnaces
USSR
OKOROKOVt G. N.# et al.t The Production of Steel amd Alloys In Vacuum XxAuction
ft=ceap Moscow, Metallurglyat. 197Z, 191 ~pp:
On the Limiting Stage in the Process of Discharging Condensed
Contaminants In the Vacuum
* 97
.iArjts In the
Relationship of Rates of Evaporation'of Contwd1
Vacuum and the Alloy Base: 104
ChaPter 5. Decarbonization of Metal in Vacuum Induction Furnaces 108
Chapter 6. Intensification of Refining Procoeses.in Vacuum Induction
Furnaces
SpeedJng Degasification, of Keta.1 Processes 120
Intensification of Deoxidation Prozenaes 132
Use of Slags
135
Combining Vacuum Induction Malting with Other Heating Methods 142
Chapter Smelting Technology in VacuuwInduction Furvzces and Pro-
-parties of Steals and Alloys
Gonena Conditions of k1olting Technology 146
Characteristics of Saelting and Properties of Steels and Alloyis 151
Production og Steels =4 Alloys ~ by ~ a Daplax Froc ka Of VILCUUM
Induction Furnace and Vacuum ArcZaelting 173
Conclusion 18)
Dibliogruphy 313 183
U77
USSR LDC 669-187.2,083
GOTINj Y. N. j ZAYTSEV, B. YE., SHCKERBAKOV, A. I. , _ZHITK-C-V, N. K., QYXZQ49YL
-G-14, BOYARASHDOV, V. A., VOY11011SM, ME. B., MPILil't,'~'V.- V' ,kfALD.OV,
AL. G., OSIPOVA, L. M., MERNOV, YU. V., ROZAKOYA, T. S.0 and IAXTIONCV, Y. S.
"Influence of Wall Thickness of Crvstallizer and Consumption of Cooling Water on
Conditions of Formation of Ingot [hiring Vacuum Arc Romefting"
Proizvodstvo Chernvkh Metallov [Production of Ferrous Metals--Collection of
-180
Works], No 7S, Nietallurgiya Press, 1970, pp:178
Translation: In a vacuum arc furnace in a:crystallizer (C) 160 mm in diameter
with a current of 2.0-3.7 ka, the influence of wall thicUess of C and tempera-
ture of cooling water on conditions of formation of ingot of complexly alloyed
nickel-based alloys is studied. C with wall. thickne!~ses of 30 and 18 ULM were
studied, the temperature on the outer surface'of the C reaching 75% in the first
case, 1050C in the s
econd. The temperature. of the internal surface of the C was
identical, 140-150*C. Neither a change in C thickness nor a change in water
22 m3/hr influenced
consumption from 11 to the depth of the liquid metal bath,
i.e., both repeated rolling of the C and reduced water consumption were permis-
sible. 2 figures.
USSR UDC:669.187.5
ZAYTSEV, B. Ye., GOTIN, V. M., SHCHERBAKOV, A. 1. ZIIITKOV,
N ~ K. , '&WL -G. N., BOYARS-111-NMI; V. A,, TULIN, N. VOY'NOV5KIY, Ye. V. ,
w -QVL
TIOPILIN,- Y- V. , N. P. , SHALIMOV~ Al. G., OSIPOVA, L. A., CHEPN-OV,
RAZMIOV,.T. S.
yu. V. znd
"Specifics of Vacuum Are Remelting of Nickel-Based Alloys and Stainless Steels
With Reverse Arc Polarity"
Proizvodstvo Chernykh Metallov (Production of.Feryous Metals-Collection of
Works], No 75, Metallurgiya Press, 1970, pp 181-183
Translation: Results are presented from a study of vacuum arc remelting of
nickel al,'.oys in a ci7stallizer 380-4SO mm in dimneter with. r1lurinocouplas
calked in longt1i zind height. The rate of melting witli weveri,e poltrity is 20%
higher with identical bath depth of liquid.metal. This, Is a result of -more in-
tensive heat transfer from the walls of the crystallizerl during melting, with
reverse polarity. The macrostructure, chemical conposition N, 0, If.and racchani-
elting with fo:i -,ard a, vers.
cal properties of the metal produced by r,. nd re polarity
are identical. The ingot produced with reverse polarity had no corona- 2
figures; I table; I biblio. ref
15
USSR UDC: 519.2
OKOROKOV, V. R~
"Reliability of Production Systems"
Leningrad, Nadezhnost' proizvodstvennykh sistem (cf. English
above), 19712, 167 pp, ill. I r. 2 k. (from RZh-Kibernetika,
No S, May 73, abstract No SV361 K [annotation])
Translation: The book considers theoretical principles and
engineering methods of calculating the fundamental quanti-
tative characteristics of reliability for various laws of
time distribution between failures of production systems and
their elements. Basic information.is presented on experi-
mental evaluation of reliability in the case of limited
volume of statistical data on failures; fundamental data are
calculating the reliability of production systems
given on
with different schemes of connection of their,compoiient
elements, and also on selecting optimum, reliabilAty of pro-
auction systems.
n 'linical per-
The book is written for engineering a d tec
1/2
USSR
OKOROKOV, V. R., Nadezhnost' proizvodstvennykh sistem, 1972,
pp
sonnel engagedin the planning and operation of production
systems, and also for students of all specialties in engineer-
ing and economics departments.
30 -
:mp
V? 090 UNCLASSIFIED---- ':pil0CES'SING DATE--18SEP70
'.~TVLE-INTERNAL FRICTION OF ZINC STNGLCCRY~TALSI AFTER TWINNING
~DEFQRMAT ION -u-
I.A.t OKOVITt V.S.j, CHtftKtNA,, L.A.
.:COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE-FIZ. METAL. AETALLOVEO. 1970p .2941) t162-7
r"~DATE.. PUBL ISHED - ----- 70
zS:UBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS# PHYSICS
-.-,TOPIC- TA.GS--METAL INTERNAL FRICTION# METAL SINGLE CRYSTALI ZINC* TWINNING
CONT ROL. MARKING--NO kE.STRICTIONS
NIENT
'0001 CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
REEL/ FkA?iE-- 198 8/0699 STEP
~._CIRC AC.CESSION NU--AP0105675
UNCLASSIFIED
'ESS ING DAtE-18SEPTO
212 020 UNCLASSIFIED, PROC
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0105675 :~ ..
~.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTRACT* THE DISSIPATIVE CAPABILITIES OF
THE DEFORMAVION TWIN BOUNDARIES OF ZN WERE INVESTIGATED BY THE INTERNAL
FRICTION METHOD* THE MEASUREMENTS WERE 14ADE ON A REVERSE TORSIONAL
PENDULUM AT FREQUENCIES OF 1.1 AND 3.0 HZ WITHINLLTHE AMPLITUDE
INDEPENDENT REGION, THE WORKING AMPLITUDE WAS NOT GREATER THAN 1.5 TIME
10 PRIME NEGATIVE5. THE SAMPLES WITHOUT TWINS ARE CHARACTERIZED BY A
MONOTONIC BEHAVI.OR OF DELTAIT) WITHOUT!ANOMALIES-~ FM$AMPLES DEFCRMED
BY TWINNINOt A PEAK OCCURS ON THE OELTA(T) CURVE AT 2ei-ODEGREESK. THE
TEMP. BEHA VIOR OF THE ATTENUATION.DECREMENT WAS DETO. AS A FUNCTION OF
~,THE IMPURITY CONTENTe THE AMPLITUDEt AND THE FREOENCY OF VIBRATIONS.
THE CHANd -IN,!THE WIDTH OF THE TWIN INTERtAYERS DORING THE INTERNAL
FRICTLO-M KEASUREMENTS W4S AL50 DETO. THE, XNOMALIES OF THE OBSO. PEAK
-.ARE COMPARED WITH CERTAIN OTHER INTERNAL.FRICTIOWPEAKS.~
UNCLASSIFIED
T
USSR ne, 669-5:5-39-057
GBDIN, 1. A., OKOVIT, V and CHL-R.FBA, L. A., Physicotec=ical Institute,
Academy of Sc
"Internal Friction of Zinc Single Crystals After Twinning D6,F'omi ation"
Nauk SSSR, Fizik% lietallov i Metallav~~ieniye, Vol 29, No 1,
Sverdlovsk, Akadezznya I
i
an 70, pp162-167
r -mi, zhe t-.,p rat-re
Abstract: An experimental investigetion w. made to detei I nc on a I
and frequeney depandhence of.the intornal friction of original zinc single crystals
and ones defo= ed by twinning. The, crystals: varied in purLty. Tha dl ssipiltive
possJ:bilities of defoxy7ration twin boundaries. were investig.at-od by the internal
friction method. 3inglo-crystal zinc-of 99.998,~ (Zn-A) 99.9,3,' (Zn-)3) purity
was selected to investigate the phenomena of inelast-Icity relatad to the presence
of deformation tv,.-ins. i4easurements were carried out on a rovorae torsionall
pendulum at frequencies of 1.1 and 3.0 hz in the aaplttuda-~ndeeondont rogion,
it is shaiin that the
with an operational amplitude not exdeeding~1.5 x fO-5
ence S (T) of the zinc single-crystal d6exement of all samp'as,
temperature depend
without twins, is characterIzed by a.nearly norizontal curve with no anomalies,
in the range of temperatures considered.
1/2
USSR
GD4IDD4, 1. A., et al., Akademiya Nauk SSSR., Fizika ',Ietallov Metallovederii.-
Vol 29, No 1, Jan 70, pp 162-1057
in sam-ales deformed b twiraling, a peak appeared on the characteristic at Z4,000'.
The initial behavior ~r all characteristics of originala and with twLn ii,~ter-
layer) coincided. This -fact indicates, as does the con~uctei X-ray analysis,
that with twinning defor-matioh the mtrix- remaUs UMU'utorter". The efl-ect OT,
ir~purity content, anplitude, and frequency on the tempeTature dependencD of a
daimping decrement was investigated. The distinctive prcqpertins of the poa'C,
meing to the motion of twin bow4axies (variation of tem'perature and peak height
et
with the oscillation fraquency) wore identicalto he peak cli;4a eristic with
martensite transformations. This is of great interest, bocause a sindlarity is
also observed in the kinetics of the martensite needle and twim interlayer
growth. Orig. art. has; figures,.
2/2
Z7F;-S -"4 2 3
HIGH-TVIPRA TUlit rRFEP or METAL; WITM A rAC~-(,,fitTE= CUat-- -,ATTlez
JArtlcle by r" and V. X. pjzhch*~- (Kivv), HOPC*W,
Akademll Mau
PP 151-1561
'In
A nutint tial improvenint. WaS r"cont-17
notod In mloystandi"r tho rol-3 or n
of factor %ditzh. daL-irnin,3 the behavlor
Or VietajG Clurinr CrOOP. SUCCOSSed in 08-
tablishin(P the nature of high-tan"rntura
croep~or pure metals weve,nepecial13- z.*1.44.
At hifft tcmpi~rzturiq thn.:Polo, or corcain
f2vtora,- Lmortant:at' low tarnperaturot,. !a
vubs t an tially dirdMehed, end the correla-
tion-or exporAnental a" ortlculnted datia
noticeably- Imniii;A'd 11-31. in this inr%wrice
a stronq rela~ivnahlp or the rate.of stoaiy-
atate creep E.to the mcmitudi of stacking
fault energy T has b on Observed for r*tsas
with an fee lattico, which can. be vxp-,1e3*ad
by the empirical *xpileviDn:
whoro in can have valuea of 2.3 /4/,
and 3-5 13, V. beapite ditreeoncoo in the
'r--
marn1tuda, of m, caucad primarily by dt.
roncon In coloction or vnIuas th-3 iwdul-j* S
and corrocticna to the riodtilu!j defoot /!1,1,
an Intonaa eEract of atackirr, fault
an tbo rate of hl gh- tempers %,ure (-0
creep was evident. Ilse of equation
11mited only by the high-terporaturo, rer
2
I n t ;~, I ~ ni t!i c C v; i I c i% ac ~ t ',-n r. -n
j%, or crtep q)1ould cc":ICIUO ;:! 'N L ~ Pr
vnti,,n nnor y oi* iolr-t1.ffw,Icn Q,,t o),. kn
r
nh~~,r wordr, iffinn t~',N or cv)-~P
In .1 procon- or
It Is ftn';Xvicd L~Int ti;i' cors.!itl=
cirar'S'PUI.flnd for till At a
clot.) to 11111f their r1oltl'IF, 11COIJIL 'Z MP /I , c!/.
