SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PLAKSINA, A.M. - PLATONOV, V.P.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R002202420020-7
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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020 UiNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 0ATE-ZONOV70 -TITLE-LOLORING GF MULTE.j rLASS -U- (05)-S EMENOV t 114.14.t ALAPOVA, Y E. M. 9PLAKSINAP, A.M.r TIMOSHFiNKOv 'RL KHCVSKlYt V*A. I. V. GF, -UNTRY OF. I'iFO--USSR ~,:,REFERENLL--UrKRYTIYAj IZ:.)t3RtT.j Pkt'414. Cf3RsWTSY# TUVARNYE,ZNAK( 19-lop ,-UATE PWIL [St!:: 11--[) L APR 10 -.-SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS TOPIC' TAGS--Ck-.EMICAL PATEENT, OPTIC PROPERTYu GLASS PROPER TY bi T A 0 LPAKKING-NO HESTUCTICNS WCUMENT CLA5')*--l)sNCt.AS5 1~- If-L) PROXY kLt-.L/VRA!lC--3ulJ4/ld(j2 STEP CIRC ACCLS51i:N N 0- -A 01 L 3,1 0 66 --- - --- ------ T77777777 '212 020 UNr LASS IF LED ROCk~SS ING DATE-20NUV70 .-~CJRC ACCESSICN Nu--4AGj32L6Lj --~ABSTRAGWEXTRACT--(U) Gf'-O- AJSTRACT . ACIL TIN GLASS AAS PLIXED W ITIH A ',~-;METAL OR ALLGY VE~LT I NRELATICN TO Tilt- GLASS) HAVJING A DIFFERE"Ir -0.% AN 0CG- A) ADCH IV~ 6F METALS, THE I G' S UF NHICH CUL&~ THE GLASS. FA--- I L I TY.; SARAT6V STATE SC [ENT[F IL RESEAM; ki I.NSTITUFE OF GLASS. fl- USSR UDG 577.1:615.7/9 FRIDNI IVSHIN, V. P., TARTAKOVSKIY, ZAL SOV, V. S., IAN, A. L., IVSHINA, T. N., A., PLAKSINA A.,-N-.,,and BOLTIK, T. V. "Synthesis and Study of the Physiological Activity of Organomercury Nitro Compounds. 1. Analysis of the Holecular:Complexes of bis-(Trinitromethyl)- mercury" Izv. Yestestvennonauchn. in-ta pri Permsk. un-te (News of the Institute of Natural Sciences, Peim University), 1970, 14, No 10, pp 159-108 (from RZh- BiologIcheskaya Khimiya, No 9, May 71, Abs~ tract No 9 F1876 from the rdsumd) Translation: Synthesized molecular complexes of bi!j-(tr1n.LLi ~thyl)--mercury with diethyl-N-nitrosamine, diethylsulfune, dimethylsulfoxidE!, tetrahydro- f-urane, dioxane, and hexaiaethylenetetramine were found to be lacking in neurotropic, anticonvulsive, and antitremor action in mice and rats but possessing weak- antimicrobial activity (E. coli, staphylococci) and high toxicity for mice after intraperitoneal injection (LD50 14.8 to 24.5 mg/kg or peroral administration (55 to 124 mg/kg) and for rats after peroral ad- ministration (51.4 to 305 mg/kg). Two preparations at eoxic doses mani- fested weak- analgesic action. USSR UDO: 621.382.22 PLAKSIY, V. T., SVETLICILINY, V. M.., and PERES11PO, 0. A. 7're-rtiao'i ~oint-Contact UHF Detectors of 3i3b Alloy" Kiev, Izvestiya VUZ Radioelektronika, vol. 14, No. 5, 1971, pp 588-589 Abstract: In this brief communication, the thermal time constant characterizing the BiBb alloy point-contact detector is defined as the time required for establishing a steady-state temperature distribution of the crystal lattice in yielding or acceptin- -GH,' g pow;,:.,r. This time constant is-found by solving the heat conduc- tion eauation of the Bi3b device and getting an expression for the temperature distribution uf an ideally ther:iiocoaducting sphere in a medium of specified thermal conductivity, dunsity, and specific heat capacity. The time dependence of the crystal lattice temperature. after the application of a particular level tha' a detector made of UHF power is examined. Tha authors.find r, of Bi2otliblo, to which UHF power modulated by shcrt rectanf2--ular pulse is applied, detects the video signal enw,~lope of 100 ns duration wiihout noticeable distortion of the pulse shape. USSR UDC 621-396.669.8 DANILFNKO, A. I. and PIAKSIYENKO, J"S.. "Device for Detecting Prequency-4i.'~odulated Radio Pulses in LToise" MOSCOW, Ot1krytiya izobreteniya, Rrogyshlennyye obraztsy, to%m_;~n:ae znaki, 110. 33, 1971, p 180 Abstract: This device contains two channels, one consisting of se- ries-connected band filter, detector, and inverter, the other of band filter, de6ector, summer, differentiating circuit, ,rd thresh- old device, -,-.,ith the second su=er input connectedd to the out-put of the neighborino charuiel inverter. This device is distinguished by the connection of a level-controlling system between the band filter and the detector. The controlling inputs- of this system are connected to the outputs of the 'two channel detectors, thus improving the noise immunity. 'The patent is claimed by the Tagan- rog Radio Engineering Institute. Receivers and Tia:ns'fiiitters USSR- UDC 621-396.275.4 DANILENKO, A. I. and "Improving the Reliability in Noncoherent Frequency Telegraphy Signal Reception" No Kiev, Izvesti ja VUZ--Radioelektronika, vol. 14, 1 7, 1971, pp 790-794 Abstract: This paper analyzes a method of increasing the noise stability of a broad-band receiver based on the statistical pro- cessing of realizations of the signal obtained at the filter out- puts. Such processing is impossible for a narrow-band receiver because of the correlation of the realization values by-extension of a single communication element. The block diagram o-f the re- ceiver for this method is given and discussed qvantitatively un- der the limitations that the voltagasat the outputs of the two linear detectors in the receiv%i~r are.proportional to the mathe- matical expectation of tne envelope processus at the detc-ctor inputs, and that the transfer factors of the receiver regulator blocks fall asymptotically to zero with an increase in the con- trolling voltages of each. Oscillograms are given of the signals obtained at the output of this receiver cGmpared to tne output signals of ordinary broad-band telegraph signal receivers. LISSR uDc: 621.39T KRIVOSMYEV, M. I. PLAKSYUK, S. G., SHLAYN, A. I . ftA Device for Measuring Distortions of Televisiod Test Signals" USSR Author's Certificate No 263039, filed 2 Dee 68, published 1 JiLn 70 (from RM-Radiotekhnika, No 6, jun 71, Abstract No 6G109 P) Translation: A device is proposed for measuring distortions of TV test signals (S-ee RZh-RadioteY-"--ik~, 1969, IOG1)., To improw precision and provide for automatic measurement of both the total background noise and its additive and modulation components, a subtraction voltage mdule and four-input commutator are connected to the control module, and a signal divider is connected between the circuit for restoring the DC ~uonponent and the control module. ux: 62i.31T:621 USSR .39T.132(088.8) KrUVOSHEYEV, M. L, DVOPUKOVICH, V. P., PLAKSYUK, S. G., BOLOVINITSEV, Yu. M. "A Device for Measuring the Parameters of Color Television Test Signals" USSR Author's Certificate No 263699, filed 5 Aug 68, Dub;ished 15 Jun TO (from.RZh-Radiotekhnika, No 6, Jun 71, AbstracL No 6G164 P) Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces a device for measuring the parameters of color TV test signals. The device contains a control module, a subca--rier frequency reference signal oscillator, upper and lower frequency filters, and an analog-digital converter. For PUT-Toses of large-scale automation of measurements of the parameters of test signals coded in the SECAM, NTSC or PAL systems with simultaneo=. output of the results of measurements on r1ifferent chromatic bands or In adjacer.-L lines in digital form, the arallog-digital converter is connected 'to the lower frequency filter through a nodule for analog processing of the brioitness signal, and to the upper frequency filter through the motbale for analog processing of chrominance signal levels which is connected in-parallel with a module for FM or PM conversion of-the chroirdnance signal.. The conversion module is controlled by a recognition circuit of the coding type. USSR UDC 576.8.o95.18:615-779.90 HAM07 V. K. and U)PATIK, M. D. "Biochemical Foundations of the Resistance of Microorganisms to Antibiotics" Uspekhi Mikrobiologii, pp 211-225 Abstract: This review is devoted to special features of the metabolism of antibiotic-resistant microorganisms. A classification of reGistance on genetic and biochemical principles isproposed. Consideration is given to instances of resistance caused by antibiotic inactivity,~changes in the permea- bility of bacterial cells, and by changesIn intracellular metabolic processes. A separate section is devoted to phenotype resistance. fiffiz- lam UDC 576.851-25.2-095.4i615.779.9 KOUREVA, L.' F.--~ and PIA Biology and Soil Faculty and Chair of-Iii6robiology, x6rcow "State University "Rdasons for.-the 'Residual' Growth of Staphylococcus aul,--us 209 in the Presence of---flBacteriostatic' Concentrations of Antibiotics Which~lnhlbit Protein S~nthesis!' MdscaYVIiikrobioI'IIo8iya, No 2, 1971, p3il_~316 Ab:~tmcti The growth rate of Staphylococcus aureus 209, a qtrLin normally sensitive to antibiotics, is 5 to 15%, of the control in the presance of eryttMomyeint chlortetracycline, or levomyce-tin at concentrations (50 to l6,0_AAg1Ml) well above those normally regarded as "bacteriostatic." The "tesidual!" growth is accompanied by anincrease In the total nwiber of living cells,,- bionass, and protein synthesis. Resistant mutants do not arise cluxing growthnor are there any population shifts toward microbial cells less aemitive to anitblotic--. flicroblal populations are known to be hetero- incubation with an anitbioticzay stijaula-Le the multiplication of genemm:and sldx?-growing cells, in which the process of pzotein syznt~esls -remaim resistant to the antibiotic, UMRAL 14ATHRMATICS Differential & Integral Equations 'USSR UDC 517-9 PLA-MENEVSKIY, B. A. aence and Asymptotic Behavior of Solutions, of Differential Equa- tions With Unbounded Operator Coefficients in a Banach Space" Moscov, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Matematicheskaya, Vol 36, uo 6, Nov-Dec 72, pp 1348-1401 Abstractc The article, which is a continuation of previous articles by the author and V. G. MAZ'YA on the asymptotic behavior of solutions of differen- tial equations in a Hilbert space and differential equations with operator coefficients, proves theorems on the existence and uniqueness of the solution of the eauation L (DI) it 1.10 1/3 USSR PLAYZNVSKIY, B. A., Izvestiya Akademil Nauk SSSR, Seriya Mate-maticheskaya, Vol 36, No 6o hlov-Dec 72t PP 1348-1401 with unbounded operator coefficients in a Banach space. These theorems are used to derive asymptotic formulas$ given t-.$- for solutions of the, equation with va-Tiable coefficients )]aj-j(I)Dja(t)=O, t>T. L (1, A) aDil-tt'(1) + (2) The author considers classes of equations (j-), (2) sucii as occur :Ln stuflying the behavior near the boundary of solutions oil the Dirichlet problem for quasieUiptic equations. 2/3 USSR PLOOMSKIY, B. A., Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Matematicheskaya, Vol 36, No 6, Nov-Dee 72, pp 1348-14ol Section 1 of the article describes operators which do not depend on t, defines the fundamental solution of operator Dt - A,and gives the simplest estimates for this solution. Section 2 proves a theorem on the boundedness of an integral operator. In both these sections the author largely follows M.