SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PRONMAN, I. M. - PROSKURINA, V. M.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R002202530008-9
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 U-,.~Dt _-_015 UNCLAS S I F I E,O.: i~~T-2-tl:-TLE--.~-t-MPLANT-ATION TYPE TRITtUM-TARGERS-MADE FORM SCAMMUM, YTTRIUM, -V`_'_-0`k4SEO0YMIUM IE DYM UM, ANO ERBIUM -U- AUTHOR- (,04)-,&T.RlZHAK,. V -I. IPRI.MENKOi Gell.t KATSAUROV* L.N.p PRONMANt I.M. buNT gy 6 FINFO--USSR 66k,E4~~AT;AENERG, L970, 28( 3) 24, L IS:HEDt--- -70 Try" lk IpS~UBJ~ECT AREAS""RHYSICS 1 C,_ JAGS-TONI.IMPLAN "AT 10"41~ TRITIU SCANOWHi YTTK E UK., PFI~SEODYMIUM, MOYM I UM; R8 I UM, PARTICL.E ACCELERATOR:.tARGET PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 ~~:O 15 UNCLA&S I F I ED t~'CIAG ACCESS TON 'NO--AP0I2,t696* BSTRA'TlEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. IN TH" IMPLA14TATION OF T INTO I-R, SC,-: NO. Y, -AND PR TARGETS, BY: USING AN, ACCELERATION VOLTAGE OF 120 KV zAND ~A T CUR-RENT OF 100 MUAy SATN. OF THE TARGETS WITH T OCCURS AFTER ,.~.:-~_35-50 MIN OF BOMBARD,11ENT; THE YIELD OP: N FROM THE T(DjN) P.!-ACTION Oll THE ABOVE TARGERS IS 2.1 TIMES 10,PRIME7, 1.8 TIMES 10: PR 1.5 T I ME S 10 PRIME7,:1.5,TIMES 10 PRIME7v- AND Im8 TIMES 10~ PRI:MF_7 N-MUCKi 'AESP.y AS -COMPARED WITH 1.8 TIMES 10 PRIME7 N-MUCI -FROM A TJT~ TARGET -iiITH ABSORBED HEATING OF 114PLANTATION TYPE RARE:EARTH TARGETS,REDUCE,~') THE N YIELD FROK . THE, TUD N) REACTIONY-E.G.9 BY SIMIL-IAR TO 30PERCENT AFTER HEATING f TO ~400DEGREE_S9 BUT THE N YIELDS FROM SUCWHEATEDTARGErS ARE -MUCH HIGHER ,ha-- ~,z,.~:--7HAN-,THE -YTELDS FROM lR-T,:rTARGETS !,,(WHERE THE YIELD.DECREASES BY A Rld, USSR UDC:669.187.2:621.746 CHISTYAKOV, V. F., AVERIN, V. V., V. 1" P RONOV, A. P.,.DANT'IN, _LISOV,Ij. V., YERMAKOV, B. A, P and -KISELEV A. A., DUMCREV,,YA. KHRISTICH,'. V. D., "Krasnyy OktvP_brIII Pldnt:. ."Casting of ShKhl5- Steel under Exothermi:c. S1 -F' i: ag orming Briquets" -Metallurg, No Moscow,- 1, -Jan, 74,,.:pp 19-22 Abstract:. Exothermic, slag-forming briquets were tested by casting of steel malted in a.16-ton'clectric arc furnace with evacuation of the metal, not deoxidized with silicon and 2lumirium, in the ladle. For comparison, steel was cast'in 2.7 t ingots by -the siphon method without briquets and with application of a light crust to the Surface of the liquid metal,when the mol& was,:113 fulL., The,:riser wa- heated with type"128M-lunkerite and an exotb6rmic mixture based on:75% PeSi ' The experimental briquets produced steel of it-quality corresponding to the mequirements of the state standard (GOST801-60). The, 6hKh15 steal pro- duced with the exothermic experimentaLbriquets was higher in quality -thammetal produced in coated molds, US USSR UDC 519.283 nTH, L. A., LRONY--N YU: F., Moscow "On-Dif en 34 fer t'al Games. III Moscow, Avtomatika i Telemekhanika, No'9, Sep 71, pp 16-22 Abstract: The differentis.1 games described in the first and second parts of this paper are analyzed. JF6r th e first two,:parts of the ai~ticle, see i Telemekhanika No's 5 and 7-01 1971).- In particular, the dif- ferential game 2 is consideredin which the right member f of the equation of Motion.of the players,, and the function do not (lepend an the control- 92 ling-parameter v of player.E.t.'Buch~a:gamecan be trt-ated as an optimum control problem with generali~ze(i:.Bellmafi:furiction Z) Inf (ts Z' U). W E ESP A theorem is proved which eliminates the difficultieii due to tle differen- tiability of the Bellman equation by reducing solution of the aptimum con- trol problem to finding an everywhere continuous differentiable E-solution of the Bellman equation rather-than itd,exact solution. In adil.ition, the 112 il,~.-.~.i;-:i..-,"",~'-":-!-"-I-,", . . . m .1 I I ll i I - I I J PAS SAINL-~ ON T1'E REITULARIZVXION OF VE VELL1,LAN I-0'TH(;:-) V,' oF CIPTV,"Jr'~ 4,UtFT-D ACTION ' L c :l rticle by L. A. X-an and Yxi 7 ntrol l o r '7 R * roble= L u s s lar, Vol 200 6 1 2~ , No 7 , pp , 4e will disetiss the p~obleM of tho Opti'mUM Cor~trol , - lo of an 0;Je ti I d b th i t1 t 1b ! es-~r c w se mo on i s a en .- e..oqx y, :~. where R~ space-, 11 control area; ,' rj local Upshitz mapping from lk'xU into .9 Let us assume , i addltjon, that mapping or f sati2fips, the Filippov co d ition for (z. R* Y U, where (-.,f(z.u)> = scnlar product o~, veetorz z and Nz,u); i-!!= LuLlltiein normi C = somo positive number. We au--t fInd, ir. the cluss o.C piecewise-continuout;l runicttins, the control that convortc.-object (1) int~N L;irv rource C f r Z; 1 CC.. '~r p minA.-aum lengtv! of time. atr i's iz known Zjoj t*he original approacli to Vio solution V.1 i C~., L W_j , J)'I r a fthe prob' e= of optimum control, .~n ti-.r nalll-ian as one of Ita most essential moinnls an a priorl assu%ption ;brut the existrnce of a solution o.1 t),e a I 1::a n. *%quatiin. tviat was Pvery,.0,erc continuously dlrf'pr~ is vf.Lrumely restrictive and, all a ri:lc, Is not fulfilled. in all the examples prAs-,.ntnd in ' parz-iculnr, t~,e Lollman functlon proves to be. non'iif- lerentlablo at som--~ multifor:alty (containing cntire segments of opt!-itua trajcctorle~). Thif: firt creates fundamental dif- flcultl I es in using tl,e T1.e1l:-.zn -(piaUcon in opt..