Hontilta of th(, riechanloal and striActural jnv:via-Pt;1CM3
for n number of metnIs with n rac lattice ov,n, F, wlrle
turo tntervAj uho,.:qcl t;hnt t1jo cst-~jbtished~ b-
striltural ov!L~rta, tovip,.,raturo of tringitlon frz.-i
ture doformati-,n to dt-fornatlon '1'?"mndz _on
tho Anz~jjq-' fnilit anoi*ry /6. 7/; fl-t zt-lotin;:7
frult V1. 't,i "r th,: traxW.I.Ic-n ~n 'an c"z~
Mr U -blow ratn ('j.05 '!:c 'r%n=_1ttrn ten-
pnvaturn vnrjod Crori,0,271'1m~ for alurinum in to for
Mno c re_'*Ioot!3 tlilr*
nv~il~ -In
loratritftmlo coorejnjt*4z- Cvri zmnaro -iatzre-lum
~,qiCh-400aornn to b)ln empirical rcintlorishlb or t-,-le
Line b In Pi~. I wan obt-nined fr,ri tonts or tht, rmra
m1aln for crueo i;nd~,r a c,:,nstrrt /6/. in vais onse t'.16
Indlentor of dov-,raa at tho relnttvc. trnnaltion
mial to 5, nrld thott ~Inslttan..tam~~,=t%=4) Xer irtrog-
t; !~atod t~trncd out .crhl',~q)er then in Vio case of artvo-h 1otLdAzv;*
In. th,~ Clr-,t ense testa were cc-mduatud 1%lit':l nlowlv in--
cronsinf, IQ-1do nI'mont to rmaturoo or ',he -zuiplevi At tiia 3m-v-
00nditAonn, clono to "or!u1IibYiuiY', the tomts c1ovrl-. reveal
the mobal difforonv3n uLth rospoct to mohmicn! /~/. --rid 3t,-,;c-
tin'.11 161 pronartlvf_ In tha on--o or corrventlonil croon tost3
Id.th n cvna~vnt land t)),? xobatruetur- favrod an n rezul~.- or
rapid lead application in the firct strq_~e or creop a
atvoiy! ecn'oott~ntly' th~
pariturn turnr ottt to be ronalfiat li1rhor nnul Its
atncl:lnq Tnult onirgy iz sunewhat tlan in tw. cas'l of
umooth iondinc'.
Since tho trannitim to-1j-:-nturo una pr!.n-~r!,l,., vr-tablS3hoe,
by thu w-,iont,"~co of inibrtriac'.tive trnees of reecvary. th,t-:~ was
TnL.,t-c,-t '.n compnvinr W&L, (Inta obtalnLd b - tan q::t's 'I In!,
Ittnrntuen data tn Wie cl=gv of al,~oj, activation onir~- or
mot;ali vith a roe lattlea InarrweV n,_~ would r=;-.o it. rozzitrIc
to contarqllal.~ '.he -lonalble machnnim ar -jcov~iry. LJ t -v aLu.~o
dat;:% aystamatizod I)y un on tho chanro of rcap uctivz;;1C,.1 one.-,
in ralatitin to tonlorature are presonted In Fir,. 2 /9-12/. ?or
'T
USSR UEC 09. S4
KOZYRSKIY, 0. 1., OKFAI.NETS, P...N., Kiev
I'Specifics of Hardening of Nickel. During Thermal Cycling"
Kiev, Problemy Prochnosti, No 5, May, 1971, pp 90-93.
Abstract: The influence of thermal hardening on structural changes in large-
ra ed. The possibility is
in nickel and on its behavior during creep is studi
g
demonstrated of significant improvement of heat resistance properties of
A
nickel by thefmal cycling of.prepared specimens. The thermal cycling acts
primarily on the surface layer of the specimen, changing its strength charac-
teristics. Tests have indicated increases in strength~by an order of magnitude
by this method.
53
Celli ~04
USSR uDc 669.15.oi8,44
KOZYSKIY, G. YA., KON014EMKOo V. A., 0"" 11. N., and PRITRUNIN, G. A.
"Effect of Preliminary Strain on Heat Resistance of Mh181;9T Steel"
Metallofizika. Resp. m-ezhved. sb (The Physics of Metals. Republic Inter-
depaxtmental Collection of Works~, 1970,,VYP- 31P pp 143-148 (from RZh-
Metallurgiya, Not 3# Mar 71, Absty.-act No 31618 by autho=-"
Translations A study was made of the effect of preliminary cold strain (CS)
on the surability and steady-state cz)!!ep rate of lKh181-OT steel. It was
found that 'there are two regions of prelizinary CS displaying a significant
(five fold in time to rupture increased in the creep rellistance of the steel,
At-7500 and a stress of 12 ke/MM2 on region Is observed in the vicinity cf
113111s, the second in the case of 5-3,0;% strain. Thare it a discussion of
cullarities of the mechanisms of stabilization of the substructure created
e~
p
by low and high degrees of prelizinary CS., Three Illustrations, Biblio-
graphy with 19 titles.
1A
77-
USSR Mr, 339.4.015.1'
'RADOXt P. 11.1 arA-*?!SHCWj Ya X, 0 Institute of
KOZYM=, C; YA..,-DL
Mertal,pbysj.
"The Effect of the Loading Rate on the Chaxacteristics of the Creep and
Substructuxe of- Nickel!
Kievy Metallofizikap.NI-31, 1970, pp 139-14i
Trans3ations. The charaqteristics of the cree vA the substructure of nickel
at a temperature of 500"C and a load of 5 7M were stvdied. The tine of
k
application of the load changed from I to 5-203 zecondso it is shown that.
the characteristics of nickel creep depend greatly on the -time and ap li-
.P
cation of the load. The smaller the rate of the loalls:a:pplicutlon, the
greater the - rate - of - the specimen' a, creep i. , IU: go chanlc4, chavicteristics
of the creey are.-compared vli~h -x-r.V- stxuctU=1 atu&ies. A comm-Aation is
made between -the specific disorientation: of the. subatracttxve atui the resis-
tance of nickel-creep.. Bib" gmphyi.2-antri", 2 Illu~t~atioris.aad 2
ta
P Me 539.4.015.1
-TS, F. N.j and PISHCFAKI V.~K.j Institute of Yletal
KaMSM, G. YA.,-OMUM
2hys1za-1 AcadeW of 86i-e-t-ce"s. :Za51;;1%'
-A, Change in the Disorientation of the Substructure of. Nickel and Copper
Under Conditions of Slow Loading at High Tetperatures!'
Kiev, Xeta1loflzikaf Vo 31P 1970, pp 14-~-152'
Mmuslationt The effect of-plastic deformation and te"errature on the sub-
&tZv=tm1s disorientation was studied on high-puzity polycrystalline nick
azzi copper specirzerg~. Eechanical. tests were conducted In Vacuum at a lotding
nixte v - 0.05 Jkg/mL,~- per hour at tomperatures.0.448, 0,1,64, amd 0.68 from
t1W melting point, It Is shown that under appropriate testinq conditions
thm specific disorientation- (the xe2ationship.of the disorientatioa angle
twtba value of deformation) of the substructure of coppor Is,several times
gmater than that of nickel. It Is concliided that such a difSerence in the
vm1wa of specific disorientation of the subst'ructlav of ~ copper and nickel
1.41r, CO=ected with the differehoe in the vaJue3, of wkin,$ def*Pta In -these
uwLils. Bibliography 1 10 entrian 111tustrations I W610,
1A
65 -
USSR mc 539,4,oi,5.1
XOZMXrYs G. YA. t KONWODKO, V. A. q ORM110TS jF. If., and PEMUNT111, C. A,,
Institute of Metal Physics, AcmAezW-**-&-ivrxx*-U1mQ�R
"U4 Dependeyme of Heat Resistance of KU&19T Steel on the Value of Pre-
liminary Defommation"
Kiev., Yetallofizika, 110 31, 1970t r-P 143-148
T~mmlationz This work imestigated the effect of Tmeiinizzaxy;cold deforma-
tion on the durability and rate of the establiched creeppf lK-b18NqT aGe-
haxdemable steel. It vras established tK-tt there mve tvro iv-Giona 0" pimlimi-
narY defo= tion in which a considerable inlczDaze kof 5 ttmes In the time
prior to fnLeti= ) it tile steel, S aXV, Op resintance io Otu-4rvecl.~ At a ton-
-ess of .12 V~mi2i om~tmgion is'obserited near
1*;rature of 750 C and a st.
f5% and the snacond, with a defcm.,amt-ion of 5-1C~4 TMa stuiy discra-ses the
Characteristics of the mechanism of, istabillisation of the 1,~substructuxe
_cxeated~:_by smal I and I=ge degree of defor -U~ n.
3J1UxUogmpbVU 19 entries, 3 Musfxalionsi
lAt
USSE UDC 669.'.)17:~`39.371
5
OnAT~
V. K f
.LS P aq.1 P 'U, Z., institute 0 o-
- :2_1=__1
ces kra nian cS.1
"Disorient&tion of the 5ubrtructure of '14etals vith Face re 0 1 La-t-tice at Figh
Termerature DuforTmtion"
Sverdlovsk, Fizika Metalllov and Yetalloyedeniye., Vol 29, No 6, Jum 70, 120~1-
3209
-Abstrdct: A stud, mde of the cha.
r n~;e of discrientatioji an~-_-lev ol' -Lie subst=uc-
ture of. coarse--rained polverystadline Gpecimcns of nic' I and co-.*.-7j.~r under Slow
"a
loadine- at temneratures 0.45, 0-56, and 6.68 from ir~211.in(, tel=.~aratums, which fo.
nickel were 500, 700, and 9000 C and for co-or)er -33~", 4~2, ama'
Mens were tested in a vacuum of jo-5 tarr at a loadin-r rate of 0.05 k:-/ -2*1`1' it
q 112.1 V.
is shown that at idpntical values of defoiwatiou and smelti;n!, otreso a;n-,,)Ucatjojn,
the angles,of sifnstructure -Isorientation 'for copper and nielzc.-'i vith
lie on'-ire rang dia
increasin,,,_; temperature. In t, ,e of. formation.Ai zLji,~,.jcd,
ana strescQs, the angles of disorientation o.L' 'the r-ubsLructA1:r('. of c,:ipy;-2r are
thar - of A-,- mihs~ruc4-
emalle .that of nickel. Me smcific disarientatio.. Ic- . W =,"2
reases with incrcace in stresc. D- ia sho7wrn that the difference ~,-.j -uhe curvc..s
obtained for nic?el ard copper depend on the difforence in ettergy of the packin6
defects of these retals.
61T
JT) L~,-O Jr. A
g
V.
A.
