SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT VOLKENSHTEIN, F. F. - VOLKOV, A. S.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002203520016-0
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S
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100
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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YSSR
VOLIKENSHTEYN, r. r., riziko-K imiya Poverkhn66`ti Pbluprovodnikov,
h
Izd-vo 11auka, 1973, 44DO pp
Page
E. Compensation Effect.00.66400 ... 325
CHAPTER SIX. PROCESSES ON A REAL 331
30. Role of Surface StructuraliDefects in Adsorption.... 331
A. Adsorption With Irregular,Distribution of De-
feats an a Surface.....~ ......................... 331
B.: Adsorption on a Structural Defect.,,,,,,,,,,,.,, 334
31. Adsorntion on a Surface.With a Variable Number of
Adsorption Centers.,,,.,,,,*$,*O,,$,,,............ ... 339
-iermal Dis-
A*. Features.of AdsorDtion,Caused by "T,11
order" on the Surface of a 339
B, Adsorption on a Locali;ed Electron., .... 343
"Effect of.Hemory" in Semiconductors During Photo-
32%
4 4 a 0 . . . 349
14/16
~USSR
VOL" KENSILTEYN F F., Fiziko-Khimiya Poverkhnosti Poluprovodn ikov,
Nauka, 1973s 400 pp
Page
A. Photoadsorption 349
B. Change in Concentration of Adsorption Centers
Under the Influence of Irradiation .............. 353
C. Adsorption After Preliminary irradiation....*.,. 358
D. The Effect of Aftereffect',****.* ...... 364
33. Concepts of a "Heterogeneo .us Surfl--acell Ind "Interac-
A
tion" in the Theorj.E*--,.of Adsorption,,.:,,,,.,... ...... 370
A. Concept of a "Heterogeneous Surface"*.,*,***.%& 370
B. Concept of 1'Interaation0'.4;*.6A*.* 0 ~b 6 a 0 41a . . . 375
34. The Physical Meaning of a "Distributlop Function"
in the Theory of Adsorption on Heterogeneous Surf-
aces.....
378
A. Heterogeneity Cauised by Irregular Impurity ;i3-
tribution,,,,*,,# ... 378
B. Relationship Between the.Gradient of Impurity
J.5-116
84-
USSR
VOLIKENSHTEYN, F. F., Fiziko-Khimiya Poverkhnosti Poluprovodn ikov,
Izd-vo. Nauka, 1973, 4.00 DP
Page
Concentration and "Distribution Function"
Based on the Heats of Adsorption..~.... *to .... so. 381
C
Exam
les 384
.
...
p
CONCLUSION 388
................. ...
As. Basic Premises ofthe Electron Theory of Chemi-
388
B. Electron Theory of Chemisorption a31d an Experi-
ment . . . . . . 3 8 9
BIBLIOGRAPHY ..... ..................... 392
16/16
USSR UDC 54).128
VOLZKENSHTEIN. F. F. PEKA, G. P. , MALAKHO V, V. V., Institute of Physical
Chemistry' USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow
"'Effect' of Adsorption on Luminescence of Semiconductors. I. Recombination
Luminescence"
Moscow, Russian, KinetiYa i kataliz., vol 14, No 4, Jun-Avir 5
73, pp 1052-10 7
Abstract: Chemisorbed particles may affect the recombination luminescence of
serdconductors by causing a change on the surface or they may act as surface
centers of recombination These effects were studied with CdS manocrystals,
the adsorbates being water vapor, air, oxygen, and ozone., Changes in the.
luminescenc( intensity due to an external- electric field and to adsorption and
changes in conductivity due to adsorption were measured. All the adsorbates
studied caused a decrease in the -~7hotoconductivity of the*.C-dS crystals and
quenching of the luminescence. No new spectral- bands were recorded. With the
same Dhotoconductivity change, lum-inescence:qUenching due to adsorption was
either the same as or greater than that due*to the transverse electric field.
The adsorption effect was greater in.the red (0.76-0.78 PM) than in the infra-
red (1.03 pm).-
nescence,;.
USSR UDC 541.127:541.14+541.515
MRKIN, Yu. A., SIVOV, Yu. A., and STYROV, V. V..
ns-titute of Physical Chemistry,,Academy.of Sciences USSR, aad Tomsk
Polytechnic Institute
:"Theory of Radical-Recombination Luminescence. 3. Kinetics of Radical-
Recombination Luminescence'
Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk,SSSR, Seriya Khimichesk.Oya, No 8, Aug 71,
1664-1672
Abstract: The kinetics of the build-up of radical-recombination luminescence
(RRL) were first studied by V. A. SOKOLOV.
and A. If. GORBAW. The present
article is a continuation of these studies. Experiments were performed on a
vacuum device with a mercury di~ torr.
ffusion pu~mp, permitting a vacuum of 10-5
RRLwas excited by atomic bydrogen.obtained by means of a high-frequency eis-
charge. Kinetic curves were plotted in the 300-5500K rnnge at various hydro-
gen pressures. Pvwdered phosphors were applied from an alcohol suspension to
glass substrates. It bias found that the character of the kinetic isotherms
differs for a very clean surface and one tha - clear. The
t is insufficienU3
kinetic curve rises in the former case, fkls,in the latter case due to the
fact that the surface holds residues of pre-chemisorbed hydrogen in the
1/2
USSR
VOWKERSHTEYN, F. F., et al., Izvestiya Akademii Nauk USSR, Seriya Khimi-
cheskaya, No 8, Aug 71, pp 1664-1672
charged state, the hydrogen being gradually;.removed from the surface as a
result of the recombination reaction., After'RRL.halts3,' thecontent of the
icharged form of chemisorptionon-- the surface_.- Irst rise.,
~s,, then begins to
decline as a result of desorption. The initial ascending branch of the
L
curve is due to the fact that the system.approaches steady-state electronic
equilibrium in the absence of recombinations. In the tase where the dis-
charge is interrupted, then is on again after a certain pause, the "memory
effect" is observed. The character of the R11 kinetics here depends on the
length of the pause, due to thefact that the quantity of chemisorbed hydro-
gen remaining on the surface after.the pause varies.according to the pause
length.
-The authors thank,V. A. SOKOLOV for discussing the results of the work and
for his guidance in the experimental portion.:
2/2
-18
USSR UDC+ 511,11-12-030 + D41-515 535-37
VO L E NSJHTTEM,,~ Institute of Physical Che.-,Iir:jtry Moscow,
F.
ca emy of-Sciences 'USSR
-ion Limineacence in 8emiconductors.
I-IT"heory of Radical-RacombinaLl
temi-ty of Radical-
11~ Influence.of Temperature,and,Pressure on in
Recombination D=inescence
4.iya
1,103COW, vres ,
mii Naulc SSSR,
kade- - SariTia Fh-imicheakaya, No 6,
Jun
~bsti'rac:t: Radical-recombi-llation- luminescencc~ k- IL) originates in
ch~Mmica transformat ions occuring on the surface of a crystallo-
-o'hore. In this study the basic band Ot RRL -,ias !~-xamined as a
function of the te merature. and pressure. V
ith owne ai;ssumptiono
the position.-of Fermil level-s was ca1culated as a function of both
rature and nro2oure. 'Tho inlenaity of in a
lineir _funQf.~~5_-Cln oe tllao ppoLmura. at lowi ilY"o, tom-
~peraturo f-,.unation erhibits a maxJnum, 1"hav, theor4etical calcula-
112.
7171M. . -, ~ - - --. .- - ~ -- --.. .- - -11- : 1 .1 ..." 11 1.- -
! i. 11 A i . . I
USSR UDC 545-42+54 4
11 515 + 535.37
VOL,' F. SOKOLOV, 1~. A.,'Institut--e of P -s4ca-,
hi
4almil-IRr~r"tr i~110slec-.-,, 411cademy J_
a of Sciences~USSR
h
"Theory of Radical- Recorabinat- ion luminescence in Sormiconductors.