-,u:n control Boltyanskiy, in ZU, gave a proof C.I., the Bellman approa& as a sufficic~nt condition of optImality for substan- tiully wAaker assuaptians relative to t),P f:mootnncss of the USSR. UDC 519-283 KUN, L. A., and PRONOZ ~Mosc IN4L-Xu ow _1110n Differential Games. III i Telemekhaiika N -14 -30. ()~5, ay 71, pp:122 Abstract: The basic concept to be considered is that of alglobal strategy, a concept based on the work of-Karlin.' 'Vith the global stratep-y is associated a tactic. The derivation of these.terms is.given in detail* The class of permissible strategies includesthe set. of global strategies satisfying the following conditions: l)-'the switch and tactic. are; independent of game state, and the tactic takes on values of constcint local strateCies-, 2) if any global strategy is part of the permissible state, then any other global strategy with an arbitrary svritch independent of state: and a constant tactic equal to any tactic of the f-irst strategy is also permissible; anyst~,ategy,forined by adopting tactics from other permissible' Btrategiebj, switching :fr~6m one,to another at -arbitrary, tize points, is, permissible.: These dot tions lead to a series of '_-_aub-aclasses.:of permiBsible,strategies, The..optimal strate& is defined in the usual way- if one player has an optimal strategy in the initial state of the game, USSR UDC 546.185 547.412 PRONS V . N -RINBLAT, 51. P., and,KLEBANSKIY, A'* L., All Union Resea eh Institute of.Synthetic.Rubber imeni 3. V. Lebedev and Polymerization,of Meth lchl orocycl o ph o sphaze ne s F 'Y' Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, ~ol'41 (103) No 2, Peb 71 462 R -483 P Abstract--. Heating methyltetraclilorophosphorane i0lita amm.,nium chloride in~sym-tetrachloroethane yields. methylchlorocyclc)l)hospl,,a~:enes ir, ~Provided that ammonim chloride is prepared.directly. in the reaction vezsel. The Droduct consists of a 60:40 mixture*~of- 143,1:1-trimethyl- 3 5 trichlorocyclo,triphonohazene and I 3,5,7-tc- lit p "-etrachlotocyclote%'raphosphazenes ThismMixturepheatel-to 2OU-220C) -for---15~-20-hrs in asealed- airpoulei.y*elds,a:rubber-li-ke methylchloropoly- hosphazene,i, 7t U~MR U~G 4121 6.185 It 54 M-F-PANUTY A. ;L LEI~I G4INBIAT' Mi Y VA '-I 0110phazenes AU 6rf 01,64 fiesis, of Bls-(~ Ill Rhim Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchex 1 70 -P~ -:-2127-212T- 1~140, NO;9, SeP 70, Ammonolysis of bil-(haptafluorOPro'_DYl)-trichli)rophoo- Abstract: p rane (I) with A fivefold excess Or highly disbersed aj=,onkum chloride I chlorobenzene, prepared freshly in t5 reaction vessel in 'from gaseous ammonia and HCJj Occurs' at - 125-1300~ with slight d.- Yielding a 70,30 mixture -of 2 9 2,,] 6, 6-hexa- ',comDosition or phoapha,zone &ndi2,2JV 94s~s6,13,6-octa_ (he~taf luoroprop7yj -eye 10tri iphosphaz ne;:(Ii).* Nacuum diatillation r .~i 122.5-12-30; bt~-. h ta3_Iinq_-zixtur!3_kf* s 8 ;80 IIP-'.l W at .8 Oi_ N, K4 L 1W. k J- to~ :-TT -V'2-~ -030~ 0410C ES I W ;DATE--18SEP70 ITLE-a-ULTRASONIC DEFECTOSCOPY OF: GR.ILLED TUBES -U UT 5).-PR2UAXIN# V.T.t ANIK.EYEVt Yk. F i GORSHKOVt :A*V,.t LOVYAXINs NERTM- M.G. XT, RU VEK.ULvlrS1r,.7 ~~ZEFEXTUS W, 0 'n -,c 'NTROL t*,ARKING--NG- RESTR ICT TONS STEP ACCESSION NO-AP0100670 UNCLASSIFIED w f_ f_ 030 U NC L:'4% S 'A AT c D I i S s E f 7 Co S :'--IkC ACCESSION NO--AP0100670 -ACT! A3ST:-',AC T -:4EST111 ZXTiNi%C T- - GP-0- :AL T I Ur,,F vll"Y DEFECTOSCO.-~:C 'I'LE.BEEN SUCCESSFULLY LLEC- OEVICES Ii;". USED FOR' QUALITY C40N., L OF THEN A GRILL--D TUDES ~IS IAPOSSIBIZ 3ECAUr_: TU6ESt -U-S-- FOP, THC CONTROL OF. G j L ~.: J 0 F-:- ', T H lr'v'T:__TFEj-,T3,NG PULSES. REFLECTED FROM A-HE RIBS OF TH E T LJB E I- T "L 'STUDY OF HOW THE. AJ4PLiTUD,ES_ N4 I r-- 0 ,4:) OF~~ THr T RIA SM TT A EXD ER-IM.E%1A REFLECTED ULTRASONIC PULSES: AR& AFFECT-B 43Y Tti- R ZBED; S, EC 7 101-4 OF THE TUBE~,'HAS SHOWN THAT A 01117ERE.,x~ IIN THE. INTERFERENCE EFFECTS OF THE A K S I TT E.- 3 , A !%'0 'z E F L 0 THE S14APE "F ECT E SItNALS IS 0GSERVED DEPCN.01i'LiG 01N' I THE R-1 BG I NG. PkS A RESULT, THIS FACTOR PREDETERIM-11NES THE CHOICE OF CGNTROL IMET10D. THIS PAPER DESCRIBES tXPER114ENTS:OF DEFEC'J"OSCOPIC C-TROL OF -THIS TUOING TYPE USING PIEZOELECTRIC ELEMIENTS '-,ADE OF THE C E R A I C N' T I I RESONANT F,RE QU ENCTE S ~.FRO' 2J0 5.25 .411Z. IT WAS FOUND THAT DEFECTS WITH A DEPTH OF MOR'Ei THAN 25 MICRONS ON THE I NI'll E R SURFACE OF TIIE TUBES UNGER THE RIBBING WERE RELIABLY RECORDED; SURFACE WAS MUCH LOWER., WITH A DEPTH SV4SlT-IVITY TO DEFECTS ON THE OUTER. 1HR IESK ,OLD. OF: -60 MICRONS. THE AUTH RS tXPkE-SS.--THEI'k GR~TITUDE TO P. 1. _V I-T I KO _-W*HO'ASSISTED INJHE EXRERIMENTiSt;. 030 UN AS I kED 'ItiTE-040t- 'fj PROCESSING ~Cl CL PRt ACCESSION NO--AP0138429 CT. THE R SO A NC EINFLOEN'CE ON T 1-1 :-~-XBSTR AC T/ EXT R AC T-- U) GP-~O- A B S T R.1"i _21~ IUMB ER - OF, THE ELECTRON IMPACT~ :IN A UNIT: OF T VIE IS -EFFECTIVE N ...,CONSIDERED. -THE PLASMA ITSELr-,-LOCATED IN.I.A WEAK ALTERNAYING ELECTUC, H 5 PE Ft _-EFFECTS- CIONSI DERED IS EC T60 TO A PA A I TE S AT WHICH tHE H THE- G L. THE, EFFEC'Ji 1-S.! FOUND! T'O H A V EAMIN(lie' INFLUENCE Hl HEST~ LEVE ------- --- ..G 14 UNCLASSIFlEa, PROtESSLNG DATE-20NOV70 ACICESSICN NO--AP0125678 7ABSTRACT/ EXTRACT-- I U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. IN E W REAGENTS BASED ON VARIOUS DERI.VS. OF 2,AMENOTHIAZOLE AND CHROMOTkUPIC ACI 0 W ER E SYNTHESIZED AND -TH A 0 AL AS THEIR-,COMPLEX FORIWATICN WITH, ZRr GAI N W i