-k.:YEVGRAFOV's working scheme. The theorem on the boundedness of an in- tegral operator is used in Section 3 to prove,the existence and uniqueness of the solution of equation (1) and the equation DIU (1) AU (1) F (t), (3) Section 4 considers equation (2) vith variable coefficients, which is reduced to the, equivalent first-order system. This system is. then "split." Section 5, contains fundamental leimms., and Section 6 proves the asymptotic formula for w1utions of system (3)- 3/3 USSR UDC: None PLAMBITEVSKIY, B.'A:. -Asymptotic Behavior of Solutions to General Boundary Value Problems for Qwsi-Elliptical Bquations in a Cylinder" Moscow, Uspekhi-Matematicheskikh Nauk,,,vol 27, No 6, 1972, pp 247- 248 Abstract: This paper, reported at almeeting of,the Moscow Mathem- matical Society,is a study of the asymptotic behaviorpas of so- lutions to the following problem: L(xt;D D )u D7a(x t) + a (x,t;D )Dju(x,t) 0 X, t t 1-j t J-0 (x, t) X R D Dx n (x,t;D D 0, Ou 19nv, R I 3Ebjk(7"t;-'~x- t an%R k=O 1/2 USSR UDC: None PLAISNEEVSKIY, B. A., Uspekhi matematicheski'tch nauk, vol 27, No 6, 1972, pp 247-248 where t >T, a is the limiting regi on of the n-dimensioned Buclide- an space Rn with limits dw, aj(x,t;Dx) and' bjk(..'Pt'l~x) are differ- ential operators in sx. The boundary of the region and the operator coefficients are assumed sufficiently continuous. It is further assumed that the pro~iem quoted above is quasi-elliptical, i.e., that the Pol omial does not.vanish flor WflX1>0, and Olvrator., j'A P11 are connected through the Shapiro- Lopatimskiy, condition. The Problem,is compared with the boundary value problem i,.,ith the parameter ina. 212 5 Acc. N'r: 6P0044180 PRLMIA.RY SOURCE: Ortopediya., 1970, Nr ReA. CodeA*15-- Travvmm ologiya i Protazirovaniye, ~0 10 8 PP FUNCTIONAL APPARATUSES OF THE UPPER EXTREMITIES jaa=. an L. A- Sav 11yev ;p e The article is a review of functional apparatuses of tht apper extremity. Va. r rious tx.pcs ot po-'vered apparattises with external source~S ot energy Ire analyzed. A ciassifi,laiion and fie-id.s. of application oft control sysiems for powering devicq,,; are suittnitted. Tiw exptctenq o" utizication o1 the hmaged extrennity itself as the source of control signals is founded. This may be reaili-.ed with lielp of bio. elecirical control sYsteins. The features of bicelectrical signals of paraly;-M muscles and the difficuities of control organization with aid of such signals hi%-L! been shown. The authors presert a description and comparison of the control sysIvits for po\~ering the apparatus, one of which has been realized at the ,Los Amigos" Clinic (Californi3, USA), and the other-at the Central Institute of Prosthetics and Prosthesis Construction. The actuality of cons t rtic tioF61 iunictional apparal=5 with several pairs of controllable mo- tions is emphasized. rL* BL FILION 7. TUSSR UI)C 616-98a-'-078-093+576-85'.63-093-'-'$5 MGAYEVA, L. I., and "A Study of Sensitivity of 1,0-1 Cells to Some Viral Strains Riga, Izvesti)-a Akadeza-ii Nauk Latviyskoy SSR, No 5, (274), 1-970, Pl!' 49-52 Abstract: 1-5-1 cells were obtained from a mouse tumor which retalLed its ancolog- ical characteristics after 84 passages, The sensitivity of this cell line to a series of viruses was tested. It waa found that YZ-1 cells have a high degree of sensitivitY to the f0llawinr' A (sbrain WSIT), virusag, vilich Ct),,Ljjje (t vvirked cytopathic reaction, influenza vaccinia, and Sindbis virus- I 110.14oll:"11 A NS-1 cells were insensitive to Vie following strains Of virl-vica: i za B -- Singapore, Tokyo and JohAmoobtirl, strains# ~=O L4.-ningrad strain, influen the v-iruleu+. p4dom Str&jjao. sud:y4cainalH strixin of Newcastle disease (4,7, n, 16), virus, anil the West Hile fever v:Lrus. .112' UNCLASS~tFIEU UATE--lJP!0V7Q 017 PR SEPARATION, OF LIQUID SCILUTIONS OURING -T L E - - ~l 14 i- TH E a T1 I 1:.. T H UG -~ i U U S MFPlB;-0,Nc_s _U_ 4UTH0R-(0'3)-V(JLGIN, V.U., OYMEkSK(Y, YU.I"., PLANOVSKI Y, A.N. COUNTkY JF I.-'iFG--tJSSa d SOURC E-- 135N KH IM. TE-KHNOL. 197 0. 412), 271-5 DATE PUU ISH~D ------- 70 :'z S U 6J EC T AR EA S--CIAE;i 15 TRY -TOPIC TAGS-PCROSITY, CHE141CAL SEPARATION,, EYAPORATI014, ALIPHATIC ALCOH13Lr v r CELLULOSE KESM, ACETATE C 0 tl-%'T R OQ L AAPK ING-NO RESTR I CT IONS OCCUMENT CLASS-W,'~.CLASSIFIED PROXY PEE' /FRA:iE--300 1/0 L,;O STEP NO--U C IR C' S S- ~71 I i7 7 1 2 017 UNCL ASS IF I EO PROCESSING DAT;_---13NGVTQ CIRC. ACCESSION NC--AP0125956 --:"ABSTRACT/ EXTRACT- t U) GP-#)- 43STRACT. THE' CONCIN. PPOFILES FOP. 3 MOUELS -111KANE SEPN. WITH HIGH PQ,:~tit CAP[LLhkY _P, 41E i-ol.B'AA PIES _0F M E~' PORE A -si GPOLY,"Ic ~-ARE OtSCUSSED. THE Stil~!. MECHANISM OF WATER SUNS. OF IiEj ETI Piz, BU, M-GU ALCS* AND OF AC_`T,,-)NE By MEA~,IS OF 2 DIFFER.E.NT CELLULOSE ',CF_TATE MEMBRAiNES WAS INVESTIGATED. THE UEPENDENICE Of:~ THE EVAP.N. RATE, THE --SELECTIVITY, Atli) mE sep,,,i. COEFFS. ON THE MEMBRANE PRESSURES ARE Z, FACILITY; MOSK. 114ST. KHIM. MASHINOSTR. qAPVlICALLY PRESENTEU. ~~,Moscowr ussq. t J AS SIf.IIt Acr-. Nr: Abstracting Service. Ref Code. AF0045529- 0 BIOL,OGICAL SW16v Xinetics of mass U!,nder. uring the frictIOR&I dis- tillation of a methanol-ethanol-4ater mixture., S~efano*skava. -ii ~ A'i IN Qr '(Moi lnst~.Khim. PlanovA B N -16VI Afashinos A 'W.' 1970,40), 56--62 (Russ). - Mas~ treirisfer was swdied during the fractional distn. of a MeOH-EtOH-H%O'nri%t.,~Qn a O~plate column, diam. 170 min, at 1 atm. A thorough 4nixing~of the liq. on I plate ~s well as the equil.bo-tiveen the li~. ~nd th~ vapor at the pha-se interface Were assiuned. 111~ Mass-~Mrlsfer' coeff. M of an individ%W component did not depend on: the concu. of other components. The inv-er4 Ilk depended lh~early . va the inverse of the slope of the. reso.' dista. Rae. . Stolic-q'of thi� linear dependence were the same for 411 components and in the; whole concn.range. Karel A. Hlaiaty REEL/FlUA 19780487 Food Technology USSR UDC 612.392.9:61-').398.3-083 SLONIMSKIY, G. L., BRAUDO, Ye. Ye., YERTANOV, 1. D., TOLSTOGUZOV V. B BONDAREVA, E. S., and PLASHCHINA, 1. G., Laboratory or hysics of Polymers, Institute of Elemento 'Academy of Sciences USSR Issusceptibility of Proteins in New Food Products to Attack by Proteolytic. 2nzymes" Moscow, Voprosy Pitaniya, No 6, 1970, pp 25-31 Abstract: The susceptibility of proteins in different kinds of synthetic caviar (based on casein, evaporated milk, etc.) and synthatic groats to attack by proteolytic enzymes of the gastrointestinal tract in vitro was compared with the susceptibility of the original protein mixtures used to make the caviar and groats. The susceptibility of proteins to attack by pepsin in all the kinds of caviar studied was higher than that of the proteins in the original mixture. The degree of trypsin and chymotrypsin proteolysis of the pepsin-digested proteins in the caviar was equal to or higher than the degree of proteolysis of the pepsin-digested original. protein mixtures. The degree of pepsin proteolysis of proteins in the synthetic groats was equal to or lower than the degree of prcteolysis of 1/2 USSR SLONIMSKTY, G. L., et al, Vopro*sy Pitaniyal No 6, 1970, pp 25-31 the original protein mixturm The degree of trypsin proteolysis of the pepsin-digested proteins in the groats was equal to.the degree of.pro- teolysis of the pepsin-digested original protein mixtures. 212 'CLASS( FfEO~:'; 1/2 0 14 UN VROCESSIN~j DATE--13NOV70 ~.~~tITLE--ELfl--CT,-;.~ICHE,'4ir,AL FLUGAINATIUN OF .01METHYLANIONEt: DIMETHYLCYCLOHEXYLA.MNEv AND Nil N, QIMEFHYLPENTAFLUOar,,6r4 I L-U- ~~,,~.,AUTHQR-105)-PLASHKINt V.S., PUSHKINAt L.~Nof MERTSALOV ~.L.t KOLLEGOV, V .- FSOKOMr, ~_S.__Vf COUNTRY -OF 11"IFO-USSR ~__:SOURGE-ZH. ORG. KHTIM. 1970t 6(5)p 1006-11 PWL ISHED ------- 70 SUBJkCT AkEAS--GHFM ISTRY ,-.;-TOPIC TAGS-FLUGRINATIONi AiNILINEt AR OM A T LG AMINE, ?"IUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE AR, -NO RE .4 X I W; S TR I C T I ONS .00CUMENT CLASS-UNCLASS11; U-0 -WOXY AEC- LIFkAME-3006/131t5 s Y EN U- UR0 f) 60 0 Ob- 0 0 510 0 61 f) L I CIRC NO-AP013501 9 'IC LASS[FI ~0 PROCESSING DATE--13NOV70 212 014 U' ACCESSION NO-AP0135019 'T. TH E ELECTROCHE-M. FLO -ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTRAC ORINATIOm OF THE TITLE compos. AT MINUS 2 0 1):,: GREtE S.G A V E~ IN ALL CASES CF SU133 (CF SU82) SUB5 NfCF SUB3) SUB2 AND N,,'I,DIMETiiYLPEPFLUOP.OCYCLUFiE)~.YLA~-'.INE. THE YIELDS AND RELATIVE. AMTS. OF THESE COMPOS. VARY WITH TH%E: STARTING ..MATERIAL AND THE REACTION T IME. ~ NMR SPECTRA OF THE PRODUCTS APE DISCUSSED. FACILITY: URAL. POLITEKH. fNST. IM, KIROVAt SVEROLrVSK, USSR. T: C i USSR um. 621-382 BT.AqKLY__j__T_, ZAKHAROV, A. P., SVETLICHNYY, V. M., STIIROSTENKO, V. V. ItHigh-Frequency Noises of a Metal-Semimetal Point Contact" Kiev, Radioelektronika, Vol 15, 110 5, Ma7i 72, rip 657-659 Abstract: The relative noise temperature of the point contact formed by a tungsten point with rounding radius of a few microas and a single crystal specimen of bismuth antimonide is experimentally determined by measuremerts in the 3-cm band by using P5-10 low-level power meters. Analysis of the results shows that possible noise sources may be thermal noises of the internal resistance of the semimetal and of the contact itself, noises due to fluctuations in the thermoelectric'voltage, and also noises due to non- uniform passage of the chaxge carriers through the potential barrier at the metal-semim:etal interface. USSR UDC: None LUBBITEETS, V. D., P,LASTI.N,I-N.,-P.._ 1.4 MOISEYEN11"O, L. A., and GRIGOROV, V. P. "Rotor-Piston Compressor" Moscow, Otlkrytiya, izobreteniya, rromyshiennae obraztsy-, tovarnyye L -.naki, No 33, 1972, P 77, Author's certificate No (11)357371 Abstract: The compressor contains a three-slided rotor with a cylin- drical valve, turning inside a body with an enitrochoid inner sur- face. The rotor and its valve produce a step"Ifise cylindrical flow to increase the compresuor's capacity. A diagram of the device is provided. USSR GUBANOVA, 0. 1., LUNMI, V. V., PLASTININA, L. N., Moscow "On Central Separation Zone in a Supe dhic Underexpanded Jet Impinging Against a Wall" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, 14ekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No. 2, March-April, 1971,~ pp135-138 Abstract: An experimental investigation of the interaction between the supersonic underexpanded jet and a wall normal to its axis has been conducted. A central separation zone occurs when the distance from the nozzle to the wall is six times tho nozzle exit radius. The pressure in this zone is lower than in the surrounding one. 1/2 26~ USSR GUBANOVP, 0.1., etal, Izvestiya Akadewii Nauk SSR, Mfekffianika Zhidkosti i Ga2,a, No 2, March-April 1971, PP 135-138 The experiments were conducted with the Mach number of 2.0 and the nozzle exit pressure,equal to 2.85,times the ambient pressure. Photographs showing the flow patterns and the shock waves are presentedi as well as the curves of the pressure distribution along the plate. 2/2 1/2 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING.DATE-04DEC70 --TITLE--CONDITION OF THE RESORPTIVE FUNCTION OF THE- SMALL INTESTINE IN PEPTIC ULCER -U- AUTHOR!-- (02) 1 R.A.j TRUSOvt T*V. S_ ~-.