I. Spectral 3 ruc~ure of Radical-Reco 'ination L~L-.-unoscencel'
U L
r1oscow, izve--ti7r- Akademii Nauk SSSR,,Seriya Hhimicheskaya, No 6,
12L7--1252
tin rn
"'a d i ca 1 - v t~~ c o,,ab i na
Absti,
-eta' : jq ,I rejn4-ivoly
n e o 1,z
0, aund- in thi-- om altenm" is -i'11,1440 to
Aovolop qw ntit- vo ul.eory for it., , The; R`IL -D op.~(,rtza :c or's i St 3 of
two bands, as a rule, orle -- Zhe "basic" --- is'aiLt;o observed in
photo luz-.iinescence, -Flaile the other - the "Suppllt;montaryll
appears only In R1 According to the proposed ivohan-7-sm, the
acb 0, a recar,,bination of free atoms or radicals 6n --the surface
resullt-s~ an appeaztance of a pair of free electro_n-fj:~~e hole. If
the recombination of the electron and;the.hxle acqoiwoanied by va-
loaso of r-,oos thzough, a levra_L of an
:11 - ,or, the
basic:, 1,8! a,~ 4- OU 11
reco;ibiriat` ~,hy I
IV
Thai local love! oi- tuh(, c.1-iomisorbed atom- it'seif (tha radical),
.1/2
USSR
.77
et al, Izvesti7a Alcadem-ii ~Na,~ aSSI , Seri-ya
i-~iimichcslmya, ~,o 6:~'Jun 70, pp 1247-1252
the 11sut)-olenent-ai-y'" band appears. TIle exper~xiental d;tit-a, i.e.
dependence of the "basic" band on the nature of the anct-ivator and
inde-jendence of.the nature of gas, and converselyi dopandence of
the "supple-mazitary" band on the natur6l of the 5urrounding medium
and independence of the activator.. fit this modell well.
2 / 2,
111 fldl! 1. ~41, 4N 1 ~ 14 a-P. I'W'i
u
oiiw F,--,-,,
_0 V 7itlT
p.'Wi C E S S IN GDATIE-20NOV70
-1/2 019 UNCLASS171 W; , '
.'-_l%TLE--PR-G6LEv"' 01: SURFACE liN THE THEURY OF SOLIDS U 4'~
AUTHOrR--VCLKL-hSF-TEY-N, F F-
CCUNTRY OF INFG-USSK
-S0URCE--7KfhLf KATAL. 11(2), 395~402'
OATE P U L I Sh E C ------- 7C
--PHYSICS
Sjj6JECT Ak' AS
it)PIC TAG~--SURFACE '_JL 10 STATE CRYSTAL L A IT i C ESTRUl"TURE
EST,
C ONTR C L k K IN G-,N 0R~ -0 T IONS
CLASS-UPNCI_e~; S S it i` i-d
:_~?ROXV RE E L/f L STF p
11RC AC C E S S I C& NG---,A P 03 15 L 7
USSR
FISHMAN, S. 11. , CHERNEYKIN, V. A., and VOLIKENSHTET
'11,J4 _V., Institute of
Yblecular Biology, USSR Academy of Sc1en*ce_s'*,__1 'SCOW
r
f ."Role of Ion-Exchange Processes in the Mechanism of Altered Ila Permeability of
Excitable Membranes"
Moscow, Biofizika, Vol 18, No 5,.Sep/Oat 73J pp 834-838
Abstract: Experimental studies have led to the conclusion that pores of
excitable membranes Lrj%y exist -in a state which is permeable to Na, as well as
impermeable. In the impermeable state they can. bijid Ca., It is now suggested
that yet.another state of the pores my exist in which~Ga is replaced by K,
the extent of which depends on K concentration in the inpubate. From the
latter state the uores may become permeable:to, Na. : In ar'sence, an electro-
chekical gradient may be establiched along which tile pos. .tive ions are con-
ducted.
I-7 C- I-RC --- A C C E-S -S- -I- ON NO-AP0055688
------ 7- - i-~ - - __- -t I ~~I"r I -I F-n - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - -- - - -- - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
v ~ I . - -
776-
2/2 023 UNCLA,SS IF I ED PROCESSING DArE--ISSEP70
IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0055688
.A,8STRACT/EXTfRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRA.CT. . THE CONFORMATIONAL PROPERTILS OF
,OPTICALLY ACTIVE MACROHOLS. ARE CONSIDERED. A STATISTIrAL ZIGZAG MODEL
-.IS USED FOR THE CALCN. OF AVERAGED.PHYS-PROPERTIES T.HE MACRrIMOL IS
CONSIDERED TO CONSIST OF NTS OF 2 TYPES WITH A STATISTICAL
SEGME
DISTR13UT[ON OF LENGnIS. THE EXPRESSIONS FOR THE F SQUARE OF THE ENO
_-ND VECTOR H PRIMEZ AND THE 0 LE.MOM'NT MU RRIME2 AND ALSO OF T'HE
TO P, a
MEAN OPTICAL ANISOTROPY DELTA A. AND THE~AWSOTROPY OF THE OPTICAL
ROTATI.ON TENSOR DELTA G WERE OgltAINED IN THE CASES. OF FREELY JOINTED AND
r: I L
rs. THE EQUATIONS WERE APPL'ItD TO THE PR03LEM OF
_FREELY ROTATING SEr,,PAEN
THE HELIX COIL TRANSITION. -ALPHA-OLEFINS? THE
IN, HE, CASE~ OF I POLY
VALUES OF H PRIME2, MU PRIME 2,. 'AND DELTA A, A-RE L.A,RGER THAN
CORRESPOND-INCT- VALUES FOK TYPICAL ORTICALLY INACTIVE 'MACROMOLS. TH E
~ANIS A F :ALPHA-OLEFINS OF SIMILAR
-OTROPIES-DELTA AND DELTA G 0 2 POLY
~STRUCTURES WERE CALCD. THE POLARIZABILITY THEORY Or- OPTICAL NCTIVITY
WAS USED FOR THE CALCNS. OF DELTA G2. THEVALUES OBTAINED FOR DELTA A
SZMILAR, BUT THE VALUES OF DELTA G DIFFER. THE:POSSIBILITY OF
ARE
OBTA It-4 I NG , TINFORMA T I ON ABOUT THE STR UCTUR E OF, OP T I CAL LY ACT I VE M ACR 0 MOL S -
IN.:SOLN.~: BY A STUDY OF ANISOTROPY OF THE~OPTICAL'RCTATION'TENSOR IS
CONS,IDERED.
-Ilillr IL AA: C If j~Efy-_--
U 14 k, ~-. J~ J-.
USSR
VOL'IX-NSHTEYN, M. Y.,.and FISM4AN, S N., Institute of Molecular Biology,
-
Me` ' Ziences USSR
Aca
"Theory of Transport Phenomena in Biological Membrane. 11. Active Ion Trans-
port"
'Moscow, Biofizika, No 1, 1970, pp 31-37
Abstract: The authors propose a model that involves both the passive and the
active transport of sodium and potassium 1ons in biological membranes. The
mechanism of act-4.ve transport ia shown to have features,,In common with the
mechanism of passive transport. . It differs, however, iii the~force that on-
sures the directed movement of -Ions (it is the gradient~Alf electrochemical
otential of the particular type of ion in passive trantport, whereas it is
p
the-gradient of potential of the complex 'created by the~biochemical reaction
in active transport) as well as inJthe cooperative nature of.the metabolic
enzyme reaction by which ions are transported,from one center to anot her.