Ell
Of
of
E00 in
Liquids
Ko at:d Classealt
0
2 Feb
Oy
j
vo
5p
Cc: 1ly
nu
1w of
c-In bo
1!.J
00 Jam)
-ion t0i 3
.15
rcy C;:
r:1d STE-3
3-r
;I, f
fie
founo- in TMter
all tl)cse
Iw 10
tSSR
IVICHEV, H. H., at al., Pis'na v Zhurnal Eksperinantallnoy i Teoratichoskoy
FiZIRIP Vol 159 No 4, 20 Feb ?21 pp 191-1c,4
substances excopt 032 and nitrobenzone. The superbroadming effect iras also
bserv,,A in a mu-,Ax3r of Giasses and crystals (in K-8, F-1, 1,26, K2SS-7
0 b
glassacn and in fuscd qw-rtn and calcimi tungptatc). It is svGgestea that the
cl-_-,erved su orlbmoadc~;ing is duo to strongi Uzer -phase nodulation rather than
four-Dhoton inte-m-eLion.
65
USSR
ROMANIKO, A. M., VERBICFASTIVILI, K. G., and OYJIOPIR-T-D2B,Z. A.
"Ibdification of the Differential Ballistooscillor,,-,raph of the Eytremities"
Tbilisi, Soobshcheniya Xzaderdi Nauk Gruzinskoy SSE, Vol 68, No 3, Dc 72,
P. 772
Translation of Russian Abstract: Scberatic -viring diarm!-s oi- the modifie-I
ballistooscillograr-h of extremities are. Presercte, Sevc--ml cllrv-es of th2
differential of tihe obtal-l'.ned .,)n differm4-
individuals (atiaete, 3w!.tiunt) are civen. Tae moddficatic)ns introdmced. into
the decijn of 'Che ballistooscillograph have tr.-ansforred 5.t into a uni:,rersal
sensincr device. with a cranio-caudally directed fLutetionz. This device
it possible to record a ballistoca-rdiogmm ar, voll as to pre-rmc.,c differenH---
ballistooscillofir--ms of extre.,id.ties vtithout ch,-;mUinj-~ the positimi of a Dati-~Mt',-
ThiG was Dipossible to do before i-tith any known typo o-f bv,~lli ztoo ~,,c i -1-1 ofy~yav.i.
Me modified inst,;iu:iCnt is anp-licable for the examinvatio-~ )-f lj(!d paticntr;, as
well as in S-Oor'-"; Curves Obtained with tl'~,e mill-dified bi:J.Iirtoosci.,JJ,)-
graph are of a definite configunation, withaixt. a-,ny teclm-o. --ical aftercffecl-~-
Uw- clinical testing of thG- device in.-IiCated J-ts suiitabi3j.+'~; in T-"mc-
--I the Ntnct~on
tice. Curves recorded with it- showed thu r-a4bilitation r~.it~jvs i.)
o~ 'ifferential olx'trcmitie~-, aftlo~r suTP~O-ry.
30
USSR
0 Candidate of Medical Sciences
"Antidotes and their Mechanisms of Action in'the Organism"
Moscow, Priroda, No 4, 1973, pp SO-S9.
Abstract: Antidotes are divided into several classes. Direct-action antidotes
include many substances which interact directly with the poisons within the
body, causing them to lose their toxic properties, either temporarily or per-
manently. Since in many cases it is impossible to act upon the poison or even
to know what,type of poison has been taken until symptoms appear, another
important type of antidote is that type which protects biological structures
from the action of the toxic substances. 'Mese substances have the reverse
influence on the receptors of the various structures of the organism from the
influence of the poison. Some antidotes, such as the cholinesterase reacti-
vators, work by restoring structures of the organism damaged by poisons. It is
noted that in order to be effective, antidotes,must be given in the proper
dose and at the proper time. If given too late,.when the.toxic effect of the
poisort is beginning to decrease, the antidote may actually cause a shift in the
physiological functions affected by the poison in the direction.opposite to the
shift caused by the poison, which may be equally harmful.
TP 1.1--. "1
USSR UDC 612.816-0
87.5
NAGAYETP 1 YA. QNEUGM1,122 Q I., and TZHEVXIN, V. A. First Medical
Id-stitue imeni. I.- P. Pavlov Leningrad
"A.-'MethiA of Ntermining the Threshold of Houromuscular Excitation In Labora-
tory-.Ardmals"
116scowi-Ogiyena Truda I Professional'We Zabolevaniyal Vo 5t 1971, pp 48-49
Abstraett.~ The authors describe a device capable of recorcUng threshold
valfies,of-neuromuscular excitation in response to electrical arA chemical
stikulAtion more objectively than current methods based on neasurement of
chronaxy, The device provides fo-- ~.mifo= increase In voltage at the electrodes,
te~rital resistance OIL
Itzatomatically turns off the current, measures the in
tha-animal'.5 bodyq and records the results. I-xperiments oi) mice showed that
thd~ddvice was able to detect the zininum doses of hydrazina and tetraethyl
ldad.~capabla of-affecting the threshold of no*urozu cular O*citability.
r
A
Ashkhabad
Translation: How can we better utilize the forces of nature for purposes of
prophylaxis and treat-ment? In an attempt to provide an answer to this question
climatologists and physicians have attempted to quantitatively evaluate the
L)
effects of climate and weather on the human organism.. Subrequently, it became
111~!g*ible to establish a relationship between the state of warmth of an organism
an tlza one hand, and the complex consisting of temperature, moisture, and
ifind on the other, in the form of equivalenti-effective and radiation -equivalent -
effective temperatures, taking irtaconsideration the effects of direct radia-
tioll.
In recent years in medicine, and especially in the case of treatments
conducted at health resorts, the complex method of Pedoroy-Chubukov for
clizatological. ana:1,ysis has gained wide acceptance. This new trend treats of
the clir-mte structure of weather, since it is through the veather that the
external environment exerts its effects on the living org"ism.
Scientific institutions of the hydrometereological service of the USSR
h4ve developed theoretical principles, according to which quantitative
USSR
DKEMCK., I., Meditsinskaya Gazeta, 4 Apr 73,P 3
approximatibns may be made of the indexes of beat balance of the hutran orGanism.
However, calculations of the heat balancewithoat due consideration to weather
conditions have been found to be inadequate for purposes of medical climatolo,
and.cli toloBical treatment. In relation 'to this) the studies of the Tomsk
scientist, V. Rusanov, are of great interest, he has proposed a nedical class-
ification of weather in terms of hours of the day (momentary weather). His
approach permits an instrumental-approach-to,the treatment of a great quantity
of standard metereological data that has accumulated over~the years. This
classification reflects the thermal state of man an the basis of the relation
that prevails between the weather and his heat balance, as well as the
phys.1-ological reactions of the organism..
At the present time much more attention in being given to the periodic
changes in the sun's activity and changes iri current weather, which reflect,
after all, metercological foundationG.of pathologic changes in the organism.
An understanding of these phenomena will be of great practical and scientific
importance.for medicine. Serious condiderations are also 44ven to the utiliza,
tion for prophylactic and therapeutic purpos 6s different se:.-cti"s of the aun's
spectrum, as well as the use of concentrated.'pulnes of sunlight.
Thtis, we can appreciate that the central problem iwmodern madical
metereology and climatology deals with.the thermal state or mar..
2/4
:1 W,
: - I - % .. . I . . ; I I - . H;1 - 11 1 : r it 1 11, , ~ I lfflNi ~ "il ~j 14, -w1; I Iniff "A 19111; Ul P P. !I F. im - I I
- . I I . I I . ...... -,- ,
USSR
OKMNICH, I., Meditsinskaya Gazeta,,4 Apr 73., P 3
Of great interest are the studies elucidating the effects of atmospheric
oxygen on the organism, which vrere first conducted by the staff of the Central
Scientific Research Institute of Health Resorts and Physical Uierap of the
Ministry of Health of the USSR.
Frequently, the significance of metereological factors is unappreciated,
and results in the fact that in various s-Fin toria, especi*LUy in the South,, the
cli e is not artificially regulated in a proper manner during the hot months
of-the year to all viate its adverse effects~or the patients wilo are being
treated.
The effects of metereoloGical factors on man are frequently inadeaua.ely
treated in scientific investigations.. Furthermore., descriptive studies of
various authors pertaining to health resort, resources or the state of man
under different climatic conditions, are often limited to data on the tempera-
--ture of the air and other such metereological information. Ho attempts are
made at numerical evaluation or analysis of,the:climatolog Ta
ical i terial. In
a scientific report the section dealing with the climate~appearz, often
enouth, as an extraneous body, solely on the basis of trudition.
Unfortunately, the public health system as yet, doesi,not evidence satis-
fac~tory coordination with respect to mcdical:climatologyo Few hig~ily qualified
3/4
ItU
-~PROXY-REEUFRAME-3005/087d s,rE PNO--.UR/04821701(~00/00(1/0000/oooo
C ACCES~10,4 NO-AA0132968
UNC LASJ UIED
USSR UDC 621-397-658
AA
..Modulators And Demodulators Of Wjde-Band.~uls(q Signals"
EleitrosmazI, No 6, June 1972, pp 51-56
Abstract: The paper considers a diode modulator with a nonsymmetric input and
a demodulator with a noneymmetric output, tntanded for trunsmiusion. of video
signals on cables and other com=nication lineo. These circuits are also suit-
ablefor trinemission of broadcasting signals. It is assizzued that the device is
intended for a range of frequencies up to 20 bVz. A mothoa is :-:hown by which it
is, possible during planning of the apparstus to detarmine the inynat impedancoo
and. tho transfer oanatanta of the modulator and demodulator. Datniled procedures
are presented for conducting the calculations concerned with the modulator and
demodulator. 5 fig. 3 ref. Received by editors,.'27 March 1971-
USSR UDC: 62i.396.6-0-IT-7
MAKSIMOV, Yu. B. ,CHER.NYSMIKO, A. A.
-"An Algorithm for Correcting the Arrangement of Radio Electronic Elements in
a Device to Optimize Thermal Conditions"
PribojX i sisteW avtomatiki, Resp. mezhved. nauchn.-tekhn. sb. (Devices and
Systems for Automation. Republic Interdepartmental Scientific a:id Technical
Collection), 1970, VY-P. 14, Pp 133-137 (fromi RZh'_Radiotekhn_ika, No 5, MaY
'fl, Abstract No 5V228)
The authors discuss construction of a purpose function for
finding the optimum arrangement of the elements in electronic radio equipment
on an instrument panel based on Ineat conditions, The gradit!nt iinthod is used
to minimize the resultant purpose function (overall estimate of overheating
of the circuit. ) A co=uter check of the proposed algoritkim showed satis-
factory results. The deorithm for correcting the arrvngamant of the ele-
ments in the device nay be one of the elements in the solution of the complex
problem of constructing electronic modules. Three illustrations, bibliog-
raphy of five titles. Resume.
1/1
Do 621-315-592
USSR U
A.A., SKIRNOV, V-N.,: SMIRVOV, O-M-
All. YA.A 8
'On The Multiphoton Absorption In Wide-Band Semiconductors".
Fizika I tekhnika poluprovodnilov,Vol 6, No 4, Apr 1972, pp 731-733
Abstract3 Specimens of GaAs, ZnSe, and ZnS ware irradistea by intense luminous
fluxos in the region of transparency. For excitation, ruby and noodymium lasers
were used which furnished single -pulses with an energy loss than one Joule and a
duration of _50 and 100 nanocec, reepectivelyp The dependence is found; 1) Of
nonequilibrium absorption and the concentration of carriero (Galws only) on the
intensity of laser emisoion; 2) Of the phatodialectric signal (nonequilibrium
complex conductivity) an the intensity of laser emission; and 3) Of the photo-
dielectric signal (effectiveness of photoreeponse) In single cryetal ZnS on the
energr of the photons of the illuminator -ft(jat constant intensity of the laser
emission. The results provide a roason for considering that in wide-band somi-
conductors with a wide spectrum of impurity otatse which are exponod to the
effect, of powerful light pulses vith"K (jo < -E,, impurity one- and two-photon
generation of carriers appears in the first place; in the latter. case it evident-
ly. goes -through real compound states* 3 fig* 6 ref Recoi-ecid by oditors, 27 Jan
1971j, in final rewording# 1) July 1971.