`:COUWRY OF tNFO--USSR S.OURcE--SO.V MED 33(3): 87-90. .1970 -:";-DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 ~SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES TOPIC TAGS--SMALL INTESTINEt DUODENUM# 9ESORPTIONe, JODINE ISOTOPE, LESION C ON T R 0 LMARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED PROXY FICHE NO----FO70/6O5006/ELl STEP NO--UR/0344/7t)/03*13/003/OOi3'T/0090 CJPC ACCESSION NO--AT0139809 LIALEA z-KL_l_lVfl_ 212 013 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70 ~.CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0139809 ,~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT. RESORPTIVE FUNCTION OF THE SMALL INTESTINE WAS STUDIED IN 339 PATIENTS WITH PEPTIC ULCER (INCLUDING 15Z CASES OF GASTRIC AND 187 OF DUODENAL ULCER). A C014PLEX SET OF SPECIAL TEST WAS SET UP TO EVALUATE THE RESORPTIVE ABILITVv WHICH ENCOMPASSED NG WITH THE SE OF THE I POTASSIUM IODINE, ETHER ALCOHOL TESTS'ALOs U PRIME131 TAGGED TRIOLEATE GLYCERIN AND OLEIC ACID. INVESTIGATIONS SHOWED CERTAIN CHANGES TO TAKE PLACE IN THE RESORPTIVE PROPERTIES OF THE INTESTINE IN PEPTIC ULCER? THE MOST PRONOUNCED OISJURBANCES OF.THE ABSORPTION BECOMING EVIDENT IN THE PRESENCE OF concomr-rANT LESIONS OF THE LIVER AND THE PANCREAS. BY CONTRAST:WITH PATIENCTS SUFFERING FROM GASTRIC ULCER THOSE WITH DUODENAL ULCER EXHIBITED PATHOLOGICAL RESULTS OF THE TEST MORE FREQUENTLY6 VERY VALUABLE INFORMArION ON RESORPTIVE PROPERTIES OF THE INTESTINE CAN BE OBTAINED BY US114G AN ORIGINAL MODIFICATION OF THE POTASSIUM IODINE TEST WITH QVIXNTIFICATION OF THE ABSORBED TRACER. INSTITUTION OF I PRIME131 TAGGED TRIOLATE GLYCERIN AND OLEICACID TESTS HELPS NOT ONLY TO DETECT CHANGES IN THE FAT ASSIMILATION9 BUT ALSO TO ESTABLISH THE GENESIS OF STEATORRHEA. THE DERANGED ABSORPTION IN PEPTIC.ULCER CAN BE TOTAL,~WHEN THE RESULTS OF .:,....-ALL TESTS TURN OUT TO BE PATHOLOGICAL. BUT MOST FREQUENTLY IT IS 'PARTIAL-WITH ELECTIVELY UPSET RESORPTIONvAN-VilCli DEVIATIONS FROM THE .:NORMALCY- ARE RECORDED IN I!OR 2 FUNCTIONAL TESTS.; FACILITY: DEP-0 HOSP* THER.i IZHEVSK MED% IN.ST.r:IZHEVSKo US~R. c t s t f~ -a N 7i T IT -I ~11& C-74rIMMATTONAL EFFECTS IN 71M RLkCTIONS OF MCROPZLECULES 41, by 'metor of Chemi.. qss",. Russilan, 1101 40. N" CharacteriztIc of the contemporary t f, "'! of 'the dev-:1op- Ment- ~ in! the phyzical chemistry of. high-molecZiar ccmpounda. ir re-t::xa.minatI;n. of. a number of cuctOMIX11 cOncel)tz In th%~ ereb Of -he ;cinetics and mcchanisr. of polymerj-.atlon procr,sren nnd che- mica-1 rozmtioas with the participotion.(A macromoleciil~,z. Up In nz~ mmcromoleculec, and marcroions. have hcrm rc ~7~.r z main1v aS c0rtiin ideal systc-nz, for- thr, chiracteritc- tfcr. of which ; ,c ': lazsical terms or iL!eo Leactivitu rtavt, b~-,n i!. Th, clsqtomaLy conce-pt-s n! or-n1c rhvmi:~Lry and ol,;,sli-al -~_Int-.,, which Ooal mainIv with 10'-MOI~CLUdr commoun0r., e."'n"ILcally trlnnfrrr~ ... ! to the C11cm1ral o~ linl~s an., of a c1lai'. tkic" "!!I thc!t z is!:!: "I th't '-AL:ti.1t., if wLt,~ con-zld,~rati,-)n of --ill t.~,,, d1stinctivo Iratoren of t1io polvmrric ztitc or mat.b,r ;u~t' Itotive dn". quan~,Lt.t 1-~, ~jv. or 'ch,, C~il structui,c, hain, 1Ls fntm, In !ioluLion ,!nl IL., unlcr ~Mn cl-~n iv Ift ch-1c.,ij ra~llfjoit~rn cl polyn, rlc matf-ric,'_: macromolvC,11-3 WiLh 0 pre,;crI'm.-d. Antrll)ution nll th~ creat"On of vnrlm:= typ~5, !tiich 1~ en;tw*_ially imp'%t~:IIL In th" ~f phyriol",-ically nctiv,- polymern, M,acromol,~cljlar ca- p,,1vn,.r-n for m-11C.11 pmposen, ~Lc. f,j~d,.mmnta' to th., 1-,.-vlnpm,,nt c)T tha!. a _n-cm tcon ma.1, ~md t1c, too wc,-A :,. Iii - in rhi t 6 1, -c ~iori %.; I I 1 1 ... ~.. t!.i: atticl. . n :ha: n, ~n. tho r,, - ~v n: ho i 7~nol or mers (.~& comparee, wlth low-molocular analotS) enterintj tho of a polymeric chain, It is po5z-lble to distinotilsh cix iifferont effects which influence th.-Ir chemical behavior- ef~pcts of the chain, that i,-zt tht- Diflupnce~ of a snsll chain of merz Pdticd ~icle- by side with a givi--n ine-r, and also variation of the, mirrocorteentrin!1nn of* reAgents near the macromolecules 85 a lirnitinj cnnflcur~itj anal effects, which inrlude thi pr(,sonce of tC'2n.tt"Ormed or untrannfo%ned adjacent jroups, situated to t,'Ie left anti rirht oV , jiven runct-Annal 1jroull, ind the Influence of tho of th4, subchain; vilc---tr,,Etatic efiect:.:,, cAi-evvf-d In ?i-,~ aeconp.,,nii-l loy th, mrpearance or disappearance of char,;~:s alon,~ the chain; the influence of cross-linkin,; on tho s,spermolecular ever, In dilute solutions. to :;ay nothing or soiw- rhase re&ctions; the influence of the Mechanically st."*:Ossed st:te of tra n3f ema ti nv of Olymeric chains In czzes of chemical 0 eetQrMcd, films, -fibers and other _rIc materials; polymc conformati anal effects connuctcil wilth chon~c of the mutual d.1zp-osition of the morp and Qroup:; of the- chain ~-jrin~, tron-%Forntatiorx of tht. ror-n or Lhe tnacromol-ci;lr- -.n sol,ttion Ond in Lh.: ~oursp or tt~e.- rli~tnical rcaction TheconfiGuratinial effect:;.and tho roln of thu chain or,!, tllet-trlinlf~'j P,'Afamat.:trl; which prr'mir. dizltin.-jiil~hini~ the of the F~Me- kll,d of f~in,:t1rn-31 jroup o' 'i mac ond of on onalot;'o~j~ j,olvc.!,- -.f ot.,zmic. na!.I,~r. Tnllr zin. '.,P. 1,y the '~:amplc of p-Icnoricnon rcceni:ly W!*'11Zh r"latz:1. tz th': 0~ k'-to- -or tx~l~mo.'ic an~! non-pol~:xrlc rnalucul,~... Thus It pe~vL thz~t the macromnIc-culal. poly-beta-ketonic erL,)r C oil C. o 0.':'l 1. 0 W;0. kvLo-r(3.T-. enol to a far lesL~er (jet;,e than, rot, s--x,xmpl~, i1ir. icolto- -,tter I T PUP J,,UIA oll -I I j0 Ij ;0 ,ta t;~-:)Uo7p U-, SIZZAU Ju kIj,?Lpqns a-0 '.OU.o Ur lou.A-I;uJA ET 4-4 77 U., e ',I) VJ A"I U I' 3T tz U t P~-lfl ul ZU, "llu, that as A rcsul.t ot ne at t.~c- tt-nn-rjin la~ r-- stabl,~ comrl" compoundif: form thin !n tl~~- ;m, Of E.ubstances. It: has been Cound, for exrmpl-~, tb-,~ namic Constants of the s~ahiljt;j 0~ Cori-11,:x ezter with ions of coppo~r and rnnncanc-c, ar~- ders of mmr.;nitjdc than thr- cvrr~-porif~ln-, vz'-.: :,~r of xrcctylac~Lone and ac,~tcrzicrtllc r!5k~.,r. In : other consequences or those phenomcnl, t wa'~ cll)f catilytic nctivity, fo, ex5mpl~ in th,: ;W.1 : ' -,,n )' t:ic-v in a number of ~fttie5, ia of -- ~r. r. inw-molecular ntlhstnces; thia, iii if. cr,nn,-~.Lt,.: the 'Lower ~Itrem;th of tl,.e solecular 111,;and5. Tiwt- ch,~. --f macron ~no Of the cl~ Ical r~,Imn-- nf Al I ass' this 1~rmltr "n-1clud-In-1 vIty" of polyn-cric t:i.-. sub!;tancc~, alivarccd 30 A charactcrirtic ft nf poly,!-: I,,, cr" I-,, r~- molcculc.., rv!.ictjonn, wilh !:Iic po:`!c1:,rt!-ir. I trast with rcActionr or reactivity of a functinn~-,l nr T-C.,: r.: r;r.~t~nr; of 'hc- de~;roe or convc-rsion. In ;,',I -,f ........ ; A I convov~ionz~ in Lhe cnur-. n.' ~ition, !ix, t%)- Vol,,-rr-r j:; prv:u~#: or 11051tion with cc-nt~nl. of v1- ir;!t! A to r,) and convf-xted "iers B 0 to lrj,..,). it. U.", (rom thp point of vo-w rj-- A Itts:--,r in. liff,vc-ut -heth,~-r It fimiL it.,il" !,-., ,: r-1- rc.rdy conv,rtml mc~rn. 71- 4-tr Ir. i,r.1 w~i! dc,tvr,mInrd airrady not 1:y m x~t- r7rr. rl-n, t.-:t t:.: .. nrary M-.:t the f, th-, o~ th,- :u- e 'LIL-3tion i-, -.:h the initi4 produot!, c,~n ;cpnr~,tc"! from on". pr-: CL': in any .t;%4~p of rnp c:mnvrr=icn nn-i ~.);,: "', ;, ,jroup in t%c mcirclilp rt-n nn6 r!r-Penf1 or, Uhr, :1-1-- 1~., cul, adj;.,cent to It. 11) fh.~ ntud" or that 'Ion thr tic, de.~crlption of the ~3, of the list rilmit ton of rn,rs In t:%.,. !-,r L vi ption iet -,t r,-Actior; ritv onntanL.,;. rf tionn now worked, cait. to con,~r,t-- pnly,"~-ri,- 1,; ~--I.ri!ylnj th, "*ntr1.~,,,jHnn ~i mers wi-itch -n ri-zictpel 1-1 nny tntcrrccii~t.,.- -r"] t'j, - thO J1L'V1UC:tL(1r, 11' T:hl- t.- r. comple-x of ~t--, :,hjrfc~'! on'! There m1so Is ~.nothcr to r, - 121 - oil i ~crnpjjt-j or thf,- clivml.r.11 rvac.,'Ion v,Jth t-rtalii corr-,lik Lon n( tile tit., f-on.-A,onfL; anti *1 t1m h,,teroynit-Ity of 1.1o mt.L::; In tiv- co1jc!;, :)r"I rd, .137 Fill-OW! Of H"' In"f' ~Pctt~v (tilt. Monte-z'r1o (nothod) W~ recontly nolvi-41 til'it prnltl'~m --~z' a of mo,lcl reacHoni, Lakinq pl.ic- with r~'l o- ~1,1., (:tuto,-atj1yrIs) anti :olr-rrtardation. It was ~ztabllshr-' '1 in the c i:tt kinAer conjitto.-- o! .1L1tOCata17r-is I Ah:~-r ~ ot, arv~ cnm- ;enr eff-ct,,; .11,1t."I'vver connvcted with licLuroc -It-,, e-r inking:, t~,ik, relctlor. products fror purely kinetic rea!:Ons rove V~r.' h0tc-rot_,emous. Tit,.- tit p ta he r=posi.tionmlly 0 or - I . is dcl%!,~v-d at alo tit C '.' convo_-:vio:% ond r~sf_'5 w-Itil dec:v~.At!e t),' tio, mo`i,~~:mlar of Lite polym,,r and Increase C-i t'e of thn !3"rlple. z, r,~!AL!cm Ln mi,ny , fr ~-vt~'.,ntly lv~vr- ..!c I u in wher. limolvnis 1,ehpvinr I!: nrlf~t,,!, ;*or ox-ija- ol oi~ _Wv An a~ the apparent",.- MCI% value of t:i, ave-rai~(' r~kle o' ccn- Fili.illy, -,-;-t::njts or r.)f nwrromol&_ '%1'.r, cor.71-r.1tion "r Lh- be,v,- thi-n, In :It -n b,, . i a , r t u.- .opni -o ;' A.--' In looth pr')(!1jr.1 . tIrvj nr tho t%in t'-"' 5 A 'io 11.1 1 ~A obtain,:0. Kin,!tic Analy.,Ass o' tho~-- tw,, :.Lfr that thr, 7ztrurturc- of: Lite ~-anvr- cnn 1~c doqcribecl within tho ,r oar, Fij.z sttu't. 017 c1'vm!cz1 cm--'Csions Th-2 nr "y thc. OIt Of .1 .11"t i"I'Lly -!~'t of '.nv- th'. ch,ni-,try of w.ttl C-. mil 1"! er" t 0. the factorn. j t. 1. j mA - t~-. 'tct- of on !-tt-rt to I, L4.lv prrCL1:'._--.r-!-. takl.n;~ -,I,c,! with 6f an,'. trt "ven r-f: tjj~ i~ po_- It Lil,~ prf,~jnt timr. to O.,suribt- tile rve~ion of L'ttlicel poly- i~.Int~ c t.ht- 'iti4 rnm:i1tr,,tt!rrt- ronnecte-d -cur, 1-t~ in nt-sm)--tr or 4 n! n 14, !_c Ur, ~ tl,.,! i:,-a, t 1 rt to 110~' n'" tne c'.'.mi-;1 ill th'. oc -celz o. Inij orl_~-- :,-I it, pr '~ci li, tit, Ih A: f%hr ;p!- ci- :~3 I!' polymet-itz :-)Ct iorv.'. lr'~ PROCESSVIG DAT[---o;>CrT70 031 LINCLAS'SIFIED "T-IlLF-STRUCTURE AND PHASF TRANSITIONS I IN LOING CH41N CPYSTALLINE VINYL ila N I M E S U- 6.S., SHIRAYEV, V.P,-t PLATE* W,A*- ~;-COWIVTRY OF INF11-USSR I kCE--VYSLK0M0Lo SOLDIN.t SEKw A 19 70 12 3): 687-/,-~, ,-.,,DATE PUBLISHFO ------- 70 -;::SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMIST.W ,~-:'TOPIC TAGS--ACRYLATE9 STEARM ACLD, ESTER# MONOMER, CHEMICAL SYNTHESIS, X U ACTION, IR SPECTRUK9 CRYSTAL, ~PHASE TRANStTIDN 'RAY 0 FFR MARKING-INO RESTRICTIONS .,CONTROL -DOCUMENT, CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED "PROXY REEL/FRAME--199Z/0308 STEP NQ--UR/Oft59/70/012./003/0697/0691 C IRC- ACCE S SION' NO-AP0111502 UNCLASS, I F IE 0 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-020CT70 Cl.RC ACCESSION NO-AP0111502 .,ABSTRACT/E-XTR.ACT-(Ul.GP-0- ABSTRACT. C SU816-18 ALKYL ACRYLATES (I)@ CEJYL METHACKYLATE (111, AND VINYL STEARATE (1111 WERE.PREPO. BY METHODS DESCRIBED-EARLIER (S., ET AL.9 1968J.- X RAY DIFFRACTOMETRY't THERMCGRAPHY, AND IR SPECTROSCOPY SHOWED THAT THESE MONCIPMERS EXIST 14 SEVERAL CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC FORMS. I HAVE HEXAGONAL A11,41) TRICLINIC .-CRYSTALSt' 11 IS TRICLINICt AND III IS.RHUMBIC. T14E HEXAGU4AL FORM OF I -IS STABLE: TO SIMILAR TO 10DEGREES BELOW ITS M.P. ONLY ibIT14 A 4'. $U617 ..,.,.--.ALKYL-GROUP;l OTHER I DURING STORAGE A4E -TRANSFCRMED INTO TRICLINIC FORMS*:- ir USSR UDC: 541-49:541.06 DAVYDOVA, S. L.,~FZ VDAMIN, V. A., deceased "Synthesis and Chemical Conversions of '.'et,-tl.-Containizxg.?,'acro~-iolecules~' bbscov, Uspekhi 110ii-idi, V01 39, No 12, -(,~~-C 701 up 225('34-286 Abstract: The ar-ticle is a sua-,rey coverill.- t-he lnoslu- impart~'urllu- parers 0-1 synthesis and clicmical coziv,:~rsions of pal,.r-,ers of vai-icus types. In this -view tho tex-n metil-convainirir'. coiimounds or~:ano:-,eta-llic witizi chains in thel'o 2. 5 direct carbon-mn~al bond t~7c- o--,' Tre'"al), particularly tho.;c c n d., Lin"" rld'so polymer cwxoun(ts wiiich coo.