DATE--0410~-C7,,i
212 019 UNCL AS S I FI ED PROGES.-)
CIRC ESS I ON NO--APO 140439
_&B!3TRACT/EXTPACT--(U) GP-0- A8 S TRA C T A MODEL 15 SUGGESIED
'YlVE TRANSPORT OF J*L E-1 11 p 13 S 1 T I V:-
PIRGrESSES, OF THE PASSIVE AND AG li - I_
AID K P;IlMz-z PQSfTlVf-z IN 310LOGICilL -MEMBRANES. I T [ 5'. THAT Tf-ft-
.4ECHAA'
tISM OF ACTIVE TRA~NSPORT HAS FEATURES C01111MI'"I TO Til'-- SM 0,;~
RANSK N THP DRIVfNG F~ARC~ A I N I A I N
VASSIVE Tf ORT. HO' EVER; [T DEFFERS
.-THE DIRECTED FLOW u-P IONS. IIll rHE CASE OF PASSKVE TRAN S.~ok I l'HE
:.DRIVING FORCE IS THE GRADIENT OF;ELECTROPHEMICAL POTE_~ITELL OF IHE lJj'ljS
OF.GIVEN SPECIES; IN ThE CASE OF ACTIVE.TRANSPORT IY' IS TH- GRADIENT (IF
RESULTING FRbM HE BIOC'EM[CAF,.. R, AC
-THE POTENTIAL OF THE COMPLEX T
THE SPECIFIC FEATURE OF ACTIVE TRANSPORT: IS THE C130P.E.RATIVI TY OF
EXCHANGE. REAC TI ON, DETERMINING: THEJRAN"5141i8SION OF 1 ON S 1:R014
ONE, CENTER TO ANOTHER. FACTLIJY~l MOL.11 BIOL.r ACAD. SCI's
--.USSR pAOSCOlit. USSR.
UNCLASSIFIED
a
028 UNCLASSI-FIED -PROCESSING DATE-0,10EC70
~12 : 4 ,
_TI-TLE--THE TIHEORY OF TRANSPORT PHENOMENA IN' 810LOGICAC MEME~RANES: 1. THE
~*~,PASSIVE TRANSPORT AND RESTING POTENTIAL ~-U-
~AUTHOR-(02)-VOLKENSTEINt M.V.,,F.ISIiMAN*P,S*N,*
-OF INFO--USSR
~~UkCE_B IOCH lm BIOPHYS ACTA 203( 11 1-9. ILLUS. L970'i
D ATE. PUBLISHED ------- 70
:UBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND M ED 1 CAL, SCIENCES
.-TOP I ---SODIUMi POTASSIUM, TRANSPORT, P: i b:,4 EXCHANGE,
C TAGS, HE-NOMENONt
THERMODYNAMUC- PROPERTY
~-_CONTRGL M,4 R. Y, f NIG - - P 4 0PESTRICTIONS
GLA S 5-UNCLA 5 S I F I rO
~,PROXY FICHE jN0----F070/6()5013/f-07 !5 TL PNO-NE /00 00/ 7012 03 000 L 0 -1
CIRC A CC S s i 01141 N 0- -~p 0 1 _40 Ilk 1~0
fl,
212 028 UNCLASSIFIED D
~--C IRC ACCE.5SION NO--AP0140440
--(U) GP-0- ABSTAACT. THE THEOR ET 10 STIJI OF THE
~:ABSTPAGT/EXTRACT A_ 1~
TRANSPORT OF N'i PRIME POSITIVE AND K PRl?4[:4,k1Sl'fJVF _-lCqG4SS
BIOLOGICAL ME.MBRANES. IS BASED ON Tl- IE ASSUMPTTOU THAT EADTH AND
ERMC MIC PROPERTIES OF MEMBRANE INFLUENCE THE Fl:UX QF- T ~'-O
H D Y NA
T
I I o K T ND S CY-
MODELS WERE INVESTIGATED~ MODEL A SOGGESTS :T4.5-: EX I ~;~ E, 4( :
10N EXCHANGE CENTERS, I BINDING MAKNLY NA PRIME. P0SJ,T`lVE_- ANO THE OTHER
MAINLY K PRIME POSITIVE. IMODEL R~ SUGGESTS ONLY I TY~ OF I ON EX HA~ GE
-...CENTER WITH A DIFFERENT AFFINITY TO M PRIME- POSITIVE ANI":.TO K PRILME
"POSITIVE. ONLY MODEL A PROVIDES. TH E EQUATION WH,ICH .1AGREES TWITH
T Ilt ly 1 0
-jEXPERIMENTAL DATA CONCERNING THE D'PENDENCE OF RES 4' POTEi T AL N
FACILITY. I NST, !'MOL' BIOL-9 :iArAD,, SCI. USSRs
CONCENTRATION.
MOSCOW,.USSR.
-E
P~b`i:ss tAic OAT -20NOV70
LIZ UPICLASSIFfEo!
C
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TlTLE--,wlEGL;LAFGRY RCLE fil- ENLYNES It NO' E N Z Y M I CC G N T R 0
-LVENShTEYN, 4; .',1
b~UTHbR-~V'
rRY.GF 1 S Sk
t; 5 1 C F 12. 1 K A 11370-, l-,(2) , Zlli"24
tuiic
s
DAYE PUL
--5-U6 JE C T AR~-:AS--b 10LOGI CAL AND ',,,EDICAL SCIENCE8
TCP I C T-AGS--cE,,lYME, IRCGULATUR
--NO RESTRICTICINS
~,C CNT R C-- LMAP K I h G
DOCUMENT CLPS S-UNCLASISIF f ED
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I -,C ACUSSICN NI'- AP 0 1 13 7 7
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C, I R C A C C L S S, I G, ii 01 - -A P G 13 5 7 7
A.6 5 T'. A C T / E R A C T - - ( U ) U.' P - 0" - A'l T A,; T T HiE 'tkECULATGR'Y Rc."Ll' JF ENZYrIES AN11
uF EjNZW-',1C -I-CNTPCL W R E' 5 TUD I EC, AL L. CS T:~ R I S,*sl
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.U-4ZYr-~E CL~,FOW-IATIGli IS CC~l 1. SI'Al*[..S Of
JRjLLz-D BY THE ELECT!-',Ui',11C v A ~zl I US
.COFACTORE (oiwsiHE-ric U; I S
( -, C 13 E N Z Y l-L S: A 1 *. C'l S C I F T R A i 4 S [ I' I i j N 1-1 F T A! - S
5 N'A L L I L: r, S S U C H AS 1~ fl -R' !~-IE POSIT IVIE 7 NA. PRIMIE -CA PP~U-ff-2
P 0 Zi I T I V E , '~'G P R I ;-i U 2 P S 1 1' 1 v E T H 15 h Y 1 > 0 T h E 3 1 YiASI supioUkrEL IN TESTS
-L"JBIN W'D HB
ii IT P, YCal Li,4' 1,HICH ThE ELECI 0 F
:mUNIC STATI: uc corAcTuR viAs
AND THE CUINIFOPIMAT-10NAL CHAI',!"J~ES M THE PROTEM
-BEANS Of:
*'.'ERE UL BY
SO. MA" NEJU OPTICAL Fcr rum r4 E AS U E M E- V4 T S
l1
'FAG I L I TY,; INST sMLI L 16 L 140SCO'A, USSR
w
I OL IMARUNG-NO RESTRICTIONS
;_W2 018 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-`-1:60CT70
l;',iRt-_:ACCESSIO,N NO--AP0117857
'_.8STRXCT/,EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A 114ECHANIS,'-i OF PASSIVE AND ACTIVE
..~-MIGR-ATIONS OF NA PRIME POSITIVE Ai*qD K PRIME POSlrjv~: I N alciL. NE11BRAiNES
1S PROPOSED. THE PASSIVE MIGRATION IS CAUSED BY THE ELECTROCHEM.