I IM
Thex-apy
USSR uDc 615 -849 -19 -015; 616-ogi
KHR91VIOV, B. M., K011130TY21VICH; __O~~OVA, Ye. Ye KRYLTI K. I.,
PROKOMNICO) V. T., and BOGDATIOV., M. P6, Leningrad Institute of Post-raduate
Medicine imeni S. M. Kirov, Leningrad Thatitute of Precision Optics and
Mechanics, and Institute of Psychoneurology1imeni V. M. Beldhterev
"Organ Changes Following Eyperimental Resection With a Laser Beam"
Yoscow, EksperimentalInaya nirurgiya i Anesteziologiya, No 2, 1973, PP 45-48
Abstract: The liver, spleen, and kidneys of rats were resocted irith a laser
beam (enerLvj de:isity 10 to 18 j1mm2). Immediately after the operation, a
linear area of coagulated tissue could be seen on the surface of the organs.
Histologic, examination from 1 to 33 days after the operation revealed several
distinct zones of altered tissues in the 3 operated organs. Vnder a surface
zone of coagulated tissue iras a zone of necrosis. and then. a zone of reactive
changes. Still deeper was norral tissue,with solitary hemorrhages. A
leukocyte reaction became apparent on day 3- Edema and hemorrhages were most
pronounced in the snleen. Connective-tissue fibers began to proliferate in
the necrotic zone of the spleen on day 3 after the operation and, in the liver
and kidneys oil day 7. The amount of connective tissue gradmally increased and
formed a sear.
U 5 ~,.R UDO 621 "P; ';'~*3 14 6:57
KBROI-MV, KRYLLV, K-1., KOROT-;-.SV.1CH, "(Xi: 5 V.T.,
"Toot Of The Use Of ~` Laser During Surgical Cparetions (Exporim-antal 3-1.0'IiCl~
[IT-quahAr.1 Lenin,,r. in-ta "goverob. vrachav ~M- 6".11. Vlurova
Leningrad ln3titate For Tre lmprovor5ent Of Doctors im-ani 1,Lmr),-1971, Ricu-3
0 L ;x- -eruct
97, PP 64-57 (from RZI tro 9, sop'. 1971, Ab-%,
Tranalation; T~ea PaD,,r de9cril-aa th~ une of Fi laser for iinw,~c-I'll.on o---.' eoft
and organa of aninmlD Ath 1.1he aitI Of a la:~Or It tile DQP~,rtmtlnt Gpo'-1-
tional Surgery of the Laningrod Inctibate For Melmprovtit,--orit Ge Drjr-Lom. 11ho con-
t1nuoun operation CO 2 laoor wilth a powor.up ~o .20 watto had FA 0.5 mri wide ~;c-
depth of the cut 9=-untud to 16 = (liver of' a dog). Oattin,, off ptlrtv, of the or~-
ans took place anc-r~icajly; t',c s- rfacI3 of tho. cut wa,- dry a~nd c' a C".1eetnut
1.0lor with longitudimil atripea, procee~irig into the intarioi-. Coaga-4-3ted tisouj is
dier)osed ozi the llm~ of the cut and in the adjoining tiz~cuoi-.! -,.,uCl,otic and necro-
blotic ChunfTe3 develop w-11-h sub2~;-~,.ifjnt replacbmont of thc-ir wonmovi~n,~ z~-.-,
JrOrav tion of a soor. I ill. 1 t I.
USSR
GUSEV,
V. A.:-QjMMJf---A. A.: F03EL', Ya. 14. (Physicotechnical Institute,
Ukrainian Acadew of Sci-ences)
"Dissociation of Diatomc Molecules Into Ions by Impact of Fast Ions and Atoms"
Zhurnal Eksperimentallnoy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki.., April 10 2,
Moscovip 37
pp i284-go
Abstract: The technique i r, employed for r~eruqurirjr- the rela-
tive effective c section, for f
'Mr,13 ortuttioni of nlow atojuit~ iwf.-ativu ions pro-
duced in collisiont, batwLn--n fast ion:, anfA atonmv of bw1rogall, he).111n, neon.,
'To molecules. The differ-
argon, and krypton (3-50 kcV energy) and C~ CO and I
2
ence. observed between the f~tnctions ej;~' -+(~~ and Tq if: ascrib'ed to the
contribution to the measured cross seetion of processes involving Ctis5ociativc
electron capture lty the target molecules. Some considerations regardi., the
n
Mechani.-,m of diatomdc rpolecule dissociation into positive and nec-',rative ions
are presented.
~77--,!, 7-7
USSR
GTJSE;V, V. A., FOGEL', Ya. M., PILIPENKO, D4 V., -Ebysico-
technical Institute, Academy of Sciences, UXminiazi SSR
"The Formation of Slow Atomic Negative Oxygenjons in Collisions Between Fast
Protons or Hydrogen Atoms and 02 Molecules!'..
Moscow, Zhurnal Eksperimentallnoy i Teoreticheskoy Fizikt, No 12, 1970, PP-
19og-1916
Abstract: A method is developed for the investigation oT processes involving
the formation of negative ions in collisions between fast ions,or atoms
with gab-molecules. The effective cross sections of the formaLion of 0-ions
In colltsione bet as or atoms and n molecules
ween 3-50 kev.bydrogen io - oxygo
are-measured in terms of relative units. 4.figuresp 16:biblirjoraphic
entries.
USSR UDC 621.383.89
TITOV, YU. A., SHELEPETS, V. I.,, OKSYUTICH, N. B.
"Codoscope Type Cathode Ray Tube!
Moscow, Otkr-ytiya, Izobrateniva. Promvqhlenn e Ob
yy razt-q Tovarn ve Zpaki, No 16,
8 Hay 70, p 57, Patent No 270102, riled 20 Dec 67
Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces a codoscope type cathode
ray tube ccntaining recording and reproducing projectors:, address plates, a
control assembly, a potential carrier assembly and a luminescent output
screen, The tube is diati-nguishwi by the fact that in o~eder to insure hi2,h
speed of recording the parallel binary code and to decrease tKe amplitude
of the control signals, the control asambly comprises a,systein of parallel
deflecting plates separatod by dialeatric.And arranged pill7pandicular to the
plane of the beam In direct proximity to the potential carrier.
-20
UDO 621.,'-72-853-1:5715-57~
USSR
LAZIYEV, E.M., SYZYAN Y.L.
"Parametrical Radiation Of Relativiatic Electron Bunchee In .4 WeveEuide Filled
With Schistose Dielectric"
Radiotekhnike i elelftrcnika, Vol XVII, No 6, June 1972, pp 1~3~
Abstract., Exnorim8ntal data are presented concerning excitation of an Bol wave
in a circular waveDzjide, based on t1he funduraentel ha,rmcnio of the frequency Of
beam grouping of a linctir accelerator f = 27597-2 ].,Hz. The enera of the acceler-
ated electrons was equal to 50 Irlev. Ath the aid of a maj!netic Onaly0ar and a
ollimator of 5 = an olect-ron beem -vins ctit out with th;) width cf the aprctrum
AS/Eo~ a + 0.2 percent which correzpcnded,to,-,-,~--5o of ti-e phass lm6th of
he bunch.- The number of electrons in tLic banch amountea to/,/ 2 . 10 purticles
I
h
and the ring-ular divergence to 10-~' rad. The beam of eloctrona PUGued
through a circular wavef ide 9.6 cm in diameter filled with alternEting luyors of
eir:arA Teflon 2.05). The Terlon dinkv~hsd a centrol. (iperture 0 12 mni for
passage of the hoan. The power c~' the excited E wave inju mearured beforo and
01
after. The results of the experimente are presented in figureo. The outhore
thank K.A. BaraWcov, B.11-1. Bolotorvakiy, and E.D. Gazapyan for discussions. 2 f1g.
4 ief. Received by editors, 13 September 1911.
112 025 UNCLASSIOIE6~ SING DATE--teSEP70
PROCIES
I.IT-LE-TRIALS OF METHYLNITROPHOS FOR.:,TREATMENT OF WATER RF!Sr-.RVOIRS AGAINST
LARVA OF CULEX PIPIENS IN MOSCOW -U-
E
_.AUTH8R-(02)-4KTYAllRSKAYA, T.A.9 SHERINA9 k.Ni..
~COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
PARAZITOLOGIYA.1 PARAZITARNYE 8OLEZNIt 1970v VOL 39t
'L, PR 59-62
PURL-ISHED ------- 70
..-.~,~UBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND M
EDICAL SCIENCES
TAGS--INSECT CONTROL, MOSQUITO, ORGANIC PHOSPHOROUS INSECTICIDE
ROXY REEUFRAME-1986/195.~_ STEP NO--UR/0358/70/039/001/0059/0062
ACCESSION NG--AP0103676
_-UNCLASSIFIED
ASSI FIED ppacESSING OATE--18SEPTO
025 UNCL
:~CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0103676
:ABSTRACT/ExT~,ZACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. RESULTS OF TESTS OF 30PERCENT
CONCENTRATED EMULSION OF METHYLNITROPHOS USUMITION) AGAINST LARVAE OF
CULEX PIPIENS MOSQUITOES IN WATER RESERVOIRS OF TWO TYPES: DITCHES AND
MARSHES: FILTRATION FIELDS AND BIOLOGICAL PONDS OF~LOCAL CANALIZATIONv
:-ARE PRESENTED. THE CONCENTRATE WAS READILY MIXED WITH WATER AND FORMED
:~A STABLE EMULSION. METHYL NITROP140S PRODUCES AN ACUTE TOXIC EFFECT
(MAJORITY OFLARVAE DIE WITHIN 2 TO 3 HOURS). z T1. EFFECTIVE DOSE OF T14E
DRUG DEPENDS ON THE EXTENT OF GROWTH AND DEPTH OF.THE WATER RESERVOIR AS
WELL~AS ON THE INSTAR OF LARVAE. IN SHALLOW WATER~RESERVOIRS A DOSE OF
300-T0 6013 H-4ECTAR OF 30PERCENT ORUG CDEPENDINS ON THE GROWTH) IS
:.~-.,-:,,RECOMMENDED FOR LARVAEOF CULEX PIPIENS! OF.~11-11 INS~TAR.~ FOR DEEP WATER
RESERVOIRS. THE. DOSE.. SHOULD BE 6-0a"TO, 10 -LARVAE OF III
t'-HECTAA.: FoR
.,TO 1V INSTARS, THE DOSES SHOULD BE '600 1200 A-ID 1500 TO 3000 G-HECTARq
RESPECTIVELY. BEFORE TREATMCNT IT IS RECOMMENDEO TO MOW DOWN THE
VEGETATION ON THE BANK OR TO TREAT THE WATER RESERVOIR WITH HIGHER
'EXPEDITURE OF THE WORKING FLUID WITHOUT,INCREASING T14E DOSE OF THE DRUG.
AS.A RESULT OF USING SMALL DOSES (300 G-HECTAR) THE USEFUL BIOFAUNA OF
WATER RESERVOIRS DOES NOT O~IE. IN'
CREASING THE DOSE~To 1500 G-HECTAR
.-,CAUSES ITS PARTIAL DEATH, AND FURTHER INCREASEAABOVE 3000 G-HECTAR)
RESULTS IN A COMPLETE STERILIZATION OF.THE WATER RESERVOIR. THEREFORE
1T IS RECOMMENUED TO CARRY OUT TREATMENT.S,AGAINST LAAVAE OF I TO [I
WEPEATED HABITATION OF-WATER RESERVOIRS OCCURS IN 6 To 7 DAYS
IRRESPECTIVE OF THE DOSE UF THE DRUG USED
USSR UDC 546.185+547.245
KIREYEV, V. V., KOLESNIKOV, G. S. (deceased), RAYGORODSKIY, 1. 1,11., and
OKULEVICH P. 0. Mvscow Institute of Chemical Technology imeni D. I.