~7,dination bonded. ato.".:,~: C),.' metals. W%ere poo-sible, t'h2 reactivities of the netal-con.'Galnin:- T.-~acroraleculc-- and.their " -rol cc-, Jlzr analac-.s arz co.,::-pared. The suririiy unsuccess-l'u- LOW 11 atte.--pts at synthcsininr nacro;nol,?cules and' cczve:vs-ion _apers in 11*11i I. L,.-- .1 products; j izthurs -ssw!ed syr-,4-hesis of t'-leoe conc----~.ndz from the chan~lfl in color Qf reaction vaix"Cure rt-Lone. nrticle co-itain,;~ the follunjinjT o,-2ctions: 1. Introluction; 2. derivat;ivca of r-c-Lals of 1, IT 1-uld, I)'!. of Pqlyu,ers for .;07 N~ I.. II USSR DAV=IA) S. L., !~KAI., uuehlii Iq'imii, Vol 39) No 12, 1~!C 70, pp 2256-2286 1 polymers deri,,Ltives of heavy ,wtalk;. Vet!illined pol- 3- Organometa ymers and stabilization; 4. Complexes of transition ;,etlas with Yaeromoleculor ligands. a. reactions with participation of the me-tal-lit'-and tond; 1). reactions of the coordinated mac-romolecule; 5. Factors which detext-Line the properties of various types of poly7tar-met-LI chemical bond; 6. PermLliarities of chemical g macromolem es due to their nature. conversions of metal-containim 2/2 7_4a T- "USSR VDC %1.64;678,86 PLATE, 11. A.p 11ALITSEV, V. V., Institute of Petrochemical Synthesis Gen A.-V.-Topchiyovi Moscow, Academy.of,Sclence's USU 11P nteraction of Butyllithium with Organotin eculiarities of the I Derivatives During the Polymerization of Triethylvinyltin" .,Moscow, Vysokomolokulyarnyye So7edineniya 12, No 7, 1970, pp 1533- 1537 ansformation takes place during polymorization Abstract: A rapid tr 6-T-77re hylvinyltin (TEVT) in the preseace of n-CNHqU aftler intro- duction of the organolithium initiator into -the systeni. Among the of the reaction are: low yields in. the homopolymer, extremely slow polymerization ratesp low molecular weights of the products formed, and deceleration of the reaction. Tho author;j found that the n-C4HqLi catalyst loses its activity as polymeriza- tion initiator because it forms a complex vrith the organatin groupR of the TEVT macroanions. This fact was confirmed by gamma-resonance spectroscopy, according to which the stability of complexes with n_C4HqU increases considerably when one compares the TEVT monomer 1/2 11, RH TEE&H'411! IN, ERHAHHUM U a, 14 j I H476RUJIMIN I - - A- --- , I I - . ...... . . .... II1 '11:' .111 [,;!T, A.11 1A A I'lif ~llh I lirfliki Ll E1 11 iii Ik.'.= 1/2':- 019 SSI FIE4 PR*OCESSING DATE-~-300il UNCLA T70 -T ITLE--PRLEPARAT ION OF SOME POLYtKETC ESTERS -U- _._AUTH0R-(04)-DAVYDOVAv S.t BARABANOVt V#Aot QOBROVOLSKAYAr N.V., PLATEP NSA* OF INFO--USSR .;'2'SOURCE--IZV. AKAD. NA'UK SSSR, SER, KHIM# 19701 (2)i-ft75-4_, p ~_~,CIATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 ."~-~'~OBJECT AReAS--CHEMISTRY TAGS--KETONEt ESTERt COMPLEX COMPOUND, POLYMEA, PHENOL, ACETIC TAUTOMERISM, SODIUM COMPOUND, POTASSIUM COMPOUND, LIGAND C?NTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS -.OOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME--1997/1184 SITEP ND--UR/0062/7o/CjO4/C'02/0475/04/-,> _CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP01200131 L "VS 55-1-fl-I sa-1) ~7 Ii ~& 2- / 2- 019 UNCLASSlFlt6..:! PR6CESSING OATE--300(~T70 1-CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120031 -AS-STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- A6STRACT* OXALOACETIC (L'It JEREPHTHALOYLDIACETICY AND 'rEREPHTiiALOYLBIS(ACr:Tt)ACETIC) ACIDS WERE CONDENSED WITH DIOLS SUCH AS HEXANEDIOLt 61SPHENOL A, ETC. EITHER IN A MELT OR IN MEPH OR C SUB6,H SUB6~~TO GIVE POLYMERS POLYE5TERS WHICH WE.RE SOL IN POLAR SOLVENTSt CAPABLE OF KETO ENOL TAUTUMERISIAl AND ABLE TO FORA TRANSITION METAL COMPLEXES., THE COMPLEX FORMAITON OCCURRED ONLY VIA THE NA OR K DERIV.S. OF THE I:POLYMER,IC.LIGANDS, WHILE THOSE FROm 11 .-'-~,~-FORMED COMPLEXES READILY BY A PREVIOUSLY*~REPORTED ROUTE,(DAVYDOVy ET AL .1968). FACILITY TNST, NEfTEKHIM* SIN, IMo TUPCHIEVAv -Moscow? USSR. Fl- A T'-~ Nr. Abstracting Service: Code 4f0100197 CHEMICAL ABST. Oe .4 0 111t,89k Highly elastic deformation of lj-~uta'nediol:di- methaerviate-hexyl methacrylate copolymer. Karz'in. V. A.. Khalikov, D. Kh.-I Shi W W114 A A. F. (Mosk. Goa, rMu im. I monosova _-Ar V SS$R_'-'107b'71900)_ 's DoNt Akad. iu (Russ). An attempt was made.to det, the va U s of thO inrliifidu- al -terms of the elastic stretching- 16rce f d e of T(dS1aX),.r = WHPA),.r + T(af/Mp., where X = th 'e e e stretching. U = enthalpy. S entropy, P = str6s. an T Phq temv.: as well as 1,1f, where f,; *,the energy coinoonent at, for 1.4-butanediol dimetbaczylate-hexyl:jnethac,r-vlate copolymer (1). The stress relaxation and thermoelastic properties of I filins (30 X 5 X I mm). were measured with a special dynamometer (M. E. Misyureevich._1969) i The twas almost1denticid at high and low temps. This, togetheri.0th the absence of residual defor- mation, indicated the c6mplet'e reversibility of the highly elastic deformation. However -des.Oite,the fact,thit 011aA._ lor I at X > 1. 10 was pos., f was n~t directly propairtional to T. DBJR REEL/FRAM 1-9841579 -7 V Acc. Nr. Abstracting Service: Ref. Code A048842 CHEMICAL ABST. 90929y Effect of the nexibility of he main eboin on the he rmain c1 r structure of crystalline lymers and copolymers with Ion qi& branches. Shibaev.- P.; Petrulch'in. B. S., thite. N.-A.': Kargin. - . ( 0~_ -. . I C~s Univ. im, LomonosOV37 M6.9UM, V111.5KI. V~yso omoi. Soedin.,'S&' A 1970, 12(l), 140-8 (RUSS). X-ray diffractometric Ants, thermogravimetry, and! cletns- of ru.p., entropy (AS) and enthalpy (AHJ of melting show that in afactic or isotactic 'title polymers '(D the character 6f the side chain packing is detd. by the flexibilitv of the main chain. Poly- (vinvI stearate), . poly(n.heptadecyl' acrylate), poly(n-octadecyl acrylate), and poly(hexadevvl scrvlati) h4ve relativelv'high m.p., AS, aff,and 2-layer side c6in packing, Poly(hexadi~vl methac- rylate) and hexadecyl urylate-iso-Pr scrylate copoli'mer have relatively low M.P., .18, Ali,and sitilgle-layer side chain packing. All I have hexagonal crystal structure. CPJR - REEL/FRAME 19800GO9 Acc. N Abstracting Service: Ref. Code: ~P6041738 CHEMICAL AR.STf LLR 0* fP 79518t Ionic copolymerlution of triethyi(vinYMin with M ql'tsev, V. It' styrene. .; Pjate. N. A.:(Inst.: Neftekhim, $in. im.. 1. Toochieva. Moscow. USNH)7T~. 12t 1). 182-5 (Russ). CH2XHSnEt3 (I~ w8e: copolymd,. with sty- rene (11) in the presence of Ni-naphthalene.complex or BuLi in na 0 C6Hs. The reactivity ratios of 11 and j were 25 -4: 0.6 an .006 :i:0.0005,resp, The yield of eopolymei Was. lower in the Oiesence of tetrahvdrofuran, appamntN due to;comolex fbrm~aqon. I could not'be polyrnd. or co~blimd, with it ip the preserkc~' of cat- ionic catalysts such as AIC13 or TiC14. The elect ro~-acc6ptw er- feet of the Sn atom on the Ir electrons,of the vinyl group; appar- ently outweighs the electron-donating effect of the ShEt3 group. DBJR REEL/FRMIE 19 1-) r; - - U-, -a -1 ------ USSR UDC 576.851-71.097.2-083.3 DYUYSALIYEVA. R. G., TARASEVICH, I. V., and PLO Institute of Epide- of miology and Microbiology imeni Gamaleya, Aci emy of Medical Sciences USSR, Moscow "Preparation of Antigen from Rickettsia tsutsugamushi, Grovm in Tissue Cultures" Moscow, Zhurnal 114ikrobiologii, Epidemiologii iImmunobiologli. No 7, Jul 76, pp 101-103 Abstract: Soluble antigen was obtained from R. tsutsugarsurhi (Gilliam and B-15 strains) cultured in a monclayer of L cGl1s and primary trypsinized chick f;Lbro- blasts. Three days after formation of the monolayer. the zedium was removed and the culture inoculated with a suspension of egg yolk infected with rickettsia. The culture was then left for 2 hours or overnight at 370G,. The suspension con- taining rickettsia was removed and tha culture oovercd with medlim 199. As soon as the first signs of degeneration of the monolayor appsaredo the cells were re- movod mechanically and centrifuged for 1 hour until all, ripkottsiA arA calls settled. The supernatant was removed. and the precipitate was us#A as starting material to prepare the antigen. The specificity of tUsjwtigan was determined from the results of a complownt-fixation test, USSR DZHIDZHOYEV, M. B. KOROLEV, V. V.J1 ~%MOV, V. N., G., and KHOIMGV, R. V., Physics Department, ~~oscov State University imeni M. V. Lomonosov "Detonation Gas-Dynamic Laser" Moscow, Pis'ma v Zhurnal Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki, Vol 14, No 2, 20 Jul 71, PP 73-76 Abstract: This article describes a new type of gas-dynamic laser in which the solid material is detonated to obtain the initial high-temperature gas mixture. Previously the high-temperature mixture was obtained in the gas-dynamic lasers by the passage of shock waves in the gas media and by heating with an electric are or by igniting the initial gases. The use of detonation of the solid material permits varying the initial pressure and tenmerature of the gas mixture in a wide range and also substantially simplifying and reducing the dimensions of the experimental set-up. Figure 1 shows a schematic of the experimental set-up; Figure 2 is an oscillogram of the impulse of geLeration, 500/4sec/unit; and Figure 3 shows the output energy. The authors state that by using liquid nitrogen in the described zet-up, they can experimentally place the Initial material in the reaction volum. By the uso of other materials 1/2 .-USSR DZHIDZHOYEV, M. S., et al,, PisIms. vZhurnal Eksperimental'noy i Teoretiches- koy FizikiJ, Vol 14, No 2, 20 Jul 71, PP 73-76 the experiments can be theoretically conducted at room,temperatures. The article contains 3 figures and 10 bibliographic entries. 2/2 -1/2 03h UNG L AS S I F:I C41 PRCICESSING 0ATt.--20NuVlO TITLE-G-N~ CONTRU t.1 ON THE -L OF CHLMICAL REACTIONS BY RESONANCE PHOTr ACr.,o MOLECULES -U~ N.D., PLATONENKO V 'T KHCKHLOVp R.V. ~_CCUNTRY OF INFG--LSSR S6URCE-ZhURNAL EKSPERINENTALINOY I TEOR rTICHESKOY FfZIKI,t 1970, VOL 58Y NR 61 PP 2195-22CL _-OATE PUB' ISHED----70 --CHEMIStRY# PHYSICS ~SUBJECT AREAS TAGS-ChEMICAL REACTION# CHEMICAL REACTION KINE-TICS0 CHEMICAL RATEr CHEMICAL REACTIOWMECHANISMt IR LASER CCNTRCL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED 7,.:,PROXY REELIFRAME-L997/1694 STEP NO--UR/0056/70/058/006/2195/2201 CIRC ACCESSICN NO-AP0120406 2 038 u ASSUFIED' PROC ESStNG DATE--20NOV70 C I RC` ACCESS[GN NO-AP0120406 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE PossiBrLITY 15 CONSIDERED OF CARRYING GUT CHEMICAL REACTIONS IN A GIVEN DIRECTION BY RESONANCE .,APPLICATIUN OF INFRARE0 LASER RADIATION TO A CHOSEN VIBRATIONAL DEGREE OF FREEDCm OF THE MOLECULAR SYSTE-M. SUCH AN ACTION LEADS TO WEAKENING OF-THE CHOSEN BGND ANO TO A SHARP'GROwTH OF THE RATE OF REACTIONS lNVOLVING BREAKING OF THE BOND, IT IS SHOWN THAT IN ORDER TO REALIZE THIS POSSIBILITY RADIATICN SOURCES wiTH. REAL PARAAErERS. ARE REQUIRED. FACILITY: 140SKOVSKIY GOS.' UNI:V. IM. M. V., LONONOSOVA. J.: Nc E -LA;cl-FTE0- - L -int-a m'~ - USSR UDC 576.8-093 KAUROV, B. S., PLATONE ?MRIKOVAP G. G.) and WBIN, A. B., Moscow State U vers ty "Sjudy of Low-Intensity Luminescence of Some Microorganisms" Moscow, Biologicheskiye Nauki, No 7, 1971 PP 102-105 Abstract: Luminescence was studied in a wide variety of bacteria: those cap- able of growing through fermentation or respiration, obligate and facultative ,aerobes and anaerobes, containing and not containing cytochromes, e.g., Clostridium. butyricum, Pseudomonas aeroginosa, Ps. fluorescens, Bacillus sub-. tilis, and others. + Spontaneous luminescence was observed only in B. brevis var. G. B. R, S, P I and P_ forms, B. subtilis, B. cereus, D. nycoides, B. mesentericus, B. megatherium, and E. coli, i.e., aerobes that contain cyto- chromes and are ammonifiers. The intensity of luminescence is 110 imp/sec. The luminescence lies in the region of 420 to 520 nit wi-th a peak at 480 nit. The culture fluid (centriPagate) is responsible for the phenomenon rather than the cells. Off r =.