~GRADIENT OF K PRIINE POSITIVE AND (14A PRIME POSITIVE, WHEREAS
IS CAUSED BY THE ELECTROCHEM. POTENTIAL GRAUIENT OF
- CO;
~A,- MPLEX OF NA PRI,%*.E POSITIVE OR K. PRIME.POSITIVE WITH A LIPOPROTEIN.
..:-.-THE: MIG;RATIONS TAKE PLACE LN ION EXCHANGE CENTERS SITUATEU IN THE
BRAN E.. 'THE PASSAGE OF K PRIME POSITIVE Am) NA PR;[,,4E POSITIVE FROM
-1~"ONE:~ CENTER -TO ANOTHER IS A METABOLIC.ENZYMIC REACTION. FACILIrY:
I N S T. MOL. BIOL.*, MOSCOWt USSR.
UNCLASSIFIED
rd
Acc.
P0044384
xr-
Ref4 Code; UR 0463
PRIHARY SOURCE:. Molekulyarnaya Bi6logiya, 1970, Vol 4, Nr 1,
PP BF. Me
INVESTIGATION OF HISTONE STRUCTURE
Ramm, Ye. ji:rslitevn, T; ~H.; BolRtArIL~ I. AL.
Vorob'yev, V. I.; Dmitrenko L. V,Nckrasovan, T. N.;
v
ol ken. ite
Instifu 4W61 th;, -Alcrular Weichl
to of COMO ar.4
L -1117run's, licallemw 01 &iencds, IXMnj.,r.'.d
ences, USCSP, MOSCOW
and Institute of t ocular 5ioRcFg~~, Acadenly af-56
s 1, (a), f2 (5). 13) has ~,.cn studied by lflha
The stnic(ure of four hislone ft clion
Inethods Of Gotkal F-WatOry dI5PCM0a,polcnll0nArJc tilration and vlscomclr-. Tho ana'
lysi3 of tile data ob'
tained made it possible. to draw A con Insion that hiflones, arc riot
globular proteins. Ibe dependence of reducc~d 4isicosity oti the chargc at the molecule
and [tic ionic stiength of the solution showed thatAhe dimensiont Of.the h~stonc mole.
cules depend to a large e-ztent uport the forces ~Qf cle'drostalic Jnlera~'I;om This surygcst3
that the hislone molecules are co.prormationally Ilixibit and prribabij, tx~,NO the confor-
mAtion of a staiislical coll with the Incorporation of:hellcal regions.
REELIFRAME 02
1,97: -100;
AP0044384
The potentiornctric titration curves have -been obtained for all the 167tone fractions
and have been used for calculating th4 number of ionizable groups, for &tCrmining thei.-
PH Mt
pK.aod tile change in tile mean oycrall charge of the MoIccults with Ulf toration
of tile niediurn. *file effect of PH and the ionic strongth, of the solution on the a-helix
-content of variou3 histone fractions was sludledi 7"he data obtained wete comp;red and
a coll.11asinh was drawn about liw non-uniform diWitiotiall of the charged grou;s in tile
histone molecules. On one hand"hislanes . coittaln.:at ricutral pH Coll uloped !A!qtlcilcqs
enriched.with basic amino kid residues With higil denilly of tile posIti,it charge and
on tile other hand, regions capable to form helical, slucture5 and contidning ~-.Ui acid
-and basic amino acid re.-tidues. A rnodel is pro sed doActibing the structure of histones.
PO
The important dillerences between :hi3tone ~ fractlonli were;. shown'la exist mainly
due to tite distribution of the charges alorq the chain.' J
USSR LTD C577.3
FESENK0, Ye. Ye., KnAKOV, V. N., LYUBARSKIY, A. L. , and
"Three-Phase Kinetics of the Recoubination of Ifyoglobin With CaAon Monoxide
rature"
at Low Tempe
MoscaT, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 205,' No:2, 1972,.pp 485-487
Abstract: A study of the recorribination of.myoglobin (Hb) -,rrith GO after photo-
dissociation showed that the reaction proceeded via three pathways. These
Were -designated as very fast, fast, and slow. reactions. The energy, the
ntropy, and the enthalpy of activation were calculated for each reaction in
e
both glycerine and a water- glycerine mixture. The rate constant and relative
rates of reaction are given for selected temperatures between -1.00% and O"C.
Conformational-shifts in Mb-Co complekes wem described.
M-Effi "E. ymm,m
Bi6physi
USSR
Fisaw-1 S. N. 3- Institute of
CiMMEYM, V. A. and VOLiKEF55M)LIT F~,
M1,01ecular Biology, Academy of Scien es-
c p5oscov
'14'olecular Mechanism of the Initiation of Muscle C ntraction"
Moscow, Bio-Lizika, 11o 6, 1972, pp 1,061-1,o67~
Abstract: The authors proposf-,. a matheTraticaLmodel that describes the kinetics
of muscle fiber resnonse to the an lication of depolarizing potential to the
P
membrane. The model ass-Lurres that the development of isointric contraction is
limited to two inain reactions: (a) desorption: of Cat+ froLm the reticulimp due.
to the charge in the electrical field and (b) forr!:ation of an aotomyo.,in bridEe
and subseq7uent confor7ration ch-nnge in protein, The behavior of the model system
in time in examined in three sitwitions: (a) after: the r~6-plication of fixed
potential to the membrane, (b) after brief polarization o,Af the membrane, and
(c) after stimulation of the muscle fiber bya.~series of:1short impulses
(thtanus).
a
Z/2 020 UNCLASSMEO PROCESS ING DATE--040EC70
-CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0129423
'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. BY USING 2 SPCCIMENS CUT FROM
SINGLE CRYSTAL TB 199.9PERCENT PURE) AT 4.2-350DEGREESK AND AT M'%G~iETIC
114DUCTION (8) LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO 34 KGr MEASUREMENTS VERI: CARRIECI, OUT
OF THE HALL EFFECT. SP. HALL EMP. FOR THE SPECIMEN lilTH'MAGNETIC FIELD
(H) PARALLEL TO THE 10001) DIRECTION AT ALL TEMPS. DIEPENDS LINEARLY ON
-SPECIMEN. FOR R
INDUCTION IN THE SPECIMEN~ WITH H PARALLEL TO il aAR 2
10) IN THE REGION OF THE EXISTENCE OF THE.FERROPIAGNETIC STATE, THE
~OEPENOENCE OF SP. HALL EMF. ON 8 HAS THE:FORM CHARACti-ERISTIC FOR
FERROMAGNETS, IN THE PARAMAGNETIC.REGIONI THE SPONTIkNEOUSY (R SUBS) AND
:CONVENTIONAL (R SUBO) HALL COEFFS, FOR BOTH SPECIMENS WIERE SEMI, AND
THE PRESENCE WAS EsrABLISHED Of: ANISOTROPY OF THESE CaEFVS. [N THE
FERROMAGNETIC REGION, THIS SEPN. WA.S.CARRIED OUT ONLT FOR SPECIMEINS WITH
KPARALLEL TG.(l BAR 2 LO). BOTH COMPONENTS -OF THE. HALL :COEFF* CHANGE
:_-SEGN TWICE WITH DECREASING TEMP~. ~FACIL ITY.' MST.: Fil. METAL.,
_SVER0L(jVSKt USSR*
UNC L ASS I F I E D
2 032 uwcussl FIED DATE--20NOV70
r- IRC ACCESS10. No-AP0127651
-AB-SrRACT/EXTRACT--fU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE TRANSVERSE 1-11AGNETOkESISTANCE
fA^ AND,HALL-EFF-CT~ Pi ViRIDIUM SINGi-E
-~ISWRGPY PIN10 FIELU DEPENDENC'ES's
~'RYSTAL 6RE 'NV~STIGATED AT LOW TEINPERATURES JI-NO J'l;-'kdNETJr, FIELDS UP To
45 KOE. THE NEASUREMENT RESULTS I N 0 1C, AT ETHAT lRlrlfAJM iS A
%GtCrlJPEf%,SATE0ll METAL -11ND APP;,kElqTLY POSSESSES. A CWSEW FERMI SURFACE
CUNSISTING OF-ELECTRON AND HOLF S HE- t-T SIHE RESULTS ARE CCMPARED WITH.
ffiE ThEfJkETICAL P00FL OF THE FER* 1.