"Reaction of Alkoxycyclophosphazenes With Chloromethylorganosilanes"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 41 (1103), No 4, Apr 71, pp 792-797
Abstract: The reaction course was measur,ed. by the amount of the chloride
evolved butyl. The following starting materials were used; hexabutoxy--y-
clotriphosphazotriene, triphenoxytributoxycyclotriphospbazotriene, chloro-
methyltributoxysilane, chloromethyin~ethyldibucoxysilane, chloroirethylm'ethyl-
phenylsilane, and cliloromethyltributylsilane. The prodt~cts were shown to
contain the P-0-C112Si-1 group. It was proposed that the reaction takes
place via ionization of the P-O-R bond. in alkovycyclophosphazene f olloved
by a nucleophilic attack of the phosphazonium ion on cbloromethyltriorgano-
silance.
USSR dC' 621.391
OKULICH-KAZ
~~AS,_Ya. A., LASHAS. A.; V. ,LEVIW, E. G.
-Now
"A Device for Memorizing the Images of Symbols"
Villnyus, NE~ ~ne trudy vysshikh uchebUn zayedeniy Lit. SSR. Avtomatika
i vychislitellnava tekhnika (Scientiftc,Works of Institutions of Higher
Education of,the Lithuanian SSR. Automation and Computer Technology), No 2,
100, "Mintis", Pp 99-103
Abstract: -The paper describes a memory device developed at Kaunas Polytech-
nical Institute and designed for visual observation of synbols read out by
the "RMA-701" Lachine. The electrical date. of the elements and modiles of
the memory device, as well as the requirements for control signals give an
idea of the feasibility of using it in other instances of adjustment or
'title
monitoring. Three illustrations,~bibliograpby of two~~ 13.
'I.254t634.723
USSR WO 632
OKULOV, A. I., Marlyak Agricultural Experiment Station
"Simazine and the Yield of Black Currante
Moscow, Zashchitm Bastenly, 110 5, Pay 73, p 22
Abstracts Tests were carried out in Kalinin Obl"t' to deteraine the effects
of the herbicide simazine on the yield of black currants. Slanine was
applied in the amounts of 4P5P 7, and 10 kg/ha. The latter two amounts were
applied against the background of fertilization with H60,?60 11C60. Under the
effect of simazine, a reduction in ttse amount of weeds reaching 96.?% was
obtained. From the standpoint of the Increase-in the yield of berries during
three years following the application of the herbIcIdeel the best results were
obtained with 4 kg/tua simazine and 7 kg/ha~sixazlno + WK, Use of 10 kg/ha
sinazine without BPK reduced the yield, While the inczeal3es in -the yield of
berries were relatively small, eradication of the weeds with the herbicide
saved labor that would be required for santal Weedingo 51nazine should be
applied In the early apring before tfie appeannob of. the principal amount of
weeds,
23 -
USSR
-.OKnGV 1M. A. Editor
"A Reliable Barrier Against Infection"
Baku, Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 110, p 4
Translation: Svetlana Vinokurova, Correspondent for the Novosti Press Agency,
addressed the famous Soviet scientist, Professor Aleksey Sumarokov, Director
of the Central Institute of Epidemiology, USSR.~Linistry of !1ealth, with the
request.to answer a few questions dealing with reports of cases of cholera in
Astrakhanskaya Oblast of the Soviet Union.
The rumor has spread abroad, that the locall outbreak of cholera reporLed by Lhe
USSR 11-linistry of Health has taken on large dimensions. Various parts of Lhe
USSR and considerable territories are named.. What can you Ony about 6LIch rumors,
and what is the true situation?
"Cases of cholera were Indeed recorded in Astrakhanskaya Oblast, 'El Tor vibrio,
a , pathogen, was isolated; it is well known to epidemiologists of inally 11ations
the
where outbreaks of cholera have been observed. in recent times. Hot,, is it
1/9
.01
USSR
OMOV, M. A., Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 70, p4
different? Clinically, the disease it induces, according to the data of most
investigators, is essentially milder than cholera caused by infection w.L
th the
classicc.1 vibrio. This is a metamorphosis which can be readily explained: tile
vibrio has altered and continues to alter its 'appearance' under the influence
of, prophylactic inoculations, the extensive use of antibiotics, sulfanilamides,
and other cnemicals.
Even recently almost all infectious diseases threatened peoplets' Uves. Now the
situation is quite different. Modern medicine is armed with tziil the necessary
-'.-means for the effective control, and ultimately for tile conquest, of infectious
-diseases. This is indicated by the. successful tantrol of cholera in Astrakhan-
skaya Oblast."
Can you briefly describe the measures adopted to prevent the Spread of infections?
~.,-.Are there any difficulties involved in this respect?
"We rely first of all on the advances and enormous experience accurlulated by
Soviet preventive medicine. The function of the Soviet healtl~ service has
always been based on principles of prophylaxis. But the control of infectious
2/9
USSR
OKULOV, M. A., Bak-inskiy Rabochiv, 22 Aug 70, p,4
diseases has been a Soviet national problem from almo5t the very first days of
existence of the Soviet nation. in an unbelievable short time, many dangerous
infections were eradicated. This was achieved at the price of exceptional ef-
forts and expenditures, but this is precisely when the sanitary epidemiological
..service was founded in the USSR. At present, this sex-.,ice helps us deal with
-the spread of dysentery, typhoid fever, etc. In principle, the cholera prophy
laxis does not differ from the set of measures instituted in the control of the
"-.former, intestinal infections, and z:t any rate the mechanism, the means of trans-
of pathogens, is the same.
In the last few years, special decrees have been adopted in the Soviet Union
dealing with infectious pathology, and in particular with intestinal infections,
Since 1 July 1970, the 'Fundamental Legislation of the Soviet Union and Union
Republics on Public Health' have become law. Through this law the ~;overnment
hzis.compelled all organizations of the economy,ministries and agencies to
'develop and institute measures to protect water reservoirs and soil from pol-
lution. Prevention of water-borne outbreaks of intestinal infections is one
of the most effective prophylactic measures.
3/9
-N.
c
USSR
OKULOV, M. A., Bakinskiv Rabochiy, 22 Aug 70, p 4
We have all the means to treat cholera. As demonstratad by the Astrakhan' case,
ntion by doctors assures almost 100 percent success: complete
promptinterve
-recovery of patients. There are also prophylactic means, swz7h as anticholera
The territory protected from spread of infection is always much broader than a
focus of infection. It is logical therefore that not only did we prehibit
travel from Astrakhan', but also initiated in~some scaports ~(and often also in
ort towns) a series of restrictions to reduce.the scope of migration, and of
res
chaotic movement of the population in summer vacation travel.
The latent incubation period of cholera lasts up to .4five days. During this ti-me,
it may be difficult to detect the sickness, or to make an inmediate diagnosis.
Therefore, all suspected cases (in 61s instance all individuals with intestinal
disorders) were put under medical observation.for a few days, until there was
conclusive evidence that the individual was healthy. Observation,is needed not
only to institute treatment promptly if needed, but also to isolate a potential
spreader of infection.
4/9
r-PH-Va"l-
USSR
OKULOV, M. A., Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 70, P 4
The greatest difficulty encountered by the sanitary epidemiological service is
the 'healthy man's psychology,' no matter how paradoxical this may appear. So
long as we are well, we think we are safe. Quite often, in spite of all x4arn-
ings, people forget to be careful: so what if fruit or vegetables are not
properly washed, or milk is not boiled or if water is consumed fron an untested
source during a hike -- but all these are the-bestlneans of spreading infection.
It is summer now, the season for vacations, and many resort 'regions, particularly
the Southern coast of the Crimea and the Caucasus, are overloaded with vacation-
ers. The quality of water and food is strictly monitored, and all lax-is of hy-
giene are strictly observed in sanatoriums, rest homes, and boardling houses.
But those who are spending their vacation on thier own, the,'wil&' ones, as
they say, would be difficult to cover by such measures. Tli~Lrefore it is de
sirable to temporarily restrict the flow,of unorganized vacationers to Crine
and-the Caucasus. The communications system and transport organizations are
-rendering much aid to public health wvrkers in this respect."
Has it been possible to determine the source of infection?
5/9
USSR
OKULOV, M. A.. Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 10, p 4
"We do not live in a sealed world. It suffices to mention that extensive trade,
cultural and athletic relations exist between the USSR and other naLions of the
world, but unfcrtunatel~ the epidemiological situation is quite different in
many of them, as compared to the Soviet Union. Even in developed capitalistic
nations such as the USA, England, FRG and others, intestinal infectious diseases
are still a major social problem. For example, in President John Kennedy's
message to Congress in February, 1962, it was stated that over two million
people are stricken by intestinal infections in the USA each year.
The thorough sanitary protection of borders, and the sartitary-epidemiological
service, which is well organized throughout the 9ovieL Union., help 6reak the
route of transmission and spread of infections. But if we consider tiat the
hogens of.many intestinal diseases, including the cholera vibrio, live in
at
p
the human organism without revealing themselves for several days, and if we
consider in addition that modern aviation makes it possible-,to travel thousands
of.ki1ometers in a few hours, it willbecome clear what a c=plex problem our
is an
sanitary epidemiological service has to solve. The cholera outbroal,
example.
619
~USSR
OKULOV, M. A., Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 70, p 4
It would be wrong to believe that because of the advancesin ruedicine and public
health, the danger of spread of cholera beyond its traditimal foci is negligible.
Of course, the times are gone when cholera made devastating attacks on entire
continents, wiping out millions of lives in many nations of,the world, as it
easily crossed frontiers and borders. The last, sixth, pandemic occurred in
the late 1890's. After this, starting in 1926i the disease seemed to retreat
-ate, for the next
to the regions of its origin, to the_Ganges delta. At any
40 years only isolated sporadic outbreaks were:recorded. Until 1961 it appeared
that we were through with extensive spreading of cholera.
However, in 1961, a new najov outbreak of cholers, caused, Lacidentally, by the
El Tor vibrio, was observed in Southeast Asia and the.Wast Pacific. This vibrio
was first isolated in 1905 in the El. Tor quarantine camp in.178ypt, from the
cadavers of pilgrims destined for Mexico and suffering from the classical form
of cholera.
Originally, the cholera induced by the El Tor, vibilo was obtierved as ati enderaic
infection in the Celebes. Apparently it began to spread from these foci in 1961.
7/9
USSR
OKULOV,, M. A., Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 22 Aug 70, p 4
In 1965, cholera struck in 23 nations, -including soine where It had not been ob-
ser ved for many decades. Cholera spread to Iran, where About
3,000 cases were
recorded,.and to the Psian USSR, where there were over 500 cases. In all, ac-
ding to official statistics, there were 51,334 cases recorded in the world
or
c
-in 1965,
According to the data oi. foreign investigators who made an epidemiological study
%i of El Tor outbreaks, the carrier state may persist for over 1,000 clays, and even
After successful treatment, the former patienttcan excrete the vibrio. This is
:,why, such vast zones of the Soviet Union are involyed in the Oraphylactic measures.
How do you, as an epidemiologist, and your colleagues assess the course of the
..control measures. Do you believe that It will'be possible to suppress the
cholera outbreak in the very near future?