STUDIED. THE 'AEACIENTS: -ARE RED POWDERS, IN THEIR -H FIJ~~q AND WELL ~iSIJL.; IN if Suez ol SLBZ AND MEOH. AQ.; SOLN H'E:R:EAGENTS :!A:RE NO i STABLE. S;t OF T THE 1) PE~NDS ON' THE 'ACIDITY -1-INTEN-SITY AND COLOR OF THE REAGENTS DF THE :~MEUIUN,. THEY ARE BLUE GREEN COLORED IN;A CONCO. H UB 2 SU341 Y-:LLOW ~_-'T-:,114 HCLI VI-OLET.IN THE PH:RANGE 1-5t -RED GRINSION IN THE PH RANGE 1-1~41~,AND -BLUE:.IN KOHO'~r-jH&_ PIREPIN' 'AND*~BEHAVICIR OF -_-_4*_59,0ImEThYL_#Zr THIAZOLYLAZCCHRC-;40TROPI'C-'~.AC.11) M 11 ~S DESCRIBED IN DE TED; T A I L I C AN 13 E --REPRESEN -A$_~~ A: 41 B;AS I.C A(l D.; THE LST EQUIL. POINT AN: ThE PUTENTIDIMEMC TITRN., CURVE REM&SENTS THE AEUTRALIZATION OF 2 -OF THE IST 04 GROUP OF THE SULFO GROUPS, THE 2ND POINT THE TITRN. NUCLELS-, THE DISSOCN..,OF THEI 2NU_OH,GAQUP TAKES IN THE ALK. _E ACID REGION'l:FORMS 2 PROTONIZED FOR-M S AT ?H IS SMALLER -REG li]jk. IN Th THAN I A YELLOW THIAZQLYL CATION~WITH MA~X. AdSOR8ANCE AT 480 NM AND IN CONCID. h- SU32 SO SU-8/4 A 2ND PROTONIZED'FORM WITH HAfX. ABSORBANCE AT 640 Mu - M I REACTS WITH SEVERAL ELEMENTSo ~GIVINGI VERY cowmASTING COLORS W, IT H AL, ziij TH, AND GA. I FORMS WITH. 'AL 2 DIFFEREINT COMPLEXES. IN AQ. IS A BLUE COMPLE-k WITH MAX -ABSOkBANCE AT 590 NM SG-LN5. AT_Ph 374 THEkE AND YHE. 2ND CCMPLEX IS FGM7MED AT.PH 1-2!.5 REGION. THIS:CGIMPLEX IS BLUE GREEN AND HAS A HIGH MOLAR ABSORPTIVIM. IN A A Q TALC. SOLN. ONLY THE 2ND CCMPLEX FORMS WITH MAX. ABSCIRSANCE 630 NM.- TEMP. AND ORDER OF NOT AFFECT THE YIELG.OF THE coLrjREO COMPLEx. AL A140 I REACT IN _t, C_ I jA U T USSR "Problems of Discrete Control vrith: ase:Gonstraints" -Hosedw Zhurnal 17-~%,Fcl-dslitell noy. Na ematildiMaten, aticheskoy Fizi kd; Septenber- t -O,ctober,, 19-72; PP 11 28-M q ABSTRACT: The author considers. raeans of:sollriAg probleins of discrete control with'- ~phas econstraints. "Straightfon ard'--.conditions a optimality are pre- :-s<ed in terris of f easible. directi ferent variations' of the na7imum on... Dif principle for the clas.-; of problems considered 'ar~, obt;tined. By menns of duality methods the relation bet-ween I'straightfontard" =d "anhi,,!ur)uz;'! condi- tioros of optinality is established~, in th ecourse of wli;ich operation Lagrange -mL Itipliers are used as constraints.on the variables. :..A bilateral evaluat-ion 'of.the ontirual control is obtained. Based onthe~cond4tionsiof optima ty presented., a method of possible direetions for the problem. sconsidered is g ven. UDC: 8.74 M. PROP Itcomputing Theoretical Hodogr phs.of- k.eflected Waves .'or Layered a d* Me ia.-. The 'Goss.-l' Program" Ty. Zap.-Sib. n.-i. geologorazve'd. neft. ir-t (11o rk sof the lk!est Siberian Scientific Resea -rch.Institute, of Geologic'a.1 Petroleum -16.9.~_(f-rom. RZh ~Prospecting) , 1.972, vyp. 55, ~ -pp. ~. 60 -Kiborne t i ka i46 14. Oct 72 abstract No I.CV642 [authors:' abstratt]). ;Translation:, The program :Ls*se t up in; 1.1insk-22 computer codes and is formulated as a standard program. The operitor is based -on an.equation of a theoretical hodograph of a reflectecl. urave for a layered medium in which the refraction of tile trzilisMitte, taken into consideration: on all intermedIM-e waires is L boundaries. of. inclination of..All hig _Iayer~ and the, st-!.,atum her . ~.xelocities. may be dif ferent, an are, accounted ford in th-D oper- ator.:~ USSR u.-u c 539,i43.43-~,66i.?L8.1 Isliamm, E. A. lakFuRASUIA F. M, ZAV YAWY A. P., ard PUDOVIE', A, 'If Kaza~i stgt,~l University Imeni V. Im, Ul Yanov n',' ~Ka zan "The Dipole Homents of Para-Substituted Pher~lphosphonates'w 10 Coll Izvestiya Akaderii Raul,, S33R, Seriya Khimichoskaya, No V~!.' 71 20i -,.pp 19-6 Abstxactt The almle r, o me r., t s of the -o-substlt4ted phenyl -phosphonates p-X C61fl, P (0) (OEt) (,X ~11e- MeO, CI, Br) ia~nd o1f; PhP(O) -ii-ere dCtE:27MJ.POd experimentally, They vex-t. also calculated. on. the aszt~iption that the dipol,~ :--moment of the, (M-.O)ZP(O) - group hzd.the value 2.30 1) whicb followd. fron an a ~ utation of this group in nucch -a manner th,~t -the conpona s alorg -the ij t ~-_.cooxdinato axes had the valuas a 0. 72, za Ti Op M 2.19;D (shrAayel/a, et aj. y Tiv. - ~j; -SRP Sar- nUm-, 19701 2695). The calculated Valut~.,S fw., co:-. ul.-Iq did not corz~apand to th e experimental' values, ap- O'Y callso o-;, an ln+rl-~~;,ticn of ;f 1 .1, 1, c All Et u.7:0 by 111--mv- the phenyl expari;,~!,-.nLaly deterp.1110d dipolc'mgn-critr of 2 corIC-ponded. to thu cfdculat d 7:e 77: 777777 UDC: 8.74 WSIR PROPPi M. V. ustructure of a Bi ogeocencsis and its Simulati Pn by Methods of the Theory -of Fluxe s V sb. Probl. kibernetiki (Problems,of CyberriPtics-collection of works), M6scov, "Nauka", 1972, pp 183-190 (f~rcm: RZh-!Kiberjietika, No 6, Jun 25 723 Abstract zro~ 6v6o4) Translation: The paper deals vith requirements for a practically usable model of a biogeocenosis (an ecological systembf fairly high complexity). It is proposed that energy and matter.. fluxe ',be modeled byi the p o pu 1; 9. t i o n s s comprising the b-iogeocenosis -- the,division of the theor of graphs which y is used in economics. The maximum possible fluxes between separate 1popu- lations are determined on the basis of the maximum numbers in corresponding species observed in nature. The fluxes throughout the entire system are -calculated by means of the Ford-Fu2kerson algorithm, ~~wbich is equivalent to the. hypothesis of zaxirium utilization of a-U, resources. by the ecouystem. The.