M SURFACE FOR TrUS :AETAL.
FACILE-1Y.- INSTITUT FIZIKI MIETALLOV AKADEMI-1 NALK i;&SR
UNCLA551 Nho
TJSSR UDC 6a2.95
SHCF-i-GLOV, YTT. V., NIKISHIN, G. 1,, DIYUSENOV, M. I., V,%,KENSHTFYN,
KO INA,~ L S., All-Union P esear-'h-
yu- H .1 SALAMANDRA, L. K., and c
t f Plant Pathology and:lnsti~tuiq of Organic Chemistry,
hs Itu e 0
ISSR
.,,Academy of Sciences L
"A Herbicide"
um Author's Certificate No 252757, filed:11 Junil 68,~published 25
Feb 70 (From RZh-Khimiya, NZO 22, 25 N6v 70, Abatrjitct No 22 N708 P by
L. Shchelestenko)
Translation: It is suggested that bia-trichlorallyl esters of
dicarboxylic acids be used-as a herbicide. They kLave :the general
formula; -CL a = CCICHOOOG~CH.~)) C00CH'M CCI where N an
n :2
i teger from 0 to 2.
n
USSR
UDC 669.71.0
18.9. 4
TSABROV, N. D., VINOKUROV, 11. D., 'MARCHENKO, A. M. ,PECIMEV, V. S., KOPYTOV,
'SH'
BE? TV
VOL G. G.
G. A.;, 11MI-N D.5 ZN
twExperiment in Operating a Vacuun
yul~VIL
Tekhnol. leRkikh sDlavov. Nauchno-tokhn. 1) Sa (Light Alloy Technology.
Scientific and Technical Bulletin of the VILS), 1970, No.5, pp 26-31 (from
RZh-Metallurgiya, no 4, Apr 71, Abstract No ~4=6)
Translation: The application of a vacuwa rdxer for evacuating liquid alloys
based on aluminum is excedient and has a number of advantages over the
mthods used earlier: Vie gas saturation of the metal is:reduced apPreciably.,
the technological plasticit~y of tl,,e ingots'is Lncreased; an increase in the
casting rate by 10-1% is possible; and tba number of defects dwing ultra-
sonic control of the products is reduced sharply. The schematic of the rdxer
and Its operation are described. There'arb 4:111ustrations and I table.
27
1-12.1 -P14
UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--l.8SEP70
i-.rlT-C_---HETERO.GENEoUS ION EXCHANGE REACTIONS, IN ZINC SULFIDEv COPPER
SULFATE. AND, WATER vZINC SULFIDE, COPPER 'SULFATE, SULFURIC ACIO ANO
~z'~6THOR .(02) LVOVICHv B.I.t VOLKH
~z
"t,WNTRY OF INFO--USSR
OURCE-.ZH. NEORG.-KH'IM, 19709 15(2) 520-4
OATE-PUBLISHED ------- 70
--CHEMISTRY
,_SUBJECT AREAS
,10PIC TAGS--TERNARY FLUID SYSTEM AQUEOUS SOLUTION# ION EXCHANGE, ZINC
-SULFIDE# -COPPER SULFATE9 SULFURIC AtCO, t4YOkOXIdE
C4374TROL MAPUKING--NC RE5TRICTIONS
.'~~bOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
--'--P ROXY RFFLIFRA14E--1987/0792 SrFP NO--UR/0078110/0't5/002/0520/0524
IRC', ACCESS ION Nf)--AP0104238
UNCLASSIFIED
-014 UNCLASSIFIED, PROCESSING DATE-18SEIP70
C-IRC ACCESSION Nt-)--AP0104238
ABSTRACT/_EXTRACT-7(U) GP-G- ABSTRACT. CU PRIME2 POSITIVE IS SORBEO BY
-GE REACTIONS QA
AND ZN(OH) SUB2 PPT.,MAINLY DUE TO THE ION EXCHAN
SUBM 6 SUBN PLUS MN C PPIMEQ POSITIVE EQUALS NC SUB'4 B SUBQ PLUS MQA
PRIMEN POSITIVE, SfMULTANEOUSLY WITH THIS, OTHER REACTIONS OCCUR AND
AFFECT JHE DISTRIBUTION OF CU PRIME2 POSITIVE SETWEbAl THE. SORBENT AND
~THE SOLVENT.- IN.A NEUTRAL SOLN ZNS IS QXIDIZED TO ZN PRIME2 POSITIVE
AND iSO SUB4 PRIMEZ NEGATIVE. ZN PRIME2.POSI.TIVE, AND (H ~SUB2 S) SUBX
-FORM IN AlCOI-_ MEDIA. IN THE ZN(OH) SUB2 SYSTEMt:CU(OH) SUB2 (F RMEO BY
'VMETATHETIC~ REACTION) SORBS CUSO.SUB4 FROW THE;SOLN. GIVING CRYST. CUSO
_'SUB4 TIMES 3CU(OH) SUBZ AS A.FINAL: PRODUCT'
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR UDC 60.6j612.766.1-08
T KAGAN, B. I. , and MAMMA, G. P1, Sverdlovsk Scientific
15ARNM*ute of Labor Hygiene and Occupa,~i4onal Diseases"
Physiological Evaluation of the Difficulty.of Work"
Moscowl Gigiyean i Sanitariyaw No 4, 1971t pp 100-102
Abstraett Various physiological indexes (pulse rate# muscular strength,
CoordLnation of movement, reactions to sound and light, attention, and SG forth)
were.investigated as a means of grading the difficulty of the jobs of several
categories of workers - lathe operator, machinist, nillirig~=chine operator,
engineer/programmeer - in a pilot machineplant. Pilot plants are characterized
by the lack of strict control of, the industrial processes, uniqueness of the
products, creative nature of the worIkers' particlyAtion, and so forth. Judging
primarily by the pulse rate, the lathe operator's job is zoilerately difficult
(90 to 99 beats per minute) while the jobs of the machinisto milling m-cblne
operator# and engineer/progra=or ax-- light (loss than 90 piatie b9ats per
minute). But with regard to nervoui strain WA fatigue, all four . categories
of workers are ecsontially a like, Ite., the work of a lathe operator, machinist,
and milling xachli2s operator In a pilot plant'is eaventia-Ily a variety of m6ntal
-1A
USSR
R. T
delin
'"Algorithms for Determination of.Paths in Mo g Graphs"
Pribory i Sistemy Avtomatiki. Resp. Mezhved. Temat. Nauch.-Teklill. Sb.
(Automation Instruments and Systems. Republic Interdepartmental Thematic
Scientific and Technical Collection], 1973, No 26, pp 3'~-,37 (Translated fl-om
Referati-vnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika, No 6, 1973,' Abstract No 6V407, by the
withor).