"Experience in the control of infectious diseases in the USSR shot's thar success
As usually related to the scope of measures and promptness in. instituting the
-complex of general sanitary and other measures barking the route of the infection,
8/9
027 UNCLhSSI~TED;. PRIICESS-114G 0ATE_-230CT70
~11-TLE--QUANTUA WAVES IN A DEGENERATE ELECIRUN FLUID OF METALS -U-
_AUT`HOR-(03)-ZYRYANOV, P.S.t OKULOVr.Vol, SILINt V.Pl
:,t OUNTRY:OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--ZHURNAL.EKSPERIMENTALINDY I TEORETICHESKOY FIZIKIf 1970, VOL 58,
5wk:f+y -.PP, 1295-1309
~DAT&PUBLISHED ------- 70
-SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
REEL/FRAME--1988/1570 STEP NO--UR/0056/70/058/004/1295/1309
X-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0106316
UNCLAS$IF[ED
/2. 027 UNCL4SSIFfED. PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
-CIRC ACCESSION NO--A20106316
GP-0- ABSTRACT. AN EQUATION SET IS OBTAINED WHICH
~:f~-~:':~DESCRIBES THE. OSCILLATIONS OF AN JSOTROPIC ELECTRON- FLUID IN A QUANTIZED
MAGNETIC FIELD. FERMI FLUID INTERACTION IS ASSUMED TO 111E OF THE CONTACT
,~~.'TYPE AND IS DESCRIBED BY TWO CONSTANTS*: BRANCHES OF THE PROPER
'FREQUENCY SPECTRUM WHOSE EXISTENCE IS COMPLETELY D.Ur: TO QUANTIZATION OF
THE ELECTRON ORBITAL MOTION (QUANTUM WAVES) ARE CON~SIDERED IN THE CASE
OF PROPAGATION ALONG THE DIRECTION OF THE MAGNETIC~FIELD. IN CONTRAST
:_:10 SUCH WAVES IN AN ELECTRON GAS (PRIME4-B)t QUANTUM WAVES IN A LIQUID,
:~AS A RULEt ARE RELATEO-TO OSCILLATIONS OF THE SPIN DEENSITY. UNDER
CERTAIN CONDITIONS THE EXISTENCE OF QUANTIZED SPIN WAVES IS POSSIBLE*
-IT IS SHOWN THAT THE LONGITUDINAL QUANTUM WAVES STRONGLY INTERACT WITH
OSCILLATIONS OF THE ION LATTICE OF,THE METAL. LIMITS OF APPLICABILITY
:---UF-~THE R:ESULTS ARE INDICATED WHICH ARE DUE:JD THE EFFECT; OF COLLISIONS
--ANU OF TEMPERATURE SMEARING OUT OF:THE FERMI DISTIMUTION"
~FACILITY: ltqS`Tv FIZIKI METALLOVy AN SSSR
FIZICHE$KIY IP15T# IM& Pt No
-~I:EVEDEVA, AN SSSR.
USSR
UrIc 614.449.~57;615.2S5.7
LINEV-A, V. A., PMHIVO1'V--, M
A LEVIYEV, P. YN.1 OKU LO V
=-ZHIMUOV? D., SANINAT M. IM
SAGAIMLOVA i
q
"'Prails of the Czechoslovak Insecti ide Z,13-50 Mc~tatl
c ',.Lon in the USSER.
I.: ES-50 Metathion Used to Control:.the Housef'lyl
Moscow,,.Meditsinskaya Parazitologiya i Parazitarnyyc Bolezni, No 2,
1970, pp 211-29-0
Abstract: ES-50 metathion, an orcranophosphorus,compound derived
from phenitrothion 0, 0-dimethyl thio-
phosphate, T-.7as developed and tested in Czechoslovakia %-;here t
demonstrated a broad spectrum of action ar-,a .L-
-inst J--'4eti;, cockroaches,
ticks, and crop pests. If-
has low toxicitv f o wam-blooded animaLs
and no cumulative effect. Laboratory and field tesz;z of the insecti-
L
cide in five different climatic regions of the Soviet Union sho-,,7ed
that it Is highly effective in a dose of 2 1:f~jm- oi: treated surface
or 30-60 days. The temperature and humudity are tha most important
L
factors,in the action of al.---tatilion. The higher the teriperature ard
1/2
..........
USSR
LINNEIVA, V. A., et al. ,Moscow, I.Meditsinsk-aya
Parazitarnyye BoLezni, No 2, 1970, pp 211-220
humidity, -he ruore toxic its effect. Increasin;:-, the hu~ Idity of
the room or moistening the treated surfaces increasas Metathl"On's
potency, especially on glass or wood. Among th(~ negative features;
(i) it has an unpleasant odor;.(ii) it leaves mr-irks on the treated
surfaces; (iii) flies seem to develop resistance to it fairly
kly.
uic,
q
122
Acce Nrl, Ref Code
A0004,9049
PRIMARY SOURCE: Vestnik Of tal M0109111f,"
1970 Nr
PP
T04MOGRAPHY I N DIAGNOSING ORBITAL NEWGROW141-45
N. 7, Adamov, G. 1. OkWapa, E.J. Gaspa.,
_Varl
Summary
ground to llri . h
-Experience gathered by the authors gives !;et that 13minar investi-
gation oi the orbit alongside with a rno.re piecise defin'tioij. of tr>pical data facilitates
est.-btish;ng the character of the neop!asm growth, of it:i riiorpho),~gical picture Prid of
external 'outlines and shape. It also permi .-is judgernent to, tic forineId as to ~he extent
g ihL
the state of- anatomic formal
of the pathological process ions surroundij orbit.
The results oi these investigations proi.,jited the a2thors to conclude that tomographic
examination of the orbit holds great promise:in matters of diagnostication and inay be
recorritnended for wide-use in medical pra:6ice,;
E77777
USSR
N. BALYUPA, M. V.
OKU Mj.~
"Lateral Thrust and Its Significance in the Settling of Foundations"
Tr. Novocherkas. Politekhn. In-ta [Works of Novocherkask Polytechnical
Institute Vol 238, 1971, pp 88-92- (Translated from TReferativnyy Zhurnal,
Mekhanika, No 4, 1972, Abstract No 4WWby Yu. NJ. Lychko).
Translation: Results are presented from experiments ott measurement of
horizontal displacements developing upon loading of soils with a vertical
1oad. The experiments were performed in~a metal box measuring 1.4 x 1.4
x- 1.4 m. using sands iuid clay soils of broken structur(!. The load on the
soil ivas applied through a rigid concrete stamp measurin.,." 40 Y. 40 C.0 in
stages of 0.25-0.50 kg/cm2 to. a relative impression of 0,5 to 1. Horizontal
displacements were m,aasured by a depth using five marks of sp3cial design
with an accuracy of 0.01 min. . The curves of horizontal ilisplacoments pro-
duced in testing the soils are analyzed. Itis noted that horizontal dis-
placements in loaded bases depend.on the type and density of the soil and
a-re significant in. general volumetric deformation.
[1111 IT IN i9rz~,1111101101 flbgl~pg;.~
rw
Eco
USSR IJDC 591.553.5:599.323.4
OKULOVA, N. M., Institute of Poliomyelitis and Viral Encephalitides, Academy
o EM-63
-Ufft-Srzences USSR, Moscow
"Information Criterion of the Optimum in Ecological S U<
t
Moscow, Zhurnal Obshchey Biologii, No 1, 1972 pp 105-109
Abstract: Energy is replacing population,size as a criterion of the optimum of
ecological systems. A population of optima density and structure is defined
as one that possesses the highest (under the existing conditions) productivity
and does not disrupt the biocenotic relations prevailing (i.e., does not reduce
the productivity of the biocenosis as a whole). The nuffber of animals is ap-
parently controlled not only by change in.the quantity,o,f energy but also by
change in the organization of the population, Le., in thj~ amount of informa-
tion in the biological system. If the energy balance is,positive (the biomass
grcmis), the amount of negative entropy (information) increases, but if the
bioma s diminishes, information is 1'ost while the entropy of the system. in-
creases. Borrm-iing the concept of relative,entropy from~information theory,
the author traces the connection between change in numb6rs and relative en-
of a red vole (Clethrionomys rutilus~Pallas) population in Kemerovo
Oblast (Western Siberia). The two parameters are closely related. Once the
optimum is reached a further increase in abundance results in a declIne In
relative entropy.
USSR UDC 599-323.4091-526071-1)
OKMVA, N. M., ARISTOVA, V. A., and KCSHXINA# T. V., Institute of Polio-
Virus Encephali tides, Academy of Kedical $*lances USSR
"The Effect of Population Density on the Size of Individual Home Ranges of
Small Rodents in the West Siberian Taiga!':
Moscow, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal) Vol 50t No 6# jun 7if PP 908-915
Abstracts Data were collected by tagging small rodents over areas of 2.5-4.3
hectares in various types of terrain and recapturing thwn six to eight times
over a period of ten days, An average Individual sector was computed for all
species inhabiting that sone. Evaluation tof the el'fect of density includes
taking into consideration the combined effect of one paxticuLir species and of
all the other species of small rodents. The effect of.the dojiinant species
on the subdominant is much s-L-ronger than vice ce=a. Features of feed
availability in different locations are closely related to the population density
and do not disrupt the established dependence. The averlage si--e of an indivi-
dual home range of Clethrionomys rutilus,,the most numerous and dominaiA
-species, is determined by the population density to the:axtent of 86.?%, and
that of Clethrionomys rufocanus and Microtus oeconomuse Pubdominant species,
1/2
'U2 623 UNCLAS Eo RkOCESSING DATE -30OCT70
-T--I-T--L--E-------DISLOCATION DENSITY DEPENDENCE OF~'T'HE COEFFICIENT OF ANOMALOUS
.1,PRUXY REELIFRAME-1992/0375 STEP Ni-)--LIR/OLiZli/71)/000/001/0107/0111
ACCESSION NO--AP0111568
Jt4CLASSIfAta~
Z/2 023 UNCLASSIFIED' PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
ACIRC ACCESSION NO--APOlll5i38
A,BSTRACT/EXTRACT--tU) GP-0- ABSTRACT.1 A MOOEL FOR AN 1~~FINIITE CRYSTAL IS
PROPOSED. THE MAGNITUDE OF THE DISORIENTATION
ANGLE OF THE M-6SAIC
BLOCKS WAS OETO. AND IS DISCUSSED BY USING TPE DtRAC DELTA FOINCTIO.N.
THE MAGNITUOE OF THIS ANGLE IS ASSCCD.- WITH *THE NATURE OF THE BLOCK
STRUCTURE OF THE CRYSTAL. THE MOSAIC.STRUCTURE OF A CRYSTAL OUGHT TO BE
CONDITIONED BY THE SAME FACTORSo AS ALSO THE.SUBSTRUCrURE OF THE
CRYSTALS. THE DIFFERENCE IN THE COEFFs OF ANOMALOUS ABSORPTION OF X
-''RAYS FOR INFINITE CRYSTALS-IS DISCUSSED IN 14ATH. TERMS. ALSO OISCUSSED
'IS THE OIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE INTEGRAL SCATTERING COEFF. AND THE
INTEGRAL CHARACIERISTICS FOR ANOMALOUS TRANSMISSION OF X RAYS IN
INFINITE CRYSTALS. THUS, THE UISOkIENTATIONS OF TCHE MOSAIC BLOCKS EXERf
THE SAME INFLUENCE ON THE EFFECT OF ANOMALOUS SCATTERING OF X RAYS IN
SINGLE CRYSTALS AS IN INFINITE CRYSTALS, AND THE-OBSO,*DEPENDENCE OF THE
~-ABSORPTION COEFF. ON DISLOCATIONtO. MUST BE*ATTRIBUTED EXACTLY TO THE
-INFLUENCE OF THE BLOCK DISORIENTATION. FACILITY: INST. FIZ.
TVERD.--TELA POLUPROV.t MINSK#'USSR.
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR
NOS.KDV, M. M., OKUN't G. L.. and CHERVAl YE. G.