-model gives limiting factors, admits a process of gradual compli:!ation' and.defines the minimum initiall amount of data for a.compl~ite mathematical esen'tation off the system. 'the Ford-IRilkerson algorithm gives- the re- repr eTs in specied 6' a cccmunity. -lation between the naximum and average numb should be used;for further extending aippli- The.theory of dynamic networks catioxis. Airthor's abstract. )AT ~,PUBLISHED E J ~~UBJECT:, ARE-AS-810LOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES ,.-,00CUME,,ir CLASS -UNCLASSIFIE0 ,---,PROXY REEL/FRAME--1986/0727 STEP 'qO--UR/0248/70/025/002,1'0047/0051 i--CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0102697 , , ~r ~ " - - 1. z , -, - ; ~ , -1 - 'i - : . - pa 13..,Ar)V7 0 M' midct-SS I ItG: OILTE rL---t- 46NE,--e~~G-IOVASCULAR. CHA,4GES..J,w FEMALE~ TELEGRA-P,H; OPERATGRS OF THE 'IFFICE IN THE OF;Jfie :i,WOR DAY; -U-. TRA,L, TELEGR APH:,L -C 'ORS IR 'CONTROL~MARKING--NO.RESTRICTIONS + 025 -UINCLASSIFfED PROCESSING DATIE-23OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION W3--AP0123669 _.~-ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTRACT. PASSING N SU32 SLYB4 35 HR INTO 7.5~ G .'2v,2 0-INITROP4,PENTENE IN MECN A 70DEGREES :UNDEP N GAVE 36.4PERCENTI-F SUB2 NCH SU82 CRR~PRIM&l NF:SU92, (1+ MEQUALS tit R PRIME1 -EQUALS ",CH -,SUBZ' CMIE(NO SU82:) :2)~ ~:~s.SUBO,1,008, 46-80EGREES,: N PRIME20 SUBD :1. ~5 12 -PRtuE20 1.52. SIMILARLY, WERE PREP0. TH'= FOLLOWING I (R AND R PRIMEL ~SHOWN) H, C14 SU,32 NO S U13 2, B~ SUBO.04 47DEGREES, N PkIME20 SUBo 144403; ME.v'CH SUBZ NO SU82,- B-SUB0.01. 5013EGREES, 1,47,430; Ht CH SUB2 CHNO SUt3Z) SU82, B SUB0.1. 65DEGREES:1*4416; Hv:CH:SUB2 CH SUB2 CFINO t SU62) SUB2.1 B SUBO.003 56DEGREES,g~ 1.4513,;.Hy CMEW SUBZ) SU82p 8 SUBO.001 36DEGREES, 1.4380; AND MEi CH SUBZ CME(NO SUB,2) SU82,~B SU80.001 64DEGREES, 1.4811. -THE-PRODUCTS WERE RATHER REACTIVE AND ~,UNSTARLE~_ LIWS. ONLY MINOR. DECDMPN.' TOOK PLACE UNDER THE kBOVE: -COND IT IONS.: UNCLASSIFteD 13DC 911.3.616.981-455074) kOTDRASUM11, G . A., PUCACIIEV, Yu. A., KOINDRAS11K.L INA, K. 1.,. KAMAZi 1K VIA, A. D., KORCHEVSKAYA, V. A., KOROIEVSKIY, P. G., POILYAKOV, V. K. IlLafidscape-Epidemiological Regional Division Into Tularemia Districts in the Trans-Ural -Area of Western Kazakhstan" V ~sb- Probl-, osobo ol pasn. infektsiy (Problems of Especially Dangerous In- fections collection of works) Byp,* 5(15): Saratov, 1970, pp 91-',05 (from RZh-Meditsinskaya Geograftya, No 4, A r 71,' Abstract No 4.~6.96) P Translation: The Trans-Ural area of Wes tern Kazak -hstan consists of four land- -'k Scape epide=ological areas. the Barbastaurllako-Utvinsfy area (steppe), the Chalkaro-linkatinskiy area (dry ste-ope), the Cliiderty-Ulenty-Bul(4-urtinsiciy area (sem.-desert), -and th-- Kaldygay ty-W l'skly area. (semf-desert-desert). Each area is described. Characteristic for the steppe and dry steppe areas is the steppe type of tularemia focus; while, the estuary se-ml-desert: type 04 tula e-ia tocus is typical for the semi-desert. The prolonged evizootic cald' of tularemia -foci in the Trans-Ural area is due to the progressive drying out of once r_%tensive local river:delta floods. Because of cattle slaughter, xerophyt plants take over with river land turnilig to &sext. 1/2 USSR UDC,: 681.333:519.2 A. M. PRO SADOVSKIY, PETUKHOV, V. I. KOLOKIYETS, O.,H. BERKUTOV, G 'A izan.1adio Engineering Institute~-_l '-"A Static Analyzer" Izobreteniya, Prorayshlenqyye. Obraitsy, Tovarnyye. Znakit No M.-I970,.Author's Certificat Filed 30 Dee 6 8,'l p 115 0-- e No 271911, Abstract: This Author s Certificate introdu'ces,.a static. analyz" wFich contains an analysis level discriminator,,a controlled step voltage geneTato:r, a genera- tor which produces pulses to fill the intervals-corresponding to thi:,. dwell of analysis, an period of a reallization higher (lower) than'the given levf~,l analysis time key circuit, a pulse fre-quency:,divider, a filler pulse counter, and-a unit which introduces the number for the initial co6nter.settf.ng. As a distinguishing feature of the.patento, the analyzer is designedTar aimplift- cation.in detOrmining numerical. -It contAius an inhibiting logic circuit-with the output of. the frequency divider~coznected to one of its inputs iddle the second input Is ~connected 'to the output pf tho pul:ge counter, jWhose set input is-connected to the tinit, I 6r:bitrodde-1 ng wnumber into the 1/2. Aerospace Medicine .USSR 6-, _:-PROSHINA, A- ~~Motivated baknowh" re by the Spirit of the,S6arch for the Moscow, Sovetskiy Krasnyy Krest, Vol 21j~No 4, ApT 71, p 30-32 P, Abstract: The following information was~given by Prof.:Yu. G. NeEedov, a specialist In. the field of space medicine ptn 4 biology, at a ueeting in the Mosc House of Workers of Literat_~re T6 18-day lo S flight of Soyuz 9 shcued that humans.bef~6me adapt:.:,,d rapidly 0 .,the-:conditions.. of ~ weightUdsness~ and- a*ie cApab e, ofj erformliig. the most an ng:~resear T dem di ch work undbt:these condidons. ~t was.mnexpec tec: that the had greater difficulties in.be'dmin reddapted to conditions on Cosmonauts C 9 earth -When a person has been 9 -kept for a lon timei in!boad, he must again earn how to walk. The muscles of the legs no longer fe~_l the weight of the body and the activity of nerve centers that coordinate the movements in walking is disturbed. Furthermore, the heart,is.no longer accustomed to performing the work which is required of it1when the body; is in a vertical position. Something similar happens after,prolonged exposure to weightless- ness. The cosmonauts, on returning to earth, had a.feeUng ofheaviness in 1/3 7 7 7. RM USSR PROSHINA, L.