Translation: Algorithms are described for determination of paths of fixed
longths,in a modeling graph, determination of arbitrary~patlis of minimum
.16ngth (with the Wnimum nw-,Oer of lines) The ilgorithms dual with network
sets. Examples are presented oil the solution of. the problems studied.
USSR
VOLKOV, A. A. , VOLKOLUPOVA, R. T.
"The Problem of the Use of Methods of Graph Theory for Calculation of Complex
Network Systems"
Pribory i Sistemy Avtomatiki. Resp. Mezhved. Temat. Nauch. -Tekhn. Sb.
fAutomatibn Instruments and Systems. Re ublic lnterdep~.rtmental Tliematic
P
Scientific and Technical Collection], 1973, No.26, pp 33-42 (Translated from
Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika.,.No 6, 19733, Abstract No 6V408,'by the
authors).
Translation: The principle of decomposition of graphs modeling complex not-
work systems is studied. A method is suggested for aggnvgation of subgraphs
into a single graph in the process of transformation of initial information
on a graph into a system of equations describing the givon fietwork systcm.
A method of selection of all and the optimal (according to a given criterion)
trees of a graph, as well as calculationof this.number, are studied.
USSR UDC: S1
VOLKONSKIY V A IVANKOV, S. A.
"Theorems on Convergence of Iterative Processes"
Moscow, Mat. metody resheniya ekon. zadach--sbornik,(Mathe-
matical Methods of Solving Economics Problems--collection of
works), No 3, "Nauka", 1972,.pp 37-51 (from RZh-Kibernetika,
No 5, May 73, abstract No SV601 (from the introduction])
Translation: A paper by these authors (RZhMat,. 1970, 12V441)
showed that an extensive class of.iterative procedures used
in:solving such mathematical-problem's as findii~g points of
equilibrium. in games, finding the minimum of a function,
problems of linear and convex programming, finding the root
of a regression equation, are 'equivalent to one another in
the mathematical sense. They may be;treated as: a d(!5Cription
in different-languages of the same.class of iterative pro-
cesses so that convergence theorems~prbved, say', for the
process of finding ts f equilibrium in g'mes, when
tgoin - o
#',translated" into e language of ria
gression equations give
L --ii-
USSR
'SEYEV, A. M., VOLK-aNSlY, V. A., SHAPIRO,' A. D.
A
LEk
'Wethods of Optimization of Plans by Automatic Fornation of Plan Versions
and Their Applications"
Ekonomika i Mat-Metody [Economics and Mathematical Methods), 1973, Vol 9,
No 1, pp 3-18 (Translated from Referativ~yy Zhurnal Kibernetika, No 6, 1973,
Abstract No 6V539, by Yu. Finkellshtcyn).
Translation: Versions of a problem of the following fo m are studied:
r
K jk
Clij
k k (2)
a x
A-t J-t
ik.
jjj~j, k 1. (3)
J, J4, k~ t' X. (4)
Xj
r~=:O or i, KA, -4 K).
USSR
Alekseyev, A. M., Volkonsiy, V. A., Shapiro, A. D., Ekonomika i Mat. Nietody,
1913, Vol 9, No 1, pp, 3-18.
Most frequently, model (1)-(5) is used for planning or production of a group
of enterprises or branches, both selectionof versions of development of
production and for the production programs Recently, formalizations such
as (1)-(5) have begun to be applied also~to path determination problems.
Calculations usingamodel mak ,e it possible to select the optimal combin-
ation of versions. Formation of the file of initial (Wta is usually 6one
manually, sharply limiting the number of:versions which can he practically
tested. The advantages and disadvantages of multiple-version and "version-
less" statements of the problem are discussed. In the opinion of the authors,
the. multiple-version problem should be given the task of determining inter-
relationships between olijects, while models of individual objects (perhaps of
significantly more complex structui-e).should be used m formulate version in
the multiple-version model. The greatest o4erience in automatic formulatioii
of versions has been accumulated for the case of the linear model -- the tradi -
tion here extends back to the Danzig-lfolf decomposition algorithm.
As concernS the solution of the multiple-version problem itself, par-
ticular attention is given to the use of 'estimates in the problem, including
integer variables. The methods of utilization of estimates described yield
2/3 65
A. ~d
F,
USSR
Alekseyev, A. M., Volkonsiy, V. A., Shapiro, A. D., Ekonomika i Mat. Metody,
19731- Vol 9, No 1, pp 3-18.
the best results as applied to partially integer problems. 'flie results of
solution of a number of practical probl.ems are described briefly: 1) opti-
mal development of the mining fund of the southern Kuzmets basin, 2) opti-
mal placement of mobile wood cutting units for cutting of the forest In tile
flooding zone of the Boguchanskaya Hydroelectric Power:Plant, 3) optimal
development and placement of-permanent and temporary repair basis for rail-
-road machine stations, 4) optimization of'~the plan for,creation of aterritor-
IaI production complex, matched to the plan of development of a construction
base. 30 biblio. refs.
3/3
I I .11 , L.: : w ; I ;
'.. I I .., I It I :
:.:.2jz 005 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
1CIRC ACCESSICN NC--AP0125.304
,-A BSTRACT/EXTRACT--IU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. INDUSTRIAL EXPTS. WERE MADE WITH
TO 3000 TCNS OF PHOSPHORIC ACID BYPROD UCT GYPSUM OF THE
FOLLOWING CC?.PiN'. (PEIRCENT, CALCED. GIN A -DRY BA'SIS).' CAD 39.7, P SU82 0
.-SUB5 1.17, SOL. P SU82 0 SUB5, 0.46, F SUBTOTAL-0.4i SIG,SUBZTOTAL. 41.33.
GYPSUM ~iAS CRIED AT 270DEGREES. , THE lMOISTUPE CONTENT AFTER DRYING WAS
.,3.5-4.32PERCCNT. DURING DRYING 50PERCENT OF THE F VOLATILIZED, DURING
~_.-CALCINATICIN ANOTHER 25PERCENT. ABOUT 8-12PERCENT :'OF PfiOSPHORIC ACID
-GYPSUM-WAS CARRIED OFF WITH THE WASTE GASES. ABOUV SOPERCENT OF THIS
AM.T. WAS RECOVERED IN TliE CYCLONES. THE.AEMOVAL.01: l4Uf$TURE IN THE
DRYING DRUMS WAS 40-50 KG-M PRIME3 HR. ~PHOSPHOIRICIACID~BYPRDDUCT GYPSUM
_tAN.BE ADDED TO. THE RAW MATERIAL MIXT. WITHOUT,DRY]ING BUT IN THIS CASE
s Es , F_ TLY,
.___TlHE SO..SUB2 CONCN..IN THE ROTARY KILN GASES DECREA.- IHICH GR A
--".REDUCES THEYRODUCTION OF H SU32 SO.SU846 CEMENT.j'[N.PREPO. FROM THE
~+ULLOWING CCMPONENTS: PHUSPHORUS,SNHYDRIDE 80p SAND 10t ASHES 5**C(JKE 5
--PERCENT*:. - THE~ CHARGE IS~GRGUND,TO AIRESIDUE OF 18-25PERGENT ON A
008 AND 3-6PERCENT ON A SIEVE:ND.., 02. CALCINATiowrOOK,PLACE
FE~._SAME CCNDITIUNS AS WITH NATURAL ANHYD. THE OUTPUT OF, li SU82
-WAS :150--~,-7 TONS-DAY AND WAS, NEARLY THE SAME AS WITH NATURAL
~-THE~_PORTLAND CEMENT CLINKER WAS YELLOW WING TO ITS C NTENT
a a
~DVSLILVIIJE Si IT HAS-A HIGH POROSITY., ALITE HAD A ZONAL STRUCTURE.
AE&H. TESTS SHOWED GOOD QUALITIES FOR THE. CLINKER.