"Nultichannel Device for Linking a Computer With Telegraph Communication
Authors' Certificate 110 379923, cl. G o6f 3/02, filed 28 Dee 70, pub-
IlLijad 20 APT 73 (from Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya# Pxomyshlennyy-a Obraztsy,
Torarnyye Zhaki No 20, 19?3, p 144)
Abstracte Ths device consists of interlink units, in each of which the con-
trol circuit is connected to a teletype receiver and transmitter and input
and output registars connected to the computer. The distinctive feature is
that, to eliminate the loss of inputted Information, an. interlock circuit is
Inserted between -the teletype transmitter and the contxol circuit, and an
additional output of -the control circuit Is connected to the corresponding
computer Inputs directly and through 'the intarrupt-cause' regiater.
YEGOROV, YU. I., et al., Optimal4n. plAnir. rav-vitiva i rammeshch. otrasley
prom-sti, Part 1, Novosibixsk, 1972, pp 174-186
of a more general form are also considered'. in particularthose which are the
natural generalization of fixed supplementary paymentis. The specific example
of the formalization of the logical condition for th.e~probiem of optimizing
the construction and functioning of a new mine is giyon.
2/2
42 -
MW
"-
REM-,- iw~ 6 1
USSR
UDC: 681.327
OKUNW. G. L. CHERVA, Ye. G., KRESTOVSKAYA, V. F.
J--
"Device for Making Electornic Computer Compatible With T61egraph Communications
'Line'
USSR Authors' Certificate No 249089, Filed 15 April 1968, Published 4 January
1970 (Translated from Referativnyy,Zhurnal Avtomatika, Telemekhanika i Vychis-
litel'naya Tekhnika, No 10, 1970, Abstract, No~ 1OD266Pt b' N. V.) p
Y
Translation: This device contains a buffer register, code converter. punch
register, telegraph apparatus register, and,control device. It differs from
known devices in that in order to eliminate redundancy in the trans-mission of
alphanumeric information to the telegraph co=iunications line, the device con-
tains a service combination register, differentiating ckmuit!i, and a flip-flop
determining the order of reading of service or lnformati~)n ewbinations. The
outputs of the service combination register are connected to the inputs of- the
differentiating circuits. The outputs.of these circuits are connected to the
input of the reading order flip-flops:for service or information combinatLons,
the outputs of which are connected to the potential inputs of:the tubes reading
the service and information combinations. One illustration.
Acc. Nr: 'V40.io~I Ref . Code:dty 0*4 3
PRIMPM SOURCE: HolekulyarnaA'41~10giya, 1970, Vol 4, Nr
PP
STUDIES OF CONFORMATIONAL HETEROGENEITY Of NATIVE PROTEINS
BY PHOTOCHEMILUWNESCENCE METHOD
S. L. AKSENrSEV. G. D. !2EZ -. andj
Z ArRAgd!,.1, V,,ff
_.y
Laboratory of Blophusits and latum russ'
01 &1~wges. Qa& &ifuk
The break points xwere revealed in the curves rate constant of decay-temperature at
photochemiluminescence Investigation of several proteins in solutions. These breaks are
mainly due to the fact that the protein,molecules at .5-40* exist In'more than one native
reversible conformational state. Investigation of influence of salt and propanol concentra-
tion en the photochemiluniinescence parnmetts permits to suggest that the regions of pro-
teln molecules controlled by hydrophobic interactions- are able to, mandest gr9dual 0ruc-
tural transitions rather than cooperative rearrangements.
REEL/FWF,
-11420
USSR UDC: 537.528
~OKUNII 1. Z.
AlInvestigating Compression Waves Caused by a Pulse Discharge in
'Vater"
Leningrad, Zhurnal T elXnicheskoy Fiziki, vol. 4.1, No. 2, 1971, pp
292-301
Abstract: A continuation of an article published by the author car-
lier in the same journal (vol. 37, 1967, p 1729), the present pa-Der
-discusses exDerimental work on the effect of compression waves set
-by a pulse discharEe in water at a distance of 12 cm from the
off 4~
discharge channel. The ratio,of the distance to :the length of the
channel is less than or equal to 5, and the comDrossion waves are
lose to cylindrical. sults of the experiments are ganeralized.
C
it is stat~_d that interest in pulse discharges in water is stimu-
lated by the possibility of using it for,hydrolocation, modeling nu-
clear exDlosions in water, and for impulse stampin~g. short, de-
scription of ;the experimental method is viven, together with pressurc
k3- f th-, compression wa-ves. Tables of Teave p,)rametern
oscillolraips o-
and amplItudes arc ~,~Uoo presented. Thc author (,,xpruas,,t--s hi,,.; rrati-
tude to 1. B. "Vinani, A. Ye. Yershov, V. N. 4alinin, '.Pray-
man. He is associated with the M. 1. '~~alinin Polytochnical lruiti-
tute of Leningrad.
Instruments and Measurements
-USSR UDq 62 l.:'17 7 ~5-; lf~2 I..' ~2
MUSTAFAY-ZV, Z., ci"J~V B.S.
a wor L~c
"I'lathod C.' 1'eusurtment Of 7herm:il lonductivity Cf Sexicord, C 4 1
Sb. Tr. po Ei~7ron. fiz. (Iollection Of 74or~cc Cq ---l-ric.Altural ca
No 6, Uune 197C, .~botrzs,;t No
pp IM11C (forom RZh--:-:1ektroni~_a i reye prIxetienLye
:6a;zio)
ination of tee cocduc'ivity
'~'ranel!;slion: A methoJ Is proncs-ed for dc"em
4 ~, c ed on of the t- niuctiv, Of pt~ cc' e t of f il- 3
coeffic'en" ~.Lc jr=ul co
on substruter, both imn etctlonary und ip none to llanu ry rei=3. "tri't t?e t::-,er=-
al 166806 -42re deter!:ini-d and then the over,11 -thenral loi;a which conuitit-a all tne
6 Si~zrn~ ry.
thermal losees and the flvx ol the films zoa iq~
USSR
GMOVS V. N., KOBZAREV, 1. YU., Mj V.. D. t L. B., POPOV, V. S,
"On the Properties of Amplitudes Not Satisfying Condition's of the Poxerax_-_k~k,
Theorem!*
Moscow, Yadernaya FIzIka# Vol 12t Vo 6. Dee ?O1 pp 1271-1285
Abstracti The properties of amplitudes violating the Pomeranchuk equali"
Lr where C-' and c7-are the, total cross soctions for particl-,-_
and antiparticles respectively, are Investigated. It is shown that iv
case of constant asymptotic cc ) cross sectlons bath the cror~S1,.,-
A metric parts of the amplitude must ha-., a.
antisymmetric azd the crossing~-syx
radius that Increases logarithmically with energy. Then a-( the
imaginary parts of partial waves of the S -channel With negative s1Cr.
nust be an alternating function of its arga,ments In 0 and the
parameter ,0. Therefore a+( the Jma&inaxy paxts of the crossii-,F-
Symmetric partial amplitudds cannot be proortional to,a-( and must
sum -channel unitaxity The D De- 'C'
selected In such a way as to en ro-
1 /2
77-
USSR
GRIBOV, V. N., Physicotechnical Institute imoni A. F. Ioffe,
Academy of Sciences U35R, and Institute of Theoretical and Exper-
-Ohys
imental I ics, State Committee:for~the Use~of Atomic Energy;
14UR ~ V -D., Moscow Zng;ineering-Physics Institute, and Institute
Of Theoretical and Experimental Ohysicsp State Co=ittee for the
AREV, 1. YU., OKUX1,,.j_
Use of Atomic Energy; KOBZ and POPOV,
V, S., Institute of Theoretical and'),xperimental Physics, State
Committee for the Use of Atomic Energy
"Properties of Amplitudes With Logarithmically Increasing Inter-
action Radius"
Moscowt Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 13, No 3, Mar 71, pp 670-680
Abstract: A prevtous article by the authors considered the elao-
tic scattering amplitudes of the prticle.F(s,t) and, antiparticle
ti violated:
F(s,t) for the case in which the Fom.6rane'liuk equal-Ity i.
5 M M
USSR
~GRIBOV V. N., et al., Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 13, No Mar 71,
-pp 670-680
viz., given s oo the total cross-sections of the interaction
with a given target for the particle and antiparticle are con-
stant and do not equal each other!.
C" d coust,a d.
An analysis was given of so-called self-similar rrriades in which
the behavior of the amplitudes in:essenceis~determined by a sin-
Z
gle variable 7 where S ln s, ~q is.the momentum
transfer (t q2). and o is the length dimensionality param-
2/4
USSR
GRIBOV, V. N., et al., Yadernaya,Fizika, Vol 13, No 3, Mar 71,
pp, 670-680
eter; and it was s1lown that the imaginary part of the crossing-
antisymmetric amplitude is an alt,ernating function of its arga-
ments and q. The present article consider's limitations
which are imposed on the amplitude.by analyticity.and unitarity
in the case of constant total cross-sections, as well as those
that vary with energy$ without any assumption of self-similarity.
hat a number of amplitude properties established in
It is shown ~ V
the earlier article, particularly the sign alternation of the
imaginary part of the crossing-antisymmetric amplitude, obtain
even without the assumption of self -similarity. Modes are con-
sidered in which the characteristi:.c impact paramet'ers (p in-
crease with increase in energy (the P6meranchuk eqdality is
violat ed, given P cussi:Oil 0 n
with a dis ly.of those
and q for which
3A
NM
-7-
DOLGOV, A. D. ZAKIIAROV, V. 1, KUN, Institute of Theoretical and
Experimental Physics of the State Commi ee: on the Use of ALomic Energy
"Shrinkage Characteristics of Amplitudes~and the Asymp'totic i4ehavior oi: Weak
Interaction Ci-oss Sections"
Moscow, Yadernaya Fizika, No. 4, Apr 72~~ pp 808-819
Abstract: The so.-called shr'~nkage characteristic of the amplitude caused by
constriction of the scattering cone at asymptotically 1,iigh energies is discussed.
It is noted that the amplitude -at t = 0 is honreguL;u- and the usual Frois. 0. This
article discusses possible restrictions an the value of- (1, ar.~r,-Jming that for
t < 0 the amblitude satisfies the dispersion relationshiv for a with a finite
number of subtractions. The basic idea of the approach. here is to study tile
singularitles which are caused by ponstriction of tile sf,,atterlng cone at high
energies and to cv;qare tbem with oi-vlinavy threshold sing!.111ardt-ics callsc(~_, by
1/2
EV- 7: 7-7 77- 1
-USSR
~DOLGOV, A. D., et al, Yadernaya ~izika, No. 4, Apr 72, pp $08-819
particle e--.ch&ige (called diagrain singulAritios). T[ i narrovin-c- of the core
on the str4e.-ngth of unitarity is an unavoidable cons equence ol-: the growth of
the total cross section. It- is shown that if it is recuired. that the singularity
in the amplitude be no greater than -t2 1n t,as occurs ~with diagrams with exchan.-e
of neutrino pairs, the total cross section a as S cannot r2,se more-
tot
rapidly than a113. If it is required that the shrinkage sina-mlar-ity he absent,
cannot rise in terms of powers of s. All conclusi-ons axe based an the
'tot
assumDtion of the validity of disDers-ion. relationships with a finite numh-er c:f
subtractions for t > 0. It is noted, in conclusicq-~ that the problem of the
asymptotic behavior of the cz,oss section when exchange of massless particles
is possible is not limited to the scope of weak interactions for which neutrino
exchange is essential. It also has a direct relationship to electroma,"etic
interaction caused by photon exchange. For the case (ji: nassless par-
ticles many theorerLs of quantum field theory are inaf,.)plicabli.- in the. form
in which they are ordinarily formulated. , This ir, attr~,!,J)uLed-to the faet 4-hat
L
they assume the presence of art energy slit between the vacuu.1 apd the rpectrAIM
of pkysical states. it is sup A -
gested that; it would be of interest to obtairt
a m ore detailed description. of the a!~.ymptotic be havlor, of oiinlitudes on thf
basis of these ideas and to tuiderstqnd betted their with thf-~ ha~:ic
V
principles of quantum field theory.