$ Sovetskiy Krasnyy Krest, Vol 21, N,o 4, Apr 71, pp 30-:32 -a that the springs ~.the legs and arms. On lying dawa, they had the impressia of a mattress press strongly ag inst their body. These sensations nassed a idly.. During the flight, the cosmonautgiexercised twite per day. They rap t on special clothing which ensured.a uniform load on the muscles and ~pu attached spring co=pensators to.this clothing. These compensators attracted the cosmonauts,to the floor of the cabin with a force of several dozen kilo- In this manner, earth gravity-was sUaulated. The! exercises, which grams. -were continued for one hour every time,.comprised walking, standing jumps, :running. The exercises had,~the and purpose ofpreserving the capacity to Withstandheavy overloads during landing an&that for normal locomotion on earth after returning from space. Th als'o.maintained:Oie working capacity ey, Oftheicosmonauts during the flight'. , COSMOinhults A# G, Nilolayav and V. 1. Sevastlyanov returned from the.flight in go'od-health and are rdquesting renewed assignments for space trips. This shows~that the.,methods applied were correct. - Soon cosmonauts will fram. an' orbit around earth locate 844io-019 of.fish, determine,ths. direction -of. ocean currents, carry out ice .reconnaissance, and survey more precisely the. boundaries 'of deserts, forests, and.Asteppes. This will require prolonged f Ughts an&a greater number of 2/3 29 01L UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 t1kc ACCESSION NO--AT0100966 GP_o_ l5SfKACT/EXTRACT-_(U) ABSTRACT. THE :AR T I C L EREVTEWS PRORLEMS ;R 'A THE THEORETICAL INVESTIGATION OF: MUL T I CHAAla ER HYDROSTATIC I NG- TO -,SUPPORTS WIDELY USEDo FOR EXAMPLE, IN THE SUPPORT, SYSTEMS OF HEAVY RADIO A -ALLURGICAL t~EQUIPI ENIT, UPTI CAL;. TELESCOPES, AAOAR ANTENNAS, MET 4E ETC, ITHEORET'ICAL -BASES ARE PRESENTED FOR CALCULATING THESE,SUPPoRTS, AS ARE IZING it a _.THE~RESULTS~OF COMPUTING THE.COEFFICIENTS ,CHARACTER iE EARING C-A P A B--ILITIES -OF THE SUPPORTS, LUBRICANT FL:OWl :POWER Lo SSES, IN OVERCoMING TH& PESISTANCE FORCES~ OF VISCOUS SHEAR~ DURlNu^ ROTATIONY AND THE ENERGY USING THE :EQU TIONS GIVEN, ANG A AEQUIREO~ FOR LUBRICANT PUMPING. _~'CORRESPONDING CO!+PUTER PROGRAMi IT IS POSSLBLE TO DETERMINE THE VALUES .._~OF VARIO'US COEFFICIENTS FOR SUPPORTS HAVING CHAMBERS OF ANY SIZE AND __:-a.IVERSE PLACEMENT WITHIN THE SUPPORT. GRAPHS PLOTTED:FROM.COMPUTATION Re-SULrs' FROKA URAL-4 COMPUTER EXPRESS THE~ :CHARACTERISTIC COEFFICIENTS ~~'+OR.. THE DIMENSIONLESS COEFFICIENT OF LUBRI,C.ANT FLOWl THE DZIMENSIONLESS -COEFFICIENT 'OF BEARING CAPABILITY, ANO -HE~ L DEFFICIENT i.,DIMENSION CSS C OF ~LOST IN. FRACT ION. DEPENDING:UPONI TH~E DESIGN PKO8LEMt THESE -~"-_Gk~PHS. SCAN BE-:USED TO OBTAIN THE M CAPRELATI ON OF PARAMETERS FOR A OPTIMU -~-`~,"PLANNED.. SUPPORT- AINC L A S 5 1 F r-D - A 77777=77 USSR UM533.69-01+533.C62-013 PROSHM T. D. v -A* Calculation of the Uling Surface of Ydnbnw~ Drag: Ith tl- Shock-FI-e Leading Edge"' Who zap- Tsentr. aerogidrodiiiam. in-via (Scientific Votes' of the C,~-ntral _AeJ~Phy~Lvdym ~_a - Institute), -.,Vol '3 -~ ffo6 1972 ('rpm &-,ferat ivny.,,r I , J. J 'J pp,la2 _3,~Abst NO~4 13) Zhurnal Nlekhanika, 110 4 197 ract B3 Translation: The liroblem of calculating the surface form of an irif initely thin e lifting i-ring ~rlth a shock-free leading,edg; in a supersonic flow iaa given -ial is ~ ken as a ce:rtain nolv- potential distribution is examined. The potent Ut nomLal.guaranteeiije, shock-free flow past the leadinE; edG-ej whille the coeffic- ients of the polyno-dal are detemined from the conditiorr. of minimum virg dxag, with a given liftixi~,, force - Me calcul6tionc =y be:cmrried mill- for and a suliersonic. trailing wings with. a vvept leading edge, having a brealt~ edge. . As an exmmle the calculations for altriwi lar winir vith a vubsonic gu leading edge are presented using a diff rent ti=ber of poly. iomial tems. ----------- Corrosion USSR UD C 669.018.6:62O.L94.2 KADIROV T., and Pjg�ZjjSKIY. B 11C orrosion-Resistance of IYAD 23 Alloy Sheet" [Tri] rk Iof-Tashkent.Polytechnic Institute), Tashkent. politekhn. in-ta.([Wo 9- 19-70,_vyp. ~ 77,. pp 90-9 2 _(f rom Mh-kfetallurgiy- .:No lj:-,Jan-J2, Abstract No -7 6*by:I--"N 1~ 6 1AaAovaj'. 1 Translation of Abstract: The authors investigated the resistance of VAD23 alloy to general corrosion (GC) and stress corrosion (SC). Specimen!; of 1-mm-thick clad sheet, prehardened in various'agents (water ar 20 and 96*, oil at 20% and liquid nitrogen at -196) and aged.under the following procedures: 140', 18 hours; 160% 10 hours;~and~200% 10 hours,: und(.