USSR IMC 669.187.6
XLYMEY, PI. M., TOPILIN,
NUMB, A. A. ARTEM'YEV V. D. ,V%KV,90
E t' As A.~
V. Vs, VOLKOIV, S. YEE.,, and SHARAPOV
11stidy of Me4- od-s -o' Aclin- on Processes of Crystalliza-Uon of Ingots During
th C)
Electri-~ Slag.Remelting"
Metallov
Proizvodstvo Chernykh Production of Ferrous Metals Collection of
Works), RO 75, MetallurgiYa Press, 1970, pp. Mi-M?
ystalli-
Translatlont Results are presented from a study of tho:control of cr-
~ot by acting.on thedrop trwinfor -and hydrod~rqtmj.c procepso*
zation of art ing
InIhe slag arA- metal bath by two-bethods" ~:,periormed onla la'-.oratory elec.
'ion. The nethods axe remelting of electrodes moving
tric slag insta-11a t,
eccentrically relative to the axis of the.drystallizer, arA renelting of
electrcdes in a longitudinal constant mangetic fieldt created by a solenoid
wound around: the cover of the crystallizer~ and suppliedJby a:controlled
direct current source. 3 figures-, 2 tables; 5biUio. refs.
-------------
iuiwY, 1973
Unc 678.,539.4.019.3
'11MUT CUA-VILLI'M 014. THE STUM.""S MIARACTERTSTICtt OF TIM-M-LTrIlic VOLmg,
V= v 1, Leningrad
o Russian, Ito 1, jq7), submitted
rzttt t R1, 1,
4 ; - , Ile~,
=
16 Vvv
cr 1911, pp 97-1011
A.AtmdY-.V=z:=da. W, CU., iffici-cf:8 riiier on r %e tan"114
r~ to Ural
vf polymers. The the a tru
stresucs,necurvinr In the composit. d,#rier Its conAvalltilt
are taken into atcount. Tit* relaticm?~ are pr"atted which E
dvfIna,the,str*oZth;oE the filta-t Ki7~crzz-a rae,ction of
d content nf filler. During the process of
.~jnnJyzffin the analytica
I-
relation was obtained far tjl ovfricAent of linear exp4noi0q.
thc,srr=cvurA1' dintribuiton of
of tiocco"aalte contiWatinr
-pr~icnt~i cot tits
:he Calculated vslo~eq Are
strength.sM atte3ze= tr.Z. Coftl'osijeS 'With
-
content. d4!tthLtIqm-qf7 the,
stron X
gth:'61 ft led polyw%ars in emepared,with ad
experfria'atal sttidfts of the comocalLea based am, epoxy resin
f1lied vitil powdered luartz. Thnra ate tittle illoWntlano
aphy.
and a ter-enLry biblogr
The proUlem of discovertitg~the cmitribuitt.,n of a filler to the.str pth T, 7
% am irtItortant,tula tn h,_prcbI=6
ccnn*,zttd with istudyL119. ELv effect or the filler act the properties of the
volyrters.
:An reference (11, a atudy was mAd6 of vartouv theories of, the strengthening,
f
v
fact.or fillers. At the land time, It to impa-lei-ble not to narde with the
aptolton of the authors 121 -who connstdcre4 that T'he term "strengthening" is i
cxpedt"tly used when characterizing the specific property of the given filler-
I
IS t%dvr catto. Artaally. an to demustrated In (31, the sons filler with dif-
feretit ratio to the, bAnder can "stretirthen" or "weaker%" certain compoliti."
characteristics.
Par materWo reinforced with fOvrRl"*, the wathom4tteal apperatus has
Weis Javelaped viitich. permits determination of their wach4nical properties by
23
;~q:
Otis component properties. An estimate of the contribution to tte properties
of the rnnVqnLta matrrtAt by. tile diouaran Ml~r. such an powdeted quartz ties
b3stically been made axperL.entally (2-fl.
In thin 114110T an effort tin. been made to.d1scovar th~ wchanisim of the
.
-
w tion of tMod polyriere under tenninn. in order -tile aratcd
~
t
l
'pi
Z4
vo
%
71 r
O
ml
a
tl
n of the tensile
1". the approach doyiloped no applied to the deto
r
strength of the flberAlaes reinforced polymers normal to tile fibers lot used.
The justifiability of this approach can be explained by the identity of the
strenged states of the cmpared materials and the contribution of the filler
and reinforcinx to the strength characteristics. of the caizpaelto materials.
The strength of tile composite materlal~ ==t be esti-ttil coilridaring
v tile istretizes arising during their inanufacturn uIlith
qrt b=it-%l17 thoi*.-
'
1 ~triatural . tl;.- T~~ -probtrin or, this tberm"iruetu
ral stress,en, - that Its. tile
istreines artaint, as a result of a difierenct in the c"ffictonts of linear
fanslon of tile filler atvf the. hinder on coolini-, of the coviposition imarevial
I rest
the cosir..AlIng temperature to tile operating :taap*rature far
Plie
V190" __Z In EN& Ftv-en riaper, an estimato. its made of. the magnitudit Pf the th
7- o'ruc I atr,mseq as a fussutf--n of the percentage content of filler
nura
Z 4;,,; their effect an the strength charticteriatica. of th6 tompetiIjilon
=tertala Im, 'Icteirminad.
to tLe asitherwatical
raidel. (Vigure, 1) adopted in this papers, the &ixuaiptioa
.
Is smade. of rog-Aarity of, thei,systam a%, attangesunt at thm, fill-or PaTtla".
it 16 Ins,201-00 AMAl$
*ILtij.thst of-thit tot titinspiis
,
in 121 'and the diffareniza in
114% tiret7-Acrzingament &E- the rivinroicin fib b Its
t a." ert1a"
7 F
PtIture I. Adopted ache" for
the (111dr poirticle, ditiotribution,
In the hindef.
24
ol
6:0
A,
UDC 620-193:669-29'
Uss?
GROMOVA, A. I., G-_EDIkSIMGV, V* V., KABANKOVA, N-0 A., ~-UT K ~O,I
G., and VOLIKHOINSKIY, YEE. V.
"Corrosion and Electrodhemical,Behavior of Zirconium-2.5 ?ercent
Niobium Alloy in Water and- Steam at high Temperature"
J.Toscow, Atomnaya Energiya, Vol 29, Io 5, Nov 70, pp 364-365
Abstract: A study was made of the ~corrosion and electrochemical
behavior of zirconiwm-2-5 percent niobiua; alloy in water of vary-
ing composition ar, 28850 C - !,-i a deaerated environment; at - 3000
C,the passive region remains up to t 1.8 olfiii;f~. Higher positive
potentials a.re marked by transition to the-transpassive region.
kn increase in the pH of the deaerated environment z;o 1-0 (com-
pared to PH = 7) does not intensify. corrosion of the alloy during
irradiation or outside the reactor, : The Preserice of am:monia (PH=
10). and oxy-en in the water at, 3000,0 increases the alloy corro-
sion.rate.
-
le fioni-ic e fills
c a er
USSR
UDC-621.317.39-531.7
SHNEYDER, A. YU., ZHUIZAVLEV, V. S., Cand fdates of Tech'Pical Sciences,
T KOLESI-11
I. N., Engineers
"Pressure-Sensitive Sensors made of Ele6tricallir Conducting Polymers"
Moscow, PrIbory i Sistemy Upravi2RLV~, No 21, 19 72, Pp 40-41
Abstract: The design and operatin- characteristics are- presented for a pres-
surt-sensitive sensor built at the Central Scientific Besearch Institute of
Prosthetics anti Orthopedic Applian .ces. The sensor is made of porous polymer
material (sponge rubber, porolon, and so,on) impregnate'd with various electri-
cally conducting compounds (resinsi enamels,.and so on),. The Gperating prin-
ciple of the element is compared with. the. operatin.- principle of -censors with
carbon caltoms. The dispersion zone of the load characteristics of a series
of 10 sensors is ploLted, and oscillograms are presented analysis of which
shows that the characteris tics of the developed sensor repeat the shape of the
characteris ties of a-strain gage. The sensor permits recording of processes
kith frequencies to 6-8.hertz. Both the static and dynamic
taking place-
6harac teris tics of . the sensors are, presented. A s tudy of the s tatic character-
Istl-cs 54oved that on variation of ithe pressure from zero to 0.8 kilogram-
torce/cm. -its resistance varies within the range of 100-2 kilohms.