- USSR Aw 621.172j62-08-3 PASHKOV, P. 0., YAVOR, A. A. ,SAVCIOa-OV, E A., KOTOV N V., SKLYAROV, N. , H. #, KUGMYEV t A. A. , and PIATONOV , A. A. Volograd Polytechnic 1nfjiitutej All'.Won Scientific Research Institute of Aviation Materials "Properties of High-Strength Clad Sheet Steel In TenslozP Moscowt hetallovedenlye I Teraicheakaya Obmbotka fletallovo No 121 1973s PP 37-40 Abstracts Specimens of VKS-i steel, 1.5 thick, clad with the corrosion- sistant Khh78-1 (EI435) alloY, 13-15% of.sheet thickness, were tested for mechanical p-roperties by the nethod4 axial tension - static b-anding - biaxial tension - tensile fracture (crack sensitivity). The Invostication results indicate that V13-1 clad steel possesses higher strength zpd plasti- city in comparison with steel without ciadding and, higher resistance to rupture. The strength of VO-1 steel in biaxial tension comes up to maximum values; besides, the strength in axial tension is 20-'25% higher than the strength of homogeneous VM-1 eteel. The application of alectroslag remelting contributes to increased plasticity under tension for high-strongth cla;i st~,el, but to a smaller degree than for homogeneous steel# Three,figurest two tables, seven -bibliographic references. 1A TrTT -!~!!i 111,4111:11 niffilli'lliu. 17An ii k ,I I Ir il-v;7 auzzu ii Irl ;nt~xl 11, -1/2 013 UNCLASSIFIE6 PROCESSING DATE--27NOV70 RAMETE-R~ORRITAL iCORRECTION OF A TATLE--OPTIMUM PROPERTIES OF A ONE.PA -.,...SPACECRAFT -U- KAZAKOVA, R.Ko OF INFO--USSR, FRANCE IFAC SYMPOSIUM ON SPACE CONTROLt TOULOUSE', FRANCEI MARCH 19701 SL 2 5 6 11 PUBLISHED ------- 70 AREAS--METHODS AND EQUIPMENT, SPACEJECHNOLOGY .;_.'_-TOPIC TAGS--ORBIT CORRECTION, ERROR MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED -PROXY REEL/FRAME--3008/1924 STEP NO--Fft/0000/70/000/000/0000/0000 IRC ACCESSION NO--AT0138189 2/2 013 UNCLASSIFLEO PROCESSING DATE-27114OV70 C[RC ACCESSION NO--AT0136789 .ABSTF,ACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE REPORT DEALS WITH THE TH -CHARACTERISTICS OF A ONIE PARAMETER ORBITAL CORRECTION As SOON As 4t THE CTION 5.-jf: THE CORRECTION EFFECT OF ERRORS OF THE MAGNITUDE AND DlkE%. IMPULSE TO THE PARAMETERS OF A FLIG14T ORBIT. OF A SPAP-ECRAFr. THE MAGNITUDE AND DIRECTION OF THE CORRECTION. IMPULSE WHICH PR13VIDES VIIN[i',IUM EFFECT OF THE ERRORS IN THE ACCOMPL.ISHMENT OF coRRECTION ARE DETERMINED. A CRITERION FOR CORRESPONDENCE OF THE OPTIMUM IMPULSE MAGNITUDE CORRECTION TO THE OPTIMUM ERROR EFFECT CORRECTION 15 GIVEN. AS ANI 'CTION AN10, THE EXAMPLE THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE SATELLITE PEPIOD CORRE CHARACTERISTiCS OF THE CORRECTION OF THE: SPACECRAFT RETURN ORBIT PERIGEE ARE CONSIDERED. FACILITY: SENIOR: RESEARCH W:ORKER INSTITUTE OF -.~,:.-.~APPLIED MATHEMATICSt ACADEMY OF SCIEN%"ESl USSR. FACILITY: --RiSEARC H WORKER INSTITUTE OF APPLIED HATHEMATICSt AMEMY OF SCIENCESY -.USSR#: UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-13NOV70 017 UNCLASSIF E TUTLE-THE OPTIMAL PROPERTIES or- THE SINGLE, PARAMETRIC OR61T (;CRRECTION CiF ..'-A SPACE VEHICLE -u- ,.A,UrHGp_(02)-PLATJN0V, A.K., KAZAKOV, R.K. .;~.CGUNTIRY OF INFO--U'aSR SOU ,R C E.--A!JT(J,'-lATIC CG!4Tk(JL I I'll SpZE - 3RD I F C S .YMP051UMt TOULOUSEv FKANCE 0 - 6 T 4 , 1970 MARCH ------- 70 -.DATE PlJ5LISHED -SU BJ Url T AREAS-SPACE T Ec HNOLOGY 'MaNly EARTH SATELLUE 0,1 6 IT 'JOPIC TAGS--ORBIT CGi,RL R -ONTRO MARKING-NO REST!iIrTIONS CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED REELIFRAME--3004/1279 STEP MO-.-FR/0000/70/000/00k)/OIJC)0/0000 CIRC ACCESSION ~NQ-AT0131735 S j 212 017 DATE--13NOV70 UNCLASSI FLED! PR Ot E S S I NG C I RC, ACCESSION N-J--AT0131735 .__A6STRACT/EXTRACT--%'U) GP-0- A3STRALT. THE PAPER OEAt.S WITH THE i~__.-.,--,CHARflCTER:ISTlCS OF A SINGLE PARAMETRIC OIZ131T CORRECTION. THE MPLUENCE (IF EPROKS E Hl CGRRECTIONAt- likiPULSE ON THE PARAM TERS OF THE SPACE VE CLE ORBIT IS DISCUSSED. THE VALUE A!"40 DIRECTION OF THF: CORPECTIONAL IMPULSE WHICII ARE OPTUIAL WITH RIL-SPECT TO 'THE INFLi)ff?~CE OF THE fi"IPULSE FOR CORRECTIL-N WHICH IS EkROIAS ARE DETERIM,[NED. CRITERIA OF CONGkOENCE BY IMPULSE VALUE ANID OPT1,74AL CORRECTION bY THE INFLUENCE OF THE .~_.-_:IMPULSE ERRORS ARE CEDUCE-0. FOR EXAMPLEt THE CHARACTERISTECS OF AN .. -::..,EARTH SATELI-ITE REVOLUTION: PERIJU, L-PTIIMA~ GGRRECTM"o AND l(EiNLER 5: :.~PER [GE EOPTIMAL CGkRECTION ARE CONSIOEREb.. L S_'l I 1~ fil OL6 UNLLA55LklEV~-' PHO~',ESSING VATt-30UGT7U 'ATLE-UPTICAL AND MOESSBAUER SPECWC OF 'I:R0iW IN TOURMALINES -U- QTHOR-(O5)-MARFUMIN, A.S., MKRTCHYANq A.R.r NADZHARYAN# G.N.9 NYUSSIXt PLAT13NOV9_A.N. C:-.5,iTRY ur 'OU.RCE-IZV.' AKAD_ NAUK SSSR, SER. rEOL. 19709 (2) t 1150, ATE PUbL I SHED-7 0 OBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY. EARTH SCIENCES AND'OCEANOGRAPHY i3PIC TAC-S-AaSCRPTION EANG SPECTRUMt IRONY ALUMINUM SILICATE MINERAL9 UYSTALP MOSSBAUER SPECTRUM .CNTRCL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS QCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED 190kY REEL/FiRAME-2000/1541 STEP NO--UR/0011/70/000/002/0146/0150 .1 RC ACCESSIGN NO-AP0125168 UN G L A 5 S I F I E D 2/3 016 UNCLASSIFIED P PJ), C;ESSING DATE--3oocr7O _lRC' ACCESSICN NC--AP0125168 'USTRACT/EXTRACT-fUl GP-0- ABSTRACT. TWO ABSOkPTION BANDS UF VARIOUS ~-INTENSITY IN THE VISIBLE 113,000-15,000 CM PRIME NEGATIVEI) AND IR .18500-950O.CM, PRIME t4EGATIVE,I) REGIONS WERE OBSD. IN,GREEN TOURMALINE -CRYSTALS. THE OPTICAL ABSORPTION SPECTRA WERE INTERPRETED BY ASSUMING .TPAT IONS OF FE PRIME2 POSITIVE ARE SITUATED MOSTLY IN MG OCTAHEDRONS ~WITH LOCAL SYMMETRY CF APPROX. D SUB4H. MEANINGFUL DIFFERENCES WERE .OBSD. IN POLARIZED SPECTRA OF BLACK TOURMALINES. THE SPECTRA ALONG MEGA (ORDINARY RAY) 48SORPTION BAND AT ~Oj WERE CHARACTERIZED BY A WIDE - ,...-:SIMILAR TO 12,000 CM PRIME NEGATIVEI WHEREAS SPECTRA ALONG EPSILON 1EXTRAURDINARY RAY) WERE SIMILAR rG ABSORPTION SPECTRA OF GREEN TOURMALINES. IN ADGN. A DIFFUSE BAND AT 18000 C14 PRIME NEGATIVE1 WAS --GBSD. IN SPECTRA OF THE BLACK CRYSTALS. THE ABSORPTION BAND AT SIMILAR ":TO 12,000 CM PRIME NEGATIVE1 IS RELATEDJO THE PRIME5 A SU81G YIELDS PRIME5 D HUBG TRANSITION, THE ONLY ALLO~%EO ONE FOR FE PRIMEZ POSITIVE -lN A TRIGONAL FIELD. THIS INDICATED TPAT A PART OF FE PRIME2 POSITIVE THE HIGH FE BLACK TOURMALINES ENTERS INTO THE AtrUCTAFIEDRON5 WITH .-ILOCAL SYMMETRY OF SIMILAR TC C SUM. THE MGIOCTOHEDRONS ARE THE OTHER :.POSSIBLE POSITIONS OF FE IN BLACK TOURMALINES AS INDICATED BY THE -,S-lMILAR CHARACTER OF THE OPTICAL SPECTRA:ALONG EPSILOIIIJ IN BLACK AND .:.GREEN CRYSTALS. MOESS8AUER SPECTRA OF PRIME57 FE INJOURMALINES ~',~ANDICATEO THAT FE PRIMEZ POSITIVE OCCUPY IN BLACK TOURMALINES 2 :.NONECUIV. CCTAHEDRON POSITIONS DIFFERING NOTICEABLYLFROH,EACH OTHER IN -PARAMETERS OF MOESSBAUER SPECTRA. BOTH POSITIONS APLE SIMILAR TO THOSE OF FE PRIME2 POSITIVE IN GREEN TOURMALINES- 016 UNCLASSIFIED.' PROCOSING DATE--30OCT70 LRC ACCESSICN NG--AP0125166 ,8Sl`aACT/EXTRACT-CGF.PARIS0N OF THE DATA CN OPTICAL AND MOESSBAUER SPECTRA OF NATURAL TOURMALINES SHOWS THAT MOST OF THE FE IN GREEN TOURMALINES IN IN A SINGLE OCTAHEDRAL POSITION WITH TETRAGONAL OISTORTICN (MG,OCTAHEDRONS). FE IS PRESENT IN SLACK TOURMALINES IN 2 POSITIONS WITH TETRAGONAL (MGoGCRAHEDRONSJ AND TRIGONAL ~DISTORTIONS (AL,CCTAHEDRCNS). THE AMTO' OFFE IN A.L,CCTAHEDRONS OF ,BLACK TOURMALINES 15 MUCH HIGHER THAN IN THE~GREEN VARIETIES. THIS ,-..EXPLAINS THE DIF-FERENCES IN THE OPTICAL.ABSORPTION SPECTRA.OF -:0IFFERENTLY COLORED CRYSTALS. ~FACILITY.- INST.: GEOL. RUD_ _v !zMESTGROZH.w PETOGR., MINER. GEOKHIM., MOSCOWY USSR. UNCLASSIFIED "El -7 7 016 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING OATE-~-23OCT70 lITLE--THE EFFECT OF GROWTH CONDIT104S OF THERMOGENESIS IN CANDIDA ~_~ TROPICALIS, -U- -,AUTHOR-(03)-PLATONOV, A.L.t POZMOGOVAI I.N.0, LOGINOVAv. LoG* ll~etnUNTRY OF INFO--USSR SOURCE--MIKROSIOLOGIYA# 1970p VOL 39t NR,lt PP 47-54 -~DATE- PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES TAGS--YEAST# FUNGUSt GLUCOSEp CULTURE MEDIUM, NfTROGENt PHOSPHORUS, CALORIMETER ONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ...~.DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~:._PROXY REEL/FRAME--1996/0484 STFP NO--UR/0220/70/0.39/001/0047/0054 ACCESSION NU--AP0117720 UNCLASSIFIED 212 016 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DAIE--23OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0117720 .~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. YEAST GROWTH WAS ACCOMPLISHED WITH AN.INTENSIVE HEAT OUTPUT WHICH WAS REGISTERED JUST AFTER CELL INOCULATION IN THE-CHAMBER OF MICROCALORIMETER* DURING THE FIRST SIX HOURS OF THE YEAST GROWTH THE BULK OF ENERGY (60-78PERCENT), RELEASED AS A RESULT OF GLUCOSE OXIDATION BY THE CULTUREP WAS CONTAINED IN THE PRODUCTS OF GLUCOSE INCOMPLETE OXIDATION* THERMOGENESIS DECREASED .DURING THE YEAST GROWTH ON MEDIA WITHOUT A NITROGEN OR PHOSPliORUs SOURCE.. HOWEVER? RECALCULATION OF THE ENERGY RELEASED AS HEAT PER I MG OF UTILIZED GLUCOSE HAS SHOWN THAT IT WAS 1.5-2 TIMES HIGHER THAN IN THE CASE OF THE YEAST GROWTH ON THE COMPLETE MEDIUM. HENCEv UNCOUPLING BETWEEN THE RATE OF ENERGY ACCUMULATION AND THE YEAST GROWTH TOOK PLACE ON THE MEDIUM WITHOUT N OR Po ONTENSIVE,AERATION WRING THE YEAST GROWTH ON THE PHOSPHORUSLESS MEDIUM RESULTED IN AN INCREASE OF GLUCOSE UTILIZATIONt BIOMASS YIELD AND THERMOGENESTS. THE YALUE OF ENERGY .COEFFICIENT REMAINED THE SAME UP TO A CERTAIN LIMIT OF AERATION; IF IT BECAME HIGHER THE ENERGY COEFFICIENT DECREASEOP.PROBABLYt DUE TO A 5ALL PH PHOSPHORUS CONTENT DOWN TO PHYSIOLOGICAL THRESHOLD CONCENTRATION. UNCLASSIFIED USSR UDC 8.74 A. GLUSHKOV, V. M., DOVGYALLO, A. M., PLAT.Pfi YUSIICIIENKO, YE. L. "Standard Dialog Training System Training System Padagog with the Avtor Ser- vice Mode for Teaching Programming Languages. Part 1" V sb, Teoriya yazykov i metody postroyeniyA sistem programmir. (Language Theory and Methods of Constructing Programming Syptems--collection of works)l Kiev- Alushta, 1972, pp 82-97 (from RZh-Kibernetika No 12, Dec 72, Abstract No 12V475) Translation: A standard program training system Pedagog is described. The system is designed to teach programming languages in the dialog mode. The Pedagog training system pe-rforms the following functions with respect to train- ing control: it makes the assignments to the trainee to which he must respond (which is realized by indicating the assignment coordinates in a special aid with the assignment); it receives and analyzes the trainee answers to the assignment; it gives the trainee the possibility of correcting.the responses input to the computer memory from an individual device (teletype); it gives assistance to the trainee on request, indicating where the materials are lo cated".