-_-nrent CC testing. Losses of mechanical properties~were determined after specimens had been held in an NaCl solution for 150 days. SC susceptibility wils de- termined by the "arc" method, with specimens-periodically submerged in a 3% NaCl solution. Changing the hardening agents had practically:no effect on the loss of mechanical properties.:.Specimensiaged.junder':the procedure -of 140*~for 18 hours.:proved least resis.tant. to'. CC (loss of was 4-4.9%, and of 6 31-38.5). In the case of specimens aged at 160* for 10 hours, satisfactory, while the mechanical properties of thase CC resistance was 1/2 fj USSR UDG 666.1.001.5 M, UTSYNT, 1-1. A. Candidate of Technical Sciences: FRYS~KDN Instil" Engineer, State cientif ic Research rute '0 Gliss ~ZA ZHIYEV,: k. G., Engineer. Bak-ti. Giass ..Plant "GlasslTypes Which Absorb,Hsat Rays -Moscow Steklo, i Keramika -17 .No 11 Nov' 70,: PP. 15 glass for the Abs-trac t: In connection with the increased use o.JL Fa-eing of building.exteriors,*t-he Soviet Union hab on, barkod upon - --pro duc4-ion of heat-abs rbing winds he 0 Ow glass. The Baku Glass t 47, Plant-was picked to inaster -the prodtiction~of this t.YP6 of glass. In the article are presented results of -laboratox-,[ researi.*,,h on the development of compositions of heat-absorbing,glaos, And tho technological parameters of the industrial produotion~of heat- aViorbing'.-glass at the Baku plant. A, comparison is made with this,type produced by.foroign;firms., 2 bables. 3 guros 54 IJill, -.mi "OD7 UNlCLASS.UFfEB:! PROCESSLNG f.')ATE--;-230CT70 iTLE--USE OF PHOSPHORUS COMPOUNDS' fOR:PRUOUCING LIGHTING~ENGLNEERING --:4-UTHOR-~(00- TSAR I TSYN M.A., ~~~Ai A4 I v SOKOLOV'v M.S.t HAPIROr M.D. '-'-tOUNTRY* OF INFO-USSR ,-,SOURCE :STEKLO KERAM. 1970, 27(3) 3 ~~QATE PUBL ISHED ------- 70 --S-UBJECT.AREAS--MATERIALS T._OPIC'-_-TAGS-~~GLAS& COMPOSITION,: OX I DE: GLA~$ COMPOUNDo GLASS A UP CITYi- GLASS PROCESSINGor LIGHT'SCATTER, ING GLASS CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTR ICTIONS --230CT70 /2 -007 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE 1: ~Cl IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0116717 BSTRAC.T/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. CONCO. SUPERPHOSPHATE CONTG. P -Z#46PERCENT WAS USED '--SUB2 0 SUB5 49.05 MINUS 50.92PERCENT AND CAO 21.7 OPACIFYING LIGHTING ENGINEERING GLASSESL. IT WAS DRIED AT 400DEGREES ,:.,.~-AND SIFTEO THROUGH A SIEVE 81 MESHES-CM!PRlMEZ. GLASS BATCHES WERE P R E P D.;, 0 FTHE CHEM. COMPN. SIO SUB2 60.:8-3.2, B SU132 a SUB3 4-468t AL O-SUB3~'7.--9-8t- P SUB2 &SUB5,5-6 ICAO, 2 . 272 .6 0 -NA SUB2 0 10.7-10.8t 'AND A X SU82.,G 7-1'~ DDNL- F 1..5PERCENT.~'- J-THE; MATERIAL WAS; MELTED AT 14,70--~90DEGR EES. ~V USSR UDC 621.315.592 Mn'VIDSKIY, M. C., OSVENSKIY, V. B., PROSIIKO G. P., KHOLODIM, L. P. 'Nature of Defects in Gallium Arsenide'Sirb6gly Alloyed with- Telluriuz~' leningrad, Fizika i Tekhnika'Polunrovadnikov, Vol 69 No 2, 1972, pp 224-228 Abstract: A complex study uras made of defects in single crystals of G_-As .~strongly alloyed with Te by joint measurement of the internal friction mLd the photoluminescence spectra in.certain samples. The crystals:were investigated -it treat- both in the initial state after grcnith and after varioas ty'es of he, In the grown GaAs cr I carrier concentration n < .5-1618 cm-3 _ysta a with :.---_6re-.of .-the:basic electrically- inactive forms.of occurrence 6f LIW Te atoms is 8 1018 cm-3 the.pairs.TeV With increase in to p, Gn -defecta are" forri.ed. Preliminary more complex complexes of Te atomr, witICIattice~ high-temperature quenching has a -signif icant effect on the j)iLture of the trans- ''formations taking place during subsequent aimealing. ~Ilie naturil! of the centers fomed during heat treatment: depends. ow the, concentration Of th,.t., alloying ad- raixture in the crystal. The. radiation, band, with a pedI at -1. 2 electron volts -in the photoluminescence spect rLaa of Ca" alloy6d with Te is nol: connected with TeV pairs. The role of the centers of-, radiationles~; recombination can be Ca 1/2 - - -- - --- Acd.. Nr Ref. Code: VA -61-211 PRIMARY SOURCE: Antibiotiki, 19701 Vol 15, Nr 41 pp Z CHEMICAL STUDIES ON SIBIROMYCIN, AN ANTITUAOR ANTIBIDTIC Al. 0. Bf6zhnikov L N. Kovshdrov~, ff. V. Konslanffnouq~ A. S. Afezetitserj, Pova StEkh V. V. Proshlua .......... . ..... Institute for New Antibiotics of USSR A6demy of Medical Science~, M)scow A nCw ntiriFN ornycin wa isolated. 141. has1he loflowing empiric XCH-OH formula: C24-23H33-3sN306-7. ma, .230 -and ~310 mV. Sibiromy6n posse-sses amphateric properties. pKa 7.5 (in 75 per cetit,ethanol). It contains I amint, 3 C-melhy~, and 2-ace- ntaining derivative, with a composition of tylatiny groups. A crystalline. sulfur co, :The ultraviolet !ipectrum C, jv-.mNjS0&-D and a melting point of 20Y.was prepared, 20 13 Identical to that of an antibiotic, fix] A100t2*.(c, 0.15, DMPhA). 'EL/ 9820428 DA I !:--11`970' MATE;-PUBLISHr=D~~_--_--7P itOBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEMCAL SCIENCES !-Tin PI:C-'.TAGS--FUNGICIDE, TOXICITY,~ C14RoMAt0'GRAPHY, SOLVENT.,EXTRACTIONt PROX Y'REEL/FRAME-1985/0417 STEP NO--UR/0220/7.0/039/OC]2/02:13/02q9 CIRC ACCFSSION NIO--AP0100899 ::UNCLASSI F10 PROCESS I IN:'; DATE-11SEP.-O RC-ACCfE:SSION,~Nn- AP0100899:~ :~ABSTKAC Tt-EX-TR ACT-- I U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. MICROORGANISMS IFUNGI AND rBACTERIA)p P,,*E!S I STANT To THE ACTION OF: DENDRODOCHINE, ONE Op THE mo S T JOXIC FUNGAL POISONS, METABOLITE OF DENORODOCHIU4 TOXICUM PIDOPL. ET BfLAII SU3STANICE IN' ~FHE NUTR - INACT;IVATED DURING THEIR GRGWTW THIS - I EINT INACTIVATION COINCIDED )4ED IUM DENDROOOCHINE WITH THE PHASES OF J_z_-.,_MrCROBIAL AC' HY AND BIOLOGICAL Tl:STS ON -TIVE GROWTH. -CHROMATOGRAP L A B 0 R A T ORY ANIMALS-REVEALED COAPLETE DENDRODOCHINE INACTll/ATIr1N INI THE GROWTH MEDIUM WITH-'lUT FORMATION OF.ANY:~$IDE TOXIC PRODUCTS. CHLOROFORM EX-TRACT :FROM; THE MYCELJM OF-. THE TOXIN INACTIVATING FUNGAL STPAINS AFTER GROWTH ON THE MEDIUM WITH DENDRODOCHINE ALSO DID 140T CONTAIN TOXIN, -...,..