2/2- 48
RV LtAallyq ARWIVID
[1
.-MMMM 11 W
USSR
GRIGORYAN, G. V., ITIKOLAM, N. rf,, andwRQX6',"aJ*o Institute of Theoreti-
cal and Experimental PhyBics, State Committee on the Vae of Atomic Energy
"Meatz-omagnetic Interaction of Pluo and KY 2,Fz Decay"
n
Moscow, Yadernaya.Fizika, Vol 15, No 5, May_ 72, pp gg~-9-08
Abstraott Calculations of the lover bound for the probability of YL
2j( de-
cay usually assume that the amplitude of the 2 T --),, 2 P transition is (to-
scribed by quantum electrodynamics, It Is -this amplititdo of two photons with
JP - 0- at a c.n.n. ener-Sy equal to the K, moslon mass which determinar, the
i.Winary part of the Y, -.,, 2 1 21.4 amplitude. Die article considers how
Justified the hypothesis concerning the validity of quitntum electrodyna-nics
is in this case and idiether it can be discardod in ordor to vxplain the con-
tradiction, between oxperiment (A. H. CLAU, T. LWOW, C. FIELD, ml.t
r(KL 2p )/ i L < 1. 8 - 9) and theory (L. 1611. SE11GALi , F (KL 2jLc )1r L >
5.6010-9). Five types orf exporimental datt% are ditacutin 0: viz.1 I) K 2
L
USSR
GRIGORYAIT. G. V., at al., Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 15, ]to Un-Y 72, PP 9515-998
Z11 deckyj 2) anomalous magnatio moment of nuono 3) alu Pair -hot orrodItc'Ac,--- on
nuclei; 4) formation so-called "tridento"t ju -> 3,Q transition in nuclear
field; 5) 11 --,~ 2,a decay. Conclusions 'Tki-fA on [r, - 2 I~pd nil pair pbotopxo-
duction :mle out tho bre.4kdown of nuon elf"Otrodynamlas, sz an oxplanatior, of
the CLARK at al. experinent provided thi's brzakdown doos not fall in the nax-
row energy region near the X meson mass. an& does not decline rather quickly
towards larger or smeller energies.,
The authors thank V. 11. GRIBOV, A. D. DOLGOV. V. 1. W(HAROV, B. L.
W for uueful discuSsIons.:
IOFFE,,and 1. YU. KODURE,
2/2
42
Ltz Oil UNCLIA 5 5 1.F.IEO'* #ROCESSING OAT .E-160CT70
.'IrLTLE--REGENERATION OF K FRIMEOAESONS.~,ANO THE POMERANCHUK THEOREM -U-
";"AUTHUR-(03)-GEKSHEYN# S.S.t KOBZAREV9 16YU-i OWNv~L98a
~" ~ ~ ~:' .1 .I - I I
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
-.'7'SQURCE--PLS'MA ZH. EKSP* TEOR. FIZ. 19701,11(l), 75-80
__D AT EPUBLISHED ---- 70
8JECt AREAS--PHYSICS
~j,0PIC-TAGS--K MESON, NUCLEON INTE-RACTIONs HIGH ENERGY PARTICLE, PARTUCLE
--FURMATIONs PARTICLE CROSS SECTION..
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
c00CUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIVIED
~:.PRUXY REEL/FRAME--1988/0666 STEP NO--UR/0386/70/011/001/0075/0080
C-IRC ACC-ES-SION NO--AP9105642
UNCLASSIFIED
212 Oil UNCLASSIFIED OROCESSING D-ATE--160CT70
ACCESSION NO--AP0105642
'~-ABSTRACWEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. EXPTS, Att
MED AT OETG. THE
~----REGENERATIGN AMPLITUDE (IF K MESONS AT ENERGIES UP TO 6~GEV ARE
RECOGNIZED AS THE CLUE FOR.TESTIING THE HYPOTHESIS THAT THE CROSS SECTION
DIFFERENCE FOR THE KN AND BAR K.N DOUBLETS SHOULD 13E A CONSTO DIFFERENT
FROM 'ZERO WHkN E YIELDS INFINITY* POMERANCHUKIS~ THEOREM WOULD NOT BE
VIOLATED IF.THE HYPOTHESIS WERE.SHOWN;MBE TRUE (I. YA. POMERANCHUK'
19651*
UN-C-L A.S-S I F-1 EU, -------
USSR
-r-, S. S., 1/,Om,7o~E-q, i. Y
= ~s i rr z U.. and O'CUNI, L. 3.
"Ceneration of KO-IMesons and the Poc-2rar;chuk Theor em"
Mos cow IPisl-a v Zhurnal EksDerimentallnoy i Teore:ticheskoy Vol. 11, No. 1,
5 Jan 70, pp 75-80
Abstract; Data obtained at Serpu-k-hov showin-a that. the cross sections for -mesons
are constant Ln the interval ')0-55 Gev/c and obtained earl-,e:!, at- Brookhaven showing
X
that the cross sections for K'-riesons are constant in the interval 6-20 Gev/c do not
contradict the 1--y otheesis that K+ cross sectiops wculd pass *tG a constant asymptotic
limit above 6 Gev-/c and that K cross sec-cions:would pass to a. limIt above 20 Gev/c,
so that as E
+ 3,5 0,5 P'LV'A a a + (6 t 1)
aK-p (K p K-d K d
K-n K a
1/2,
USSR
t a!, Pis1ma v Zhurnal Eksperimentallnoy i Teoret"cheskov
GERSFriEYN, S. S., e
F_izi kill Vol. 11, No. 1, 5 Jan 70, pp 75-80
~If this were so, the Pomeranchuk theorem (ZbETF, Vol.* 34, 1953, p 725), accoriling to
tthich a = a as E -)-- -,would be violated. It turns out that th~_- data -of uhese two exper.1-
mnuts do not in arq way prove that the cros,5:sections Cr _~ anCL a-, - ac-Cually pass
K P
-vtlaulax~, it i~- rj(,,:ixi1)lC- that the croS3
to their asymptotic cons ant limits. In pa
section a + begins to rise beginning with 20 Gev and approac,les Uj,-P. As for
K p
in the region E = 20 Gev it can be approximated within the t- 17 error
P
not only by a hor-Lizontal li,,e but by a curve that drops' Slowly Wit1l tho growtn of
!-energy and also by a curve having a minimum. The purpoze ol: thlr~ iiork is to note
that the hypothesis that c aFs = const / O:as E - -leads to s4weral clear
predictions relative to the regeneration of KO-meso6s. If the experiLments do not
contradict these predictions, it will mean that the hypothesis is incorrect. This
delivered at a conference on high-energy physics in~ Kiev on 22 December
paper was
:2/2
112 613 UNCLAS S I r- I0!!!cjces,SlNG DATE--20NOV70
TITLE-REGENERATLON GF K PRIMEQ MESOKS, ANO TH EPOMERANCHU-1, THEOREM -U-
-.,-AUTHtJR-(03)-GERSHTElNy S.S., KOBZAREVv 1:.YUo UJWNp~!L.8.
CCUNT RY CF INFC--USSR
~'SCURCE-JETP LETTERS IUSA), VOL. 1-1, NO.i 2-, P. 75-80, JAN. 197o
------- 70
)ATE. PUBLIS14EO
JECT AM:AS-PHYSICS
"""rUP[C TAGS-K MESCN, ENERGY SPECTRUMP DIFFERENTIAL GROSS
SECTION
CUMCL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
:i-PROXY REEL/FRAME--300511746 STEP ~10---USJCOOOI,70/i)lljOOI/0075'006"
ACCESSION NG--AP0133651
LA.&S, I F LF D
lussR
an
BOGO-HOWIMY, YE. B., DOLGOV, A. D, ZAKHAROV, V. I d
TERM'YEV, M. V.,' In3titute of Theoretical and State
Comittee on the Use of Atomic Enerv
"On Possible Effects of UT-Invariance Violation and K -4 2Y Decay"
Moscow, Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 15, No 5,, May 72, pp 985-994
Abstracts An earlier artic-LI by the authors noted that the eyperitgeni-ml data
of A. L. CLM~K, T. ELIOTT, R. C. FIELD et al, on K can be -Batted
L
to w)itarity if It is assumpd that there is a CPT-n6n1JVaxiarxt interaction
wbiclh makes a contrl'bution to the KL7il- 2p decay, amplitude in the forn
and partly eompenzates for the contribution of the tvic-pboton intern. edlate
~7.
1/2
USSR'-
BOGOMOL'M, YE. B., et al., Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 15, 110 5,~ ffay 72, pp ~e35-
994
state to the absorptive CPT-invariant part of the amplitude, If the a"Morptive
part, which results from other real transitions, is ignored, theria is no con-
-1z
fliat with the CLARK et al. experiment if bf-- 0.5a!:t' 10 The present
article gives a detailed discussion of properties of siloh an interaction and
experimentally observed effects in which-it Plight appe-:3ir. Properties of the
0
"'KS system are considered, followed by a discussion of poziiible leptonic
Ki.
decays of K masons with the paAiclj~ation of neutral cm:rTents and charged cur-
rents, nLaleptonic decays, radiative deciys,~and nuon deicays,
The authors thank V. N. GRIBOV D. L,' 1OFFEAnd 1, YU, EMMAREV for
Interesting discussions,
2/2-
43
USSR
DOLGOV, A. D. , DOLGOLENKO, A. G., ZAKFIAROV, V. I. OKUN' L. B.
an -1)~ -
Institute of Theoretical- and Experimel.tal 111ySj!V1r,~""t)UT'-:'r
mission on Utilization of-Nuclear Power
"KL-+2u Decay and the Possibility of Existence of a Light Vec-
tor Meson"
MOSCOW2 Yadernaya Fizika, Vol 16, No 2, Aug. 72, pp 376-383
Abstract: The authors discuss the hypothesis which holds that
the existence of a light vector meson )(a is responsible for
'che failure of experiments set up to detect KL -211 decay. The
analysis shows that existence of a X-moson with the propeTties
necessary for compensating the two-photon contribution io
Im F (KI - 2 1j) contradicts experiment. This and other diffi-
culties seem to rule out the existence.of such a particle.
Jf the hypothetical X-meson does-exist, it ivould have to decay
into new light neutral particles or undergo interaction xymi,
both unlikely possibilities. The authors thank V.V. Barmin,
V. S. Demidov, A. G. Meshkovskiy, 141. N. Nikolayev and V. A. She-
banov for constructive criticism.
USSR
BW-VNOLNYY, YE. B., DOLOW, A. D., ZAKHAROV, V.
SHIFMAN, M. A., SHMATfKDV, M. 2H., Institute.of Theore-L-1caland Experi-
.mental Physics of the State C En
ommittee for-the Use of _U _ergy
"KO and the Anomalous Interaction of Huons With.~Hadrons"
L
Moscow, Yadernaya F.Izika, Vol. 16, No. 1, Jul 72, pp 12 9-142
Abstract: The possible contribution of the 3w-intermediate state in the
imagInary part of the amplitude of p+p- decay and the possibility o-F
the existence of anomalous muon-Dion interaction which could balance the
imaginary part o.-F the amplitude ~f KO - ti+lj- decay arising through the
L
2y-interrmediate state are discussed. It is noted that -fte existence of
an anomalously strong pion-muon interaction could resolve the contradicticn
between the exrerimental results of Clark. Field. et al and the theory,
bixt it, is shown that the anom- lous i)iteractions 70 - 2P and BTr - 2p Oo
not contradict existing experimental data-on elastic awl inelastic *,catter-
ing of a muon by- a nucleon, on the generatlon of nuon I-airs by pions, and
by data on (g - 2) for the mion It is noted tbat in this approach serlo-z
'13
difficulties arise which are associated with the very large val:,ie of Re "',~ -,T)