-for the given assignment in the text; it offers the possibility to the -trainee of repeating the assignment; it returns the answers to the assignment 112 IJSSR GLUSHKOV, V. M., et al., Teoriya yazykov I metody postroyeniya sistem programmir., Kiev-Alushta, 1972, pp 82-97 from the memory to the trainee on his request or automatically if on completion of the correction of the answers he halts the operation of the system; it in- sures adaptation to the trainee, giving information on the errors in the answers at different levels of detail, helping him at the same time detect errors and simultaneously adapting to the capabillties of the user; it collects statistics on the course of the training process with respect to each user; it insures mastery by the user of the training material on a guaranteed level without allow- ing the user to carry out the next assignment to obtaining a direct response to the present one from it. In addition, the system executes the.functions con- nected with the specific nature of the training process by applying a digital computer with time sharing operating in the dialog mode ae the.1-listructor. These basically are functions aimed at maintaining contact between tLe trainee and the computer: the information about what external systems devices must be used by the trainee at the defined points in time; the information about which opera- t1pns It should perform on the external devices, what operators of the opera- tion training language and in what cases it,mus.t be input, holding recording dialog with the trainee in which the system recelves certain data from the userfor its subsequent identification in the system; the control of the dialog with user in the training process (or in the process of joint solution of the training problem). There is I illustration and a 7-~!ntry biblJography. 2/2 USSR UDC 8.74 SHKOV, V. M., DOVGYALLO, A. M.,J~LAJ 'GLU -QNQyXj. A., YUSHCHENK0, YE. L. "Standard Pedagog Dialog Training System with the Avtor Service b~bde for Teach- ing Programming Languages. Part 2" V eb. Teoriya yazykov i metody postroyeniya sistem progrannir (Language Theory and Methods of Constructing Programming.Syrstems-collecti f works), Kiev- gn o --.,No 1. Dec:72 Abstract Nb A-Iiiifitk 1972,- ~~8-110 (from ~RMA-Uberne 76j: 7:7 L~~t: 124 -)f i basic_ 'a t, Pedagog ation:-Astudy was made c X c er stics of the 6 Ibi ~tea~hipgl prog, -t -!system With'the Avtor~~Aiierv ramming languages. ng item mod . i; in : . - t. ivi~ parts: general sys em, s'! d deci ixito. Wo . 'A U- "of: the daf tvare' for the t~~ ~n g -ani -the progranIfo. interpretin' including the training process 0ntrol program I the input operator; a special program including the programs defining the correct response to the system assignment (reactors) and the service files. Data is stored in the files on the basis of which the training process is con- trolled and the files also include data relating the control programs to the T training material. Ihe system is designed to teach the COBOL language to one student in the dialog mode (the DD-3 dispatcher of the Dnepr-2 digital computer offers the possibility of paralleling the training process for several trainees). 1/3 -80 1------ USSR GLUSHKOV- V. M., et al., Teoriya yazykov i.metody postroZeniy~a sistem program- mir~ Kiev-Alushta, 1972, pp 98-110 The system programs are organized by.the modular principle. The functioning of the module programs does not depend on their allocation in the common memory which permits changes to be introduced into the system. The volume of the system modules is on the average 100-140 instructions, and the information ex- change between the modules is realized via the dynamic meniory,in the base regi- ster field. The Avtor mode of the training system is designed for correct- ing the service information files. It is noted that the specific nature of organization of the training system in which the general and special sections are clearly separated permits changing the.operation of the system by correct- ing only the service information. These changes can, in,particular, pertain to.the sequence of assignments to the training, and in connection with this, the training algorithm and also the training subject. For the~Avtor mode a special language has been created which permits correction of all the files of the special section of the training system. The presence of such possibilities in the training system permits efficient variation of the training process, dropping of the necessary and incorrect assignments, inseltion of new ones, in- troduction of new assignment sequences, provision of new inixiliary material, and so on. It is possible to use the Avt:or~aiode both after accumulating cerLain statistics on the course of the training process and directly during the course 2/3 7---7 7 -7 USSR GLUSHKOV, V. M., et al., Teoriya yazykov i metody postroyeniZa sistem program- I!Lr., Kiev-Alushta, 1972, pp 98-110 of training. The programs in the Avtor mode are designed for operation in the dialog mode. The basic device for the Avtor dialog is teletype. The operators of the Avtor language input from teletype,are recognized by the Monitor program which then transfers control to the corresponding programs -- interpreter -- which performs all the operations given in the operator- After processing, these programs return control to the Monitor program which goes to the state of waiting for the next message from the user. The operators of the Avtor mode are divided with respect to purpose-iato two groups: the operators for print- ing the file contents, the operators for correcting the files. Illustrative examples are presented for the Dnepr-2 training system. The bibliography has 8 entries. USSR UDC: 681.3 DOVGYALLO, A. If., NIKITIN, A. I., PLATONOV, B. A., SEWTYMC, V. P., YUSHCHMO, Ye. L. 110n. One Approach to Developing a System of Instruction in Programming Languages on a Digital Computer Base" V sb. Primeneniye tsifr. yychisl. mashin dlya obuch. progrw=ir- (Use of Digital Computers for the Teaching of Programming-collection of vorks), Kiev. 1970, pp 25-30 (from Wh-Kiber-neiika, No 7, Jul 71, Abstract No 7V780) Mo abstract] 82 USSR UDC 8. 74 "First Queue of a Selective Dialogue Training System Based on the Dnepr-21 Digital Computer" V sb. Hat. i inform. probl. prognozini upr. naukoy (Mathematical and Informa tion Problems of Forecasting and Control of Science -- collection of works), Kiev, 1971, pp 201-206 (from RZh-Kibernetika, No 9, Sep 72. Abstract No 9V628) Translation: The training dialogue system has the follcmAng specifications: 1. The programs for controlling the traininG process are constructed on the basis of selective algorithms. 2. The system operates in three modes training, teacher (this mode has a large intersection with the author mode) and author, 3. It is the subordinate problem of the DD-3 dispatcher of the Dnepr-21. 4. Its peripheral devices are among the.standard equipment and are the Dnepr-21 systems devices: the T-63 teletypej the.photographic Input, the punch output and the alphanumeric printer. The first stage of the system is designed to study the COBOL programming language. 112 022 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--20NOV70 TITLE--LIFE uF A QUARHIH CRUC13LE FOR A~ LZ Mf:fRIC.tCM INOU(Jlj~N FURP4ACE __~'-ALTHUR-(C5)-KAY8I0-EVA* M.N.v PLATOINQ M,,))LATt)NOVt YU.8., 8ERK6VSKIY, V! 8"P RCi;ATGVSKlYt M.I. GF INFC--USSR ~-SUURCE-_-LITEINCE PROIZVOO. 1970, (4), .33-6. _PUbLISfiED-----7C SUdJECT ARL-AS-MATERIALS, mKii., [N0.# CIVIL1 AND MAKINE ENOR TA'G3'_-INCk)CTICN FUt-,NACE, QUARTZP THERMAL STABILITY, MAGNESIUM OXIDE# CALCIUM (;XIOL, 1'110h UXLUE, ALUMINUM OXIDE, SILICON DIOXIDE 'L RESTRICTIONS C NTP t. ~'Dt`!~UMENT CLASS-UNCLAS~ill:10) ROXY RELL/FRAME--3004/19'32 Mill NO--UK/0128/70/(J')O/()U-t/0033/0036 --Sff C I RC. A-C C E Surl lod--Alf-:~13~~[94 -2/Z G 2 2 UNCL ASS I F Ij ED 11 RUCESSING DATl---20N0V7C ACCESSICN NG-AP0132194 ..~,At3STRACT/tXJRACT--(U) GP-0- A B S'r It A ", TT'40 Q U AR TL I T"- SFOR MiAKING, INUUCTACPi FURINACE U~UibLFS WERF UjiMPARED A S TO THE IR 'NDURAMCE RMAall-HY, AW HL-AT iESIsrA.,,jCE, DOMCSTIC AND SWE'DISliv WHOSE COMPNIS. WERE Sl(J SUU2 9a.1i), cil.34, AL SU32 0 ~S(183 0.59, C.95, FE 5032 0 SU.;33 0.31t 0.269 CAG 0.79.) 0.2~,t 0&03Y A;40 K SUt,,2 Ci if-ILTAL OXIDES) MENUS,- 01.24, LOS' I., TLIEj -5P. ON l(-vlTICN 0.10, 0.46 WT. PERCENT, A 1: CPUCI-"LES MAOF- FRLA THE DOPiESTIC QUARTZITE UERE MokE F k 1A r3L EAFTER AT P'~56-6E*,;Rf-cS THAN T14E SWE-D[SH CRU" [BLES) ( 2 H. PR03ABLY IECIAUSE TH~ 0CMESTIC kli A.,0 ~U -ZITE HAU 11,10RE Slo SU,32) v AND ME 0. wAS 2.530 AND 2.36C G-CM PRU-J-3v io, E Sl-l .ri-tE AUDN. !OF OF B S U 6 2 0 SW33 UECREASEO FhE D. TO AND 2.3'30 G--CM, PRIMEL3 RESP . T HE CRU CLFLt:S ';-tlTHSTtjUD 321 AMI, 309 MCLTING~, RE SP. Uf"CL A S S I F IU USSR UDC 537-521.7..621-315.61. LAMA --.Y. S. ODYNETS, L. L., P GY PROK6PCIIIJK, Ye. 14. "Electrical Breakdown of Oxide Films on Alumin&' Moscow, Radiotekhnika i Elektronika Vol 261 No 9, SeT) 71, Pp 1739-1740 Abstract: The authors studied the electrical breakdo-"M of A1203 fil-TqS made by anodizing 99.996'1'0 pure aluminum in an aqueous solution of boric acid (30 grams Der liter) and sodium tetraborate (0.05 gram per liter) at 7o0c. Films 14o-50"00 A thick were studied. The experiments were conducted in a vacuum of 5-10-5-10-6 mm, Hg at temperatures of -180 - -~+30011C. It was found that- the electric strength of the films, docr(~ases with arise in tempe.-ature. The electric field --stronffth at breakdovrn of the film is asymmetric for opposite polarities, but thJ13 as:,yimpetry decreases at temperaturea in excess of 20OPC. At comparatively low temperatures, an abrupt increase in the electric strength is observed for films thinner than about 2000 A. This effect is not observed at 30OPC. The exr,-erinentrd results show that breakdown of anodized films at moderately high temperatures is clue to impact ionization by electrcna. MEMEMME BIMM, USSR ubc: 621-~31T-3(088-8) KAIWWNIK, M. Ye., Mm-wv, V. I., ALEKSXNDROV, A. F. ,Lv-BErC-V, B. M. , MEETELITSIN, I. V. , PLATONOV, F. V.. ,FEDIN, V. F. ffA Device for Measuring the Electrical Paraiieters of Piezoelectric Resonators" USSR Author's Certificate No 264547, filed 5 Jul 68, published 17 Jun 70 (from PZh-Radiotekhnika, No 1, Jan 71, Abstract Ho 1A315 P) Translation.: It is pointed out that conventionall devicez!