-SUGGEST ING IN THIS CASE THE ABSENCE OF POSSIBLE ADSORPTION OF TOXIC -SUBSTANCES BY THE CELLS. AN INCREASE,OF:0XYGEN CONSU'4PTJ0N BY THE ~--~:~%MYCELIUM'_OF THE TOXIN INACTIVATING STA:AINS WAS PE:CORDF-D Dl_JqING THE I~TNTRODUCTION.-OF DENDRODOCHINE 'SOLUTION AS A SUBSTRATE AS ls,'ELL AS A x SLMULTANEOUS~- DECREASE :OF DENDRODOCHINF.CONTENT I . THE REACTING MIXTURE. HENCE-~ ~,OXYGEN: ZON SUM PT [ON :IN .-THI'S CASE WAS AN INDEX OF DENDRODOCHINE DECOMPrIS-f-TION AND DENDRODOCHINE--INACTIVATION:WAS DUE TO ENZYME. . PROCESSES.- 1.) 1 1 1 L I uDo 621..391.812.624 USSR `0144 PAVEL YEV, A.G. [Members, Scientific-TechnicalSocioty Of Radio 1mgineeringp Electronics, And Oo=mmicatibit i~;eni A.S,,:: Popov] NTo L Oalculation Of The Power Of A Radio, Signal Scattered By, A Statistloally Uneven Surface". Radlotekhnika, Vol 27, No 4, Apr 1972, pp 30-40 Abstract% Scattering of radiowavem at a statistically uneven surl'ace Is oonaid- ared within the limits of the Kirchoff approximation. In eontraal, to other Works, a. solution is found for the short-dietance- zone (Fresnal zone), w4are throughout the . effective region of scattering, the angle subutanti~jlly changou between the normal to the mean surface and the direction of obvervation. The proposed method of' determining the energy charaoteristioo of the field iwkes it possible to show the principal p4vical regularitiao of a givan problem - the condition of a regular mirror image and the conneotion of the coordinaLes of the dispersing eection or it with the inolinotion, to the median plane,, without introdaction of simplifying auu=ptions concerning the independence of the refloo-biona from the, separate aeations and the uncorrelated randont heights and inclinations at the neighboring pointe of the surface'. OonsiAeration of the,* correlations between the -rarAom heightg and inolinations made It, Oaseible to f inii the . arror of another work:connooted with the incorrect interpietation of Thai role. of e elf-shadowing duting acattering of radio wdT613*5,figP.2 'rOf R060 iVOd:, 24 ~Tuly 1970. 7 USSR UDG 621.385.623.4 ALFEEROV, V.H., VLADI?41RIS2V, M-iB.' ViSa'EVSKAYAL A.M., FROSIN, B.V., =17, G.P.~ "Concerning Phase Stability Of Power,KI a-ronit y Elektron..t Iekhniks. Nauchno-tel-chn. Iab. glektron. SVCh (Electronic Technolog:r. Scientif ic- Technical Collectionp Ylicroviavo'Bleatronics)p 197011acue 11,pp 136-139 (from RZh--Elektron'-kn i yeye primeneniyo' No-2, Februar 1.971, Abstract No 2A171) M Translation: Data are Dresented characteristic of the dependence of the phase of tpr4~. signal on the magnitude :of the, anode voltage the:exciting power, the tho - ou -k~cusing-reglma,--tho filamant-voltago,..~azid;Aho teriperst-are of the cooling iKater. :Th' para-tus for phase mea6urementais 4~oribed,~', Ilia oxperimento were conducted a.~ap On'_Type IM-lati Alystrona. V TJSSR UDC: 577 4 ~PROSI "A Rational Number of Ty~pes of Co=-anded Media"; resheniy (R*~ V sb. Issled. o-oeratsiy (riodeli, sisteMy search on Operations (of 11:1odels, ;:~ystemsjl and :6olutionsT--~:collection of '6'- patei Cent r, 1970, H e of Scien works) 10 1, US 3, a 8,7 2 0m e '38 Load L11V tr No 7V470) p -57 (from RZh--IIate*z-atiIka No '7.,'1972: Albs act p 11 4,ype JS Translation: A game model of the "Att.ack-Def erise con- sidered in which the essentia.2. moveat is: the choide of non- standard ..,eanon characteristics coBipliqating tbe co' tness rrec of their- i6entification b-.1 th6 enemyi on, the bne . hand, and. the e co- novaia`~ -disability, ~ of- the absence: 6~ 6~,the: i)MICIv... of solvin thefj6.:pr6'bI6m9 twith,,'diff'I~olvb informa- 9 tinn nn. -1-11.3 evp Q i iq A oz. i o- i 1: i p d (Fro*m Vne j-ntro-: J. Z7, ..UMR 'A -G- 'PR r Osklm Av: M. ;;~ - GOLII sly Atimu "Electrobmincz~cence ai~& ez p0 iiity of mods Tkiet., Iat6 1- nsk Zhurnal Prildadnoy S~ek-troskop#; -Auftust,'-1972 pp ABSTRACT: Phked -poly-orystalline ta-blets~ were used as corr-rei-derJ:. sarmoics in -in, ation of cort!"aictiNity in the comlex stutr of electrolvialreseenc6 ~ d stis-ml, Z,.nGd,9. As an the authors studi4d the e* ectralwrd- rj~scerice near the bhot th cathode - and. the f-;t-,. pulat~ on of conductivity in 1,occn~uctiP.-, tablets, Zn3oCd7oS as -,, base at a ta-inereture o:t',77"K.. To obtain thE) ta'O'Lets activa- ted poi-idor was first sijbjected to a pressure of 2010 afmospl and then sin- tered -vitile bein-. hoated to . 700'0. he,' electrolm not:Icence wmatra of Zn"dS, -ZnGdS-Sw.- ayid-ZnCd3--Cu,.taIbI6bS cOnSistea of ban-ds with a Y-vix-in, tum near ~1~30 in. and -i~ iiss (I RahcLs -,vith m a)dma at 4503 490 580' it, spectivel~ ve-x obnerved r, t h ru ~P~-Ctoco'Muctbivity mwtra. 1/2 'USSR UDC 535-376 + 5315. 377. 4- 537-226-8 -NYY,, M M. and PROSKURA A.: I., Institute GOL I 17MAN, A. G., FYSh :of PhySiC3) Academy of S,,-iences Ukrai~nlan MR-;--Xiav "Excitation Spectrum of Cadmium.8elenide Photoconductivity and 0 Stimulated Conductivity at:77 K11-: Kiev, Ukrainskiy Fizicheskiy Zb_trnal, Vol 16i No 3P Yar 71, pp ..:503!