-, for measuring the electricall parameters of piezoelectric resonators do not Ll-#ow for direct, measureremit, of -Diezoelectric current. In the proposed device there is a special coil with an auxiliary indicat -or i~hose scale is graduated in piezoelectric current values. The*resonator to be tested is placed inside the coil. E. L. - -------- -- USSR UDC 611.85 LAPAYEV, E. V. and PLATOnqy,_H,,J. "Experimental and Mathematical Analysis of the Effect of Rotary Acceleration on the Vestibular Apparatus" Moscow, Izvestiya 9kademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Diologicheskaya, No 3, 1973, pp 357-363 Abstract: Mathematical calculations showed that normal and rotary accelera- tions act on the vestibular apparatus during curvilinear motion. The rela- tive magnitude of the rotary moment, which is derived from the difference in the radii of rotation of the opposite sides of the semicircular canal, was found to be the main factor involved in the mechanism of stimulation of the capula and endolymph. The mathematical calculations were confirmed by 45 experiments performed on rabbits. With an-increase in.the radius of curvi- linear motion, a decrease in the rotary moment rather than an increase in the centrifugal force plays the major role in the mechanisms of inhibition of the aystagmic reaction, USSR uDc: 621.374.5(o88.8) Vasil lyev~ N. I., YEFRE MM, P. A., PLATONOV, 0. T. "A Delay Line" USSR,Author's Certificate No 267682, filed 2 Feb 68, published 5 Aug 70 (from RM-Radioteklmika, No 2, Feb 71, Abstract No 2G-318 P) Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces a delay line made up of L-shaped links containing an inductance and capacitance connected in series with taps from. each link. To provide continuous control of delay without introducing nonhomogeneities into the line, bronze;discs are soldered to ng as one plate of a multisection capacitor which is com- the leads, acti.. pleted by a movable grounded plate. USSIR UDC: 8,74 SATLIT~.*OV, A. K-i,. Y- S L~li "Tie-in of the '.Konsul-21541 'Electric Printer ror Alphan=eric Data Output" V sb. Chisl. metody v tez*"~-n.-ekon. zadachakh (Numerical Methods in Tecl- nical and Economic of~~' vorks), Kazan', Katan' Uni- versity, 1971, D 13-3-112, (f RU-ibernetika, No 1, Jan 72, Abstract _p No lxr966) Translation: It is tainted out- thatt In reFolving and translating prc~zrarns 'written.in ATMOL-63 (or any other lan&uage) on the 1.1-20 coniputcr, the need arises for output of al?~'-anumeri ini 'or=ation. The construction of a de- vice for matching the nsul-254"' electric printer to the 11.1-20 commuter and some modi-fications ir. the M-20,are described. V. Alekper07. USSR PLATONOV, K. K. Problemy Sposobrostey (Problems of Aptitude') Moscow, lcf72, 312 PP Translation: This book is devoted to problems which are urgent both on account of the need for theoretical elaboration, and In connectioa with the practical- ities of profession selection, the determination of professional aptitude, and the job orientation of students. Using a large body of factual material, the author describes the history of the problem of,aptitude, the conflict anong existing trends, and the theory of estimating aptitude as it concerns various professions. He considers the problem of aptitude in connection with the con- cept of the personality, understood as an integral but variable structure which includes abilities as properties not only predetermined genetically but also elicited and shaped within the courseof concrete activity, Table of Contents. Introduction Part I Theory of Aptitudes Chapter 1. From the History of,the,Doctrine of Aptitudes A First Look at Aptitudes -Aptitudes as ~1ental Phenomena 1.0 1/5 Aptitudes as Mental 16 86 I USSR PIATONOV, K. K., Problemy Sposobrostey, 1972, 312 PP Aptitudes as a Social Phenomenon 21 Classics of ~bwxism-leninism.on Aptitudes 26 Doctrine of Aptitudes in Soviet..Psychology 31 Chapter 2. Aptitudes and the Personality 42 The Idealistic Concept of the Personality and Aptitudes 42 Biologization of Personelity and Aptitudes 46 Concept of the Personality as a Social Phenomenon 51 -The Problem of the Personality in Soviet Psycholegy: 57 Chapter 3. The.Place of Aptitudes:in the Personality Structure 63 Search for Personality "Structure 63 Structure as a Philosophic Category 70 The Concept of %rnamic Functional Structure of the Personality 75 Me Unity of Aptitudes and Honaptitude's 84 Answers to Objectix)ns 95 ter.4. Yan and Aptitudes Chap 102 Aptitudes and Needs 105 Aptitudes -nd Consciousness ill .Aptitudes and Activity 116 'Chapter 5- Dynamics of Aptitudes 122 - Native and Acquired 322 2/5 USSR PLATONOV, K. K.) Problemy Sposobrostey, 1972i 312 PP Instincts and Aptitudes 128 Early Appearance of Aptitudes 136 Superaptituder. 147 The Social and the Biological in the Structure of fiptitules 153 Chapter 6. Aptitudes for Various Forms of Activity 159 S6ientifia Aptitudes 16o 'Some Components of kotitudes for Vental Work 164 Mathematical Aptitudes 170 ~Organizing kotitudes 176 Pedagogical Aptitudes 181 Aptitudes for Normal and Legally Correct Activity 187 'Part II Theory of Study and Formation of Aptitudes Chapter 7- Psychological Job Selection 195 From the History of the Problem 195 Apprehended Errors and Their Possible-Repetition 201 fttitudes and Professional Suitability 205 Some Perspectives in Job Selection 210 Chapter 8. Methods of Studying Aptitudes 217 3/5 Tests 217 USSR PLATOIM7 K. K., Problemy Sposobrostey, 1972, 312 pp "Testizing" Possibilities of Physical Training and Sports Method of Generalizing Independent Characteristics Principles of Studying Aptitudes Chapter- 9. Professional Orientation~ and Aptitudes .:From the History of the Problem "Prof essiogr~phy" Job Education and Pronaganda Job Consultation Adaptation to Profession Chapter 10. Formation of kotitudes -Forms of Formation of Personality and Aptitudes Aptitules and Skills Fonmtion of Elementary Aptitudes Psychosomatic Conditioning Role- of the Working Group in Formation of Aptitudes Chapter 3.1. Psychologies.]. Preparation From the ffistox-~ of the Problem 225 231 234 24o 245 245 950 257 262 266 271 27-L 276 281 287 292 296 206 USSR UDC: 611.85:613.693 SOLODOVNIK, F.A.., VOROBYFV, L.M., FT "The Direction of inertial Shift of Endolymph in Semicircular Canals During Rotation of a Man with Head Movements in the Frontal F14ne" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Biologicheshaya, No 3 Uaiy/jun 70, PP 337-347 Abstract: The horizontal and vertical components of nystagpic reactions vrere recorded in the course of rotation -,&,hen movements of the subje(_~'s head vrere in the frontal plane. A theoretical analysis was conducted of the origin of Coriolis forces in the semicircular canals, and the dixection of inertial shift of the endolymph was estimated, which corresponds with the dLrection of the nysta6mic reaction. When a man rotates his head from the left sholjlde~r to the right, the movement Incites ampulopetal flow in the anterior semi- circular canals, and ampulofugal flow of endolymph in the posterior semi- circular canals. The movement of the head from the rifj,,hL shoulder to the -,('-ft causes ampulofugal flow in the anterior and ampullopetal flww of endolymph in the pozterior semicircular canals. Rotation to the left ctLuses flow of endo- lymph in the opposite direction. When the head is raised -the endolymph in the horizontal semicircular canals shifts in the oppoalte ellrecttan of' rotu- tion; and when the head 15 tilted, the'eridolymph shifts in the direction of rotation. 1/Z 030 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-30OCT7i TITLE-DIRECTICNAL INERT SHIFT OF ENDOLYMPH IN SEMICIRCULAR CANALS IN THE COURSE OF MAN'S RCTATION PROVIDING THE SUBJECTS MOVEMENT OF THE HEAD AUTHCR-(03)-SGLODOVNIK, F.A., VOROBYEVt L.M.p PLATONUVt N.B. COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR p SOURCE-IZVESTIYA AKADEMII NAUK SSRr GIOLOGICHESKAYAr 1970o NR 3, PP 337-347 DATE PUBLISHEC---70 SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES ._,.JOPIC TAGS-VESTIBULAR APPARATUS# ROTATION* HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY 'CCNTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DCCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED REEL/FRAME--3001/1385 StEP NG--UR/0216170/000/003/0337/0347 -AP0126925 CIRC ACCESSIGN NO UNCLASSIFIED 2/2 030 UNCLASSI.FIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT7( CIRC ACCESSIGN NO-AP0126925 ABSTRACT/EXTIZACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL COMPONENTS OF NYSTAGMIC REACTIONS WERE REGISTEREO IN THE COURSE OF MAN"- ROTATICN PROVIDING THE MOVEMENT OF THE SUBJECTS HEAC IS IN THE FRONTAL PLANE. THE AUTHORS CARRIED OUT A THEORETICAL ANIALYSIS OF THE ORIGIN OF CORIOLIS FORCES IN SEMICIRCULAR CANALS AND ESTIMATED THE DIRECTION OF. THE INERT SHIFT OF THE ENDOLYMPHj WHICH~CORq.ESPONOS THE DIRECTION OF THE NYSTAGMI(; REACTION. WHEN MAN ROTATES RIGHTWARD HIS HEADS MOVEMENT FROM THE*LEFT SHOULDER TO THE PLIGHT ONE INCITES AMPULOPETAL FLOW IN THE ANTERIOR SEMICIRCULAR CANALS AND AMPULOFAGAL GLOU OF ENDOLYMPH IN THE POSTERIOR ONES. THE HEADS MOVEMENT FORM THE RIGHT SHQULOEa TO THE LEFT ONE CAUSES AMPULOFUGAL FLOW IN THE ANTERIOR SEMICIRCULAR CANALS AND AMPULOPETAL FLOW OF ENOULY14PH IN THE POSTERIOR ONES. ROTATION IN THE LEFTWARD DIRECTICN CAUSES AN ENOOLYMPH FLOW IN AN OPPOSITE DIRECTIOM. WHEN THE hEAD IS RAIStD THE ENDOLYMPH~Of THE HORISONTAL SEMICIRCULARS CANALS SHIFTS IN AN OPPOSITE DIRECTION OF THE ROTATION OF THE TESTING SET UP AND WHEN THE HEAD IS: TILTED THE ENDOLYMPH SHIFTS IN THE DIRECTION OF THE ROTATION. Ace. -~Nrt* Uf Code: .$0047315"a UR 0300 PRIHARY SOURCE: Ukrayns'kiy BiokhUdchniy Zhumalt 1970o Vol 429 Nr 1-j PP TRANSPORT INTO CYTOPLASM OF NljCLEAR. DNA SIMILAR TO RNA IN THE PROCES& OF LIVER, REGENERATION AND CHEMICAL HEPATOCANCEROGENESIS Tatmov A' 'S 4ofishchuk 0. M. F V_.R.__Kqrqfkoruchka. le. G, L~uk %Institute of Bi hemistry, demy of Sciences Ukrainia n* SSR. Kiev, institute of Experimental a UUglnian S�R-lKlev Summary', -The transfer of nuclear RNA into the liver cytoplasm in nonnal rats was studied '24 hr& after partial hepatectomy and in the process of chemical hepatocancerogenesis by the method of hybridization of nuclear RNA (D-RNA-1 and D-RNA-2 with DNA at the Umence of non-labelled RNX REEL/FRME 19790833. Ulf. I.M. I USSR uAlOM- P .IN - - Docter of Technical Sciences, TRIBEL'GORIN, E. V. , Candidate of 'Technical Sciences, BOGDANOV, B. K., Engineer "Methods of Changing Over to Automatic Control of Continuous Mass Production Systems" Moscow, Mekhanizatsiya i Avtomatizatsiya Proizvodstva, No 9, 1970, pp 16-19 Abstract: An analysis of continuous mass production systers in various sectors f the national economy conducted at the Odessa,Technological Institute imeni 0 M. V. Lomonosov made it possible to isolate the general functional singularities of various segments of the systems and to reduce them to el.ght types. The class- ification of segments of the continuous mass.production syt~-tem and the principles of setting up a dispatcher automated control system on thio basis comprised of standard general-purpose modules were taken up at the Thir(L All-Union Conference on Autc=tic Control. The analysis was based on the example ef a modular dis- Paccher automated control system for the most complex production line segment requiring sixteen modules. Further studies showed that thci riumber of modules required for realization of this segment can be reduced to tea. It is shoim that further automation of continuous nass prodiation. sybteras should be bafied on a transition from di6patcher automated control to operatorlew; prograirmed j/n USSR PLATONOV, P. N., et al, Mekhanizatsiya i Avtomatizatsiya Proizvodstva, No 9, 1~970, pp 16-19 control. This will require analysis of the dispatche'r's ftinctioas for purposes of algorithmic description, classificatioirof the dispatclier's,functions, and a description of the information which must: be stored. ksimple formula is found for the optimum control system from th,e standpoint of cost, It is shown that the function of route analysis can be handled by an. automatic device with- out extensive modification of the dispatchei,:coutrol system. 2/2 8 USSR UDC 666.189.2-11 KOLESOV, YU. I., !-:ALASHKU-;A, T. G., and All-Union Scientif ic- Research Institute of Glass Plastics, and, 4GHITi~b!ers "The Effect of Certain Technological Factors on the Degreo of Volatilization of B 0 in the ~Ielting of Non-Alkaline Alumoborosilicate Glass for the rroduct..ion 2 of Fiberglass" Moscow, Steklo i Keramika, No 5, Ray 70, pp 19-22 Abstract: The volatility of B203 was studied during melting of alLL%oboro~iilicate glass E in three types of vat ovens: regenerative, recuperative, kind direct 11t)at gas-electric oven. It was determ=ed that maximum volatilization of 6 0 Z 3 90A -- is observed at the stage of the vitrification of tho furnace charge. In the gas-electric oven the loss of B20-1 in the light zone ia several-fold higher .f than in gas ovens. To lower the losses of B203 it is proposed that the period of glass formation be shortened by increasing the tomperature at tho point of th3 furnace charge loading and that boron anhydride be adxied to the furnace charge in the :*or= of calcium boride. The increase.i n the mass exchange between the depth and surface layers of the glass forming material in t1w oven results in highor losses of B203. memo= USSR uDo 612.(075.5) N Chair Of SUir g, Prob- PARPENOV3 V. A., PLATONOV, V. N., and PLATONOV 3 min lem Sclentific lResearch Laboratory of adz, State Institute of PIWsical Calture, Kiev "A Barochamber-Treadband for Tests in an Altered External Environment" Leningrad, Fi-.iolog-iCheskiy Zhur-nal SOR imeni I. M. Sechenova, Vol 57, 11o 1, 15M, pp 140-143 Abstract: A barochamber with a capacity of 100 liters has been designed which is totally enclosed md made of transparent plastic. The purpose of the ch;:.mber is study of the functional state of small laboratory anin,-al s ihat iralk or run at various speeds. The chamber can be filled i-rith a gas irdxture containing 0 2;' OD2, He, md N 2 in the desired retios. The pressure in the ch-amber can. be varied in the 0-5-1.5 at mange 8nd t 5e concentration of negative air (gas) iGns in it in the range of 10r' - 10 /cm . ji-i endless moving band is contained in the cham- ber, the velocity of the rwtion of riltch can be varied in 36 aems from 0.2 to 2.5 n/see. The animals of a group placed into the chamber run on the vertically moving band in the direction of its mition. xtil thqy reach an electrically 1/2 60 USSR uDc 616.2-036-11-022-14 IL-)IPXO, V. I., 1~~TONOV V. G. GORDON,.M. A., AffrONOV, V. B., X,;LYAYEVA,. N. I!. R. M. R. A and ANTIPOVA, 3-1- fnfon~:icientific. Research Institute of Influenza, 4n Ministry of Public Health MSR, Leningrad "Frequency of Development of Associated Lrifections AccorTanying Acute Respira- tory Diseases" MOSCOW, Voprosy Virusologii, No 1, 1973, pp 8,,>-86 Abstract: Incidenc-- and charac 'teristics of multiple infe~2tions were studied among 4,256 patients with clinically diapnosed influenza or acute respiratory disease. Out of J;CFP' of these- for which the etiology 11,-~d 'heen ez,~tablj.shed, 12.6% had associated infections, the percentage being samewhat hi,,~ier for hospitalized than for ambulatory patiehts, but no seasonal variation was fol-ind. Analysis of the incidence of ansociated int"ections with. xy!spevt to disease caused by particular pathoCem; indicated that most vawoclatcd infections occurred among patients ir-ith para-influenza type 2 and least vrith inflv.- enza type B. 14ont, associated infections (82%) were caused by influenza virus, particularly during epidemier,- 14hen influenza virus vas not *-Involved, Dllyco- plasma pnewmaniae was encountered most frequently (56-74,1)- Such multiple infec- tions were normally found to produce more severe syiq)toms. USSR PARMW, V. A., et al, FiziologichesIdy Zhurnal SSSR tmeni- I. M. Sechenova, Vol 57,, No 1, 1971, PP 140-143 charged pate suspended from the top at the point at which the band, which is pro- pel1ed by an electric motor, turns downiards over a shaft. Under the eff ect of the electric shock from the gate, the animals turn bach on the band, unless they are so tired that they cannot make the required ef:Cor-b, they then pass through the gate and fall into a lcn-mr compartment of the eh mm ber. The chan, ber has been used in preliminary research on the effects of gas mixtures with different ra- tios of 02 : 11 partial pressures on the performance.of animals at various in- -tensities of e?.fort and also cn the type and duration of restoration processes that followed rhysical loads to -which the animals were subjected. .2/2 USSR LID C(>21.391,82:621.396,62:621.376.3'~:621.317.743 V IMMUK N, S . G. KHRULEVA, N. S . , PLATONO V. 1. wr "Statistical Characteristics of IN 'oise from Regular Sources Mhen Receiving an AM Type Signal Superimposed on,art FM Carrierit Uch. zap. Gorkovsk. un-L (Scientific Notes of Corkiy University), 1970, vyp. ~105,lpp 31-32 (from RZIl-Radioteklinika, No 9, Sep 70, Abi;tract No 9iUO7) Translation: The effect of interfering signals ol, a receiver ill co,.=Unica- tion systems with an FM-carrier is of the nature of short pulses. This arises from the fact that the heterodyne follows the '-Frequency variation of the use- ful signal only, and the effects of the interfering signals are exhibited only in the time intervals when the frequency components of tae active spectrum of the signal and noise coincide. To determine the distributioti lUI of instan- taneous values of the noise at the receiver output, experimental research was performed. By statistical processing of the output voltage oscillograras ifor two types of modulating voltage (noise vibration in the 250-3,500 hertz fre- quency band and sinusoidal oscillation with a frequency of two kilohertz), the distribution curves for the instantaneous values of the iioise were ob- tained. For the first type of modulating voltage, the distribution law ob- tained is close to normal, and for the second type of m6dularing voltage, the 1/2 USSR UDC: 531-383 PLA 0 V K 303HNEVt S. I., and BRAYDENZ10, A. Ya. "Double-Gyroscopic, Triaxial Stabilizer Vith Gyroc:ompaas Effect" Leningrad, PriborostK2yLnjy je# No 1, 1972, PP 89-93 Abstract: The description is giver- ot a device desteped to solve 4- the problem ofo stabilizing gravimetric and rnl_c,(~ae Wt etric cal in3tn,.menta relative to a horizontal cooTdina*n sp3tem with geographically oriented axes. These instruments are 1."or use in a gondola towed by a ahip for the purpose of izveotigatiiig the gravitational ,Lrid mngnetic fields of the earth. The dcvice iia2 developed by the Hydrological Instrument Depar? fu" tho TVIL Polytecl4aicv.J. IT.,Aituto i;ith which the author.,~ are- associated, in collaboration with the Institutb of Terrestrial Mzignotism, Ionosphere, and Hadio -Propagation, of the US-OR Acadeaky of Sciences (MMTIR AN SSS-111) and the Naval Gravimetry Division o-_,~ the Adl- Union Scientific Re8earch Institute of, Land and Sea (VIUJ1410RG.~:$ The I-Lyrostabillzer con-sis-to of a basic Cardwi mspension with two asta-tic gyroscopes i_,~ its, frame; these Syro.9colies, are the senoi-YL3 elements of the stabiliZer indicator sys-Gem. There is also a smal I Cardaa suopension for the instyument to b-,_~, Ctabili'Zod. it diagram of the nystem is given and its theory oT operation worked out. USSR MANUMA,114, S. G., et al., Ucli. zap. Gorkovsk. un-t (Scientific Notes of Gorl-,iy University) . 1970, vyp. 1.0, pp 31-32 (from RM-Radiat-ekhnika, No 9, Sep 70, Abstract No 9A.107) deviation from the normal law is more significan't. Th'e greatest variaace from normal distribution is observed forvalues close~~to zero. USSR uDo: 612-07-5 -5) PAMFEIM, V. A., -PLATQQ"VjPjW and PLATOITOV, S. M., Chair of SwtorLng, Prob- lem Scientific Research Laboratory of High Training Loads., State Institute of Physical Culture, Kiev "A Barocha-mber-Treadband for Tests in an. Altered External Environment" Leningrad, Fiziologicheskiy Zhurnal SSSR imeni I. M. Sechenova, Vol 57, No 1, 1971, pp 140-143 Abstract: A barochamber with a capacity of 100 liters has been designed which is totally enclosed and made of transparent plastic. The puTose of the chariber is study of the functional state of -small laboratory aiaimals that i-W.k or run at various speeds. The chamber can be M-led with a gaa mLiture containing Q... CO m-d N irt the desired ratios. The pressure iri the chamber can be va.H-ed 2' "el .2 in the 0-5-1.5 at ange �nd t~e concentration of negative air (gas) icns in it in the range of 1G - 1d /cm . An endless moving band is contained in the ch,~qm- ber, the velocity of the wtion of which can~be varied in 36 steps from 0.2 to 2.5 n1sec. The ankilis of a group placed into the chamber run on the vertically moving band in the direction of its mtion, -until I.hf--,f reach an electrically 1/2 60 IUSSR PARFEMV, V. A., et al, Fiziologicheskiy Zhurnal SSSR imeni I. M. Sechenova, Val 57, No 1, 1971, PP 140-10 charged gate suspended from the top at the point at which the band, which is pro- pelled by an electric motor, turns down-iards. over a shaft. Under the effect of the electric shock fron. the gate, the animals turn b-!ek m, the band, unless they are so tired that they cannot make the~required effort; they then pass through the gate and fall into a lower compartment of the ch=ber. The cham~ber has been used in preliminary research on the effects of gas mixt-ures with different ra.- tiOS of 02 : 14 partial Pressores on the performance of anim-!Lls at various in- tensities cf ehort and also on the type and duration of restoration processes that followed physical loads to ihich the animals werp subjected. USSR UDO .513.6 pIATOINoy,_y._ of Sciences Belozussian SSR, and _p., Academician of the Acaden 'TNN XIY, V. I., Institute of Mathematics, Academy of Sciences Belorussian SSR, and Belorussian State University: imeni V, I. Unin, Minsk "The Structure of Unitary Groups and the Commutant of a Simple Algebra Over Global Fields" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Ifauk SSSOR, V61 208, No 3, 1973, pp _541-544 Abstract: Let V be an n-dimensional linear space (right) over a finite- dimensional body D. is a nondegenbrate skew-hermitian form on VX V with respect to some Involutory antiautomorphism j: d-4 d of the body D. S (d C- D I d - d) is a subset of symnietric elements of D. If K is the center of D, then dinKD = m2- and it Is assumed that k - x' n s ~ K: i.e., j is an in- volution of the second kind. In the case of char K -,2, as usual, it is considered that 1/3 USSR PLATONOV, V. r., and YANWEPISKIY, V. I., Doklady Akadenil Yauk SSSR, Vol 208, No 3, 1973, PP 5111-544 vt; (--- V 94(v) E=- D: (1) (v, v) = 1(u) - k(o). P-13 U(O is the unitary group of form TU(4) is a subgroup of U(~) gener- ated by tranavections. GL(n, D) is a fun lLneax group over D; SL(n,D) is a subgroup of elements with a reduced norm equal to ones SU(~_ SL(n,D) n U(q)). It is assumed that index (~ >A. The known hypothesis about the groups SL(n,D) and SU('(0, contained in the Kne-ser-Tits general hypothesis about simp-1,y-connected algebraic groups, is as follows: the groups SL(n D) n >1 ' and SU(~)) are generated by trans- vections,= (what is equivalents & factoTs of these grou - along the cen- ter axe sirple abr;,traci groups. The hypothesis for SL' ID~~' (n is equivalent to 15