-505 Abstract: Soviet photoresistors of the FS-D! type were used to study the excitation spectra of cadmium selemide photoconductivi- ty and stimulated conductivity at-77,0 K in.the 500-1250 nm re- gion It was found that stimulated.conductivity builds up to sat~;ation under light excitation of any wavelenGth between 700 and 1100.nm. The current stimulated to satu~,ation in cadmium selenide cells does not.depend onithe excitation wavOlength be- 700 and 1100 nm. ..The:'red stimulation boundary is situated nm. In the photoconductivity spectrum the photoconduc- -tivit peak is situated: around 800 4m,and thp red boundary near Y 10 50 UDC: 535-376 USSR GOLIMU, A. G., deceased, PRO KRICHEVE11S., A. M., Institute of A LI - the UkrS�'R,' Kiev Physics Academy of Sciences ~of~- "Interacti on of Electrolurmineacehce and Photoconductivity.During Switching In_ZnCdS_ Mn Phosphor C stals' ~Cu Kiev, Ukrainskiy Fizicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 17 No 7,.Jul 72 mp 1148-1151 Abstract; Conductivity switching is studied in polycrystal electrophos- phors. It is shown that conductivity can be amplified by absorption of self-radiation by a photoconductive electrop~hosphor and induction of photo- current. The photoconductivity accompanying.induced~.electroluni4-nescence was sustained by the effect of the-electroluminescent emission. The trig- -gering of electroluminc-scence vas,atudied as well as the spectral char*ac- of switching, temperature quenching of highp,conductivityand the kinetics of conductivity. ZnCdS!"Cu,14n.:solid solutionr_~were studied at Switching was based on,amplif cation of dark,conduction by a factor 771K. 5 10 Of W-10. in the presence of a%light'source. 'Either.the;action of the light was combined with a constant electric field (40';_kv/cn) or else the plied after:111umination. Electrolumrinence)ace occurred electric field was ap simultaneously with dmplification of.cop(luctivity. It~; is shoim that the feadbhbk~beti~e6n e~ectidlumiiaesceace ness:an :the se1f-indud6d_:.photocu d UDC 552. USSR 321.6(234.851) BAIMEY117, -M. K., ABRAHKIII, A. S., IrOLODIUA: I V., ~IOI OV A. M. , and PROMM, G, F. MOSCOW Geological. E?Tloratibh Instituteiimeni.S. Ordzhonikidze, Gomplex Geological Exploration,Expedition- -i~iie of:Local Aeromagne a An6malies. of Ahe W6stern Slope of ogical,Na thern -Urals .-(the Verkhnyaya'/*~er/ F: chora. Riverloasin),il Moscow, Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zav6defiiy_-Geologiya,i Razvedke., No 10, -06t-73 41-48 pp Abstract: A report is Eiven on a detailed investigation of the aeromaLzIe- c anotaulies on the. left banak of the VerldlLn-ays. Pechora river, on the wate-r div.ides of its left tributaries -- the Vyderlya, the Templya, and the 11'an I skaya Volonitsa. The area of development of stratiffed metamorphic rock posoesses on the whole a negative r.,agnetic field, which is of a strongly varied nature. -s nre to be Numeroun local vositJve aimmalio obzorved against the greaerally negativo backaround. Two typen of anoinulipp are to bo ~qtion- the moist. intonalve onos: inotatric and linearly, elongated. Tbo Jt;cj.riutri(.- and t t Ii magnetic anomalies are d fl-monp jlrjEj t, near Cocribod., Wot hy of note tic ger -hi h brin about til oit-Alies are the -Objects V c _'g Ioh,e -local, positivip.-magne c an :.T 'i~vqhskiye hyperbasites. 4 figures 3. tO'Ie' 12 refe* nce$. s r n Acc. Nr: -Abstracting'Service:~'.'. Ref. Code: 000420717. CHEMICAL ABSTI. uif .3 85558k Effect of the zinc plating method, on the corrosion resistume of zin witinks, roskurkirn, N' 'Zholudev, IV ZR.; -&- -; -P; Gorbunov. N, Arses. I InqL rub. I 19 U, R . z Ach ~Rqs~), The 10 X 40 nim rods'.6f. Steel' were- ' P ted"by OectrioMic and dilffl:sion InIethad&s wi.td1i -an viithout ;- t'ireatlneintaftelhvard~, andihen subjected to the corrosion test.4 in. tap DnicprRivier water cclhtg, saits 212' 02- 11, fiec-1-11CO; ~7.4, Cz 39.3, Fe OJ, and Cl- 18,25 mg/l. and, having' hardnes*S basicfty 1-2 ilig equiv,t], and . R 7,17. Tile best. corroion ~resistance was sK) vn by diffu!;ion p coatings obtained i~ a Zn ba~kxanw, 01.2%, Al,'Rod heat-treated at, W for, IG nlin.~ ~Corrdsion rate 0 0090 ~ in2 hr~ ~corr4iiion )':~Tlkrio~restre'Riqance 9/-F depth 4J,ju t Wii~, hr, 15.2,u) were those obtained: by t1w -electiolyr.ic , method -~~ftliqut ht-at treat- nient, but their treatxntUt:atSW' for 20 min ingriued~the rcsis- tance by 2.4-fold.; Gwerallk :c oatings of a% houwge neo 0 us layer of a Q 6d kood corrosi'n reeisiance. Pietkiewicz J -~.REEL/FRAME 4~ 1 J 751 -79- USSR UDC 547.241 XARLCTEDT, M. B., PROSKURNINYI M. V.0 and LUFMOj I. S., Moscow State Universi ty ."Dialkoxyphosphines. II. The Addition of Malkoxyphosiiphines to Aldehydes" Laningrad# Zhurnal Obshchey.KhimU# Vol'42(104),~Vyp ;It 19.72t p 2418- 2421 Abstracti Dialkoxyphosphines react with~aldehyde8 in:Inert soki,ents with a:st=ong evolution of beat in.the: &bsencle. of. a bass catalyt~t as followst (no)-yu 11,C110 11,C11(011) 1'(011)2 Honitoring the reaction, using the IR sj*ctra at 222O.cm7 (the P- H band) andat 3300 cm-1 (the 0 - H band), shows that the reaction is yrcactically complete: in an houx. For example, the reaction of dibutoxy~hosphine with isobutoxyaldehyde. followed by treatment with trimethyliodide foxms the CK -oxyphospbinate and in addition tW c>