T-F it
, 7;
N
Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk USSR, Metally, Ho 4, Jul/Aug 72, pp 67-71
Abstracti The rules governing the kinetics.of the desulfuration process of
nickel by =-a earth metals were determined.. The procwss consists of melting
and dissolving the desulfuratar-metal, tia desulfuntion naction, arA the
elimination of reaction products fron, the sphM~e of intez-action of rare
earth metals with nickel sulfides, The intemdatianship between the
quantity of the addition and the quantity of S In the.,rietal smad the effect of
the temperature on the desulfuration process was deternined, On the b?--is of
established temperature dependent changes of I.Eobarl:~:patentials of La ard
Ce sulfides, the affinities of la and Ce with 8 in Ni .can bz! evaluated.
Rare earth metals, proved to be effective desulfumton, As the maximum
change of the isobaric potential g~oes with thedevelojimant, of La 2S3 and
Ce S sulfides, it is assumed that these axe the.most'ilprobable reaction
2, 3
types -of sulfides in Ni. Results of the Phaseanalysl,s confirn this
Two illustrationsl one table oneformulao eleven bibliographic
references.
IA
66
J
USSR UDC: 621.374.5(088-8)
ANO
SIVNIKOV, L. S. UTY V, L. L.
,_7
nA Wide 171~~e Shaperft
s Certif cate Vo 265185, fil d 4,Mar 68, :"lisbed 17 Jun 70
USSR Author e D,UQ
(from RZh-Radiotekhnikal, No 1, Jan 71, A.bstract No IG264 P)
Translation: The proposed transistorized wide pulse sliaper -utilizes the.
effect of charge accu-nPilation in PIT junctions. The device contains a
saturated shaping stage with r-. transistor svitc~ asacontrolling leakaSe
resistance, and a matching emitter-follover. 'To red=6 the duration of
the tralling edge of the shaped pulses, the output of the emitter follower
'to the basO~' of the svitching
is connected through a diff6rential. network, U
transistor,
119
USSR UDC: 51
Volkolupova, R. T.
Description of Flow Distribution in a Grid S~stem
Pribory iSistenay Avtonatiki. Resp. Metfived. ~T-Imat. Nauch. --tekhn. Sb. [Autc:.-I, -
tion Devices and Systems. Republic InterdoplITtmental Thernat-ic 9::i-,:,,ntific and
Technical Collection], 1972, No 24, pp,165-170 (Tr.mi0ated lFron, ReferativnyT
Zhurnal Kibernetika, No. 11, 11,172, Abstract No I.I.V498.. by the authc_rs)
Translation: Amathematical description and model. Of proce~.ses of gas distri-
bution-in a complex gas collecting network amstudird.. A system of nonlirear
algebraic equations is produced, reflecting the interact ion of variable factors
-in the. process in- question.
UDP: 533-6.6dl.5
VILENSKIY, F. A. , VOLKONSKU
YA,~T_G,, GRYAZNOV,, It. P..; PIRMIOV, U. G.,
Moscow
"Inves.'_'gation of Nonstandard Flow Conditions-in an Aycisy=etric Annular
Plug Nozzle"
Moscow, Izv. AN SSSR: Mekhanika, Zhidkosti:i Gaza, Ki o4 Jul/Aug 72, pp
94-lol
Abstract: The paper presents the results of calt~ulations and experimeatal
study of naistandard flov conditions in an annular plug nozzle wrhen the
external pressure Pex exceeds the pressure-pp determin*sa in the one-
ai) roximation from-the ratio of the area of the'output
section of the nozzle to the area of the critical cross:section. The
method of characteristics is used to calculate the gas, ;.low in the an-
nular region enclcsed between the free bounda-ry and the edge of the plug
under nonstandard corditions when Pex>P', An experimental study is made
of the flow, during which the static pressure'was measW!~ed on'the vall of
the nozzle, and shadow photo~~ravhy. was used to visualize the ~Iow. The
results of the experimental and theoretical study are giyen -.':*or a ring
nozzle with MI 3 n ideal gas witb constant adi b
.71 and a~
USSR UDC:521,71!3.2:621:.378.9
V*. CIII:RNYAYEV, A. I.,
LKONSKIY, V. B., NESTEROVA,.Z. V, POPPY, Yu
YAKOVLEV V.- V.
IIA Laser Rangefinder with Super-High-Frequency Modulation of Radiation
and.Frequency Conversion in the Photorecpptor"
Optiko-gel-hanicheskaya Promyshlennost',No':10, Oct 73,:Op 22-25
Abstract; In known light rangefinders with SHF modulation of optical
.radiation, phase detection of the signal received is performed in the
light modulator. The operating -range of a laser rangefinder,can be sig-
nificantly increased by attaching a reflecting Iftira to the object, the
distance to which is to be measured. This aTtic) e pres~vnts the results
of-experimental studies of a laser rangefinder with SHF~amplitude modula-
tion of the radiation, the modulation.frequency convertor in rho photo-
receptor and phase detection at low frequency. The laser uses a helium-
noon laser operating at 755 Mz. The maximuin range measurement error when
a film reflector is used at a 'range, of 25.m Js 0,5. mm,: %~.ith a..signal/noise
ratio of at least 10.
Automatic.recording of~thc results: of metisurements
on a stTip-~chart recorder is possible.,
urganoppq; hprous;-,(;omppUndS,~
[T
USSR IJDC 63~.954
'GRAPOV, A. F., LEBEDEVA, N.Y., MEL'NIKOV, -N. V. ,'SERCEYE',T7A,T,,.,A.,,.. STONoV,
L. -D.~. TITOVA. L. M.. and All.Union Scientific Research
~,/'N"qC31'7-iso
Isophos-2, CICH2 were tested on many plants, including
OCOH ~-2,4
3CII
Co&,spur grass (Echinochloa crus-galli),.and.rice grass (Echinochloa oryzicola) ,
the weeds which commonly grow with rice. Application of: 2-6 kg isophos-I or
-)/ha killed 100'/ of the above weeds.: The
lsOphos est time foe-application of
the heibicides was before scr-ying of rice, or prior to its sprouting. A surface
application produced the best results., Both types of isophor, in 4-8 kg/ha
doses were toxic to earden orache, amaranth,~ and white ben't. Field pennyrress,
spring wild oat, and,knotweed were of average sensit:ivity toward isophos.
1/2
.7
77
-103
C1.1APOV, A. F. et al., hgrokhimiya, No 1, 1972, pp 96
Among.the cultivated plants, rice was most~resistant toward this heibicide,
followed by Lill
heat, oats, and barley (most sensitive). Cotton, beans, radishes,
and sunflmTers are resistant to isophos, but, sugar beets~and flax are sensi-
tive~ , Carrots were most resistant to. isophos in doses of 1-4 IS/ha and
tomatoes and cucumbers showed medium resistance. Isophos,was 100% effective
against rice grass in neadow-marshy, soddy-podiolit,, and~sierozem soils. It
vas oul 5
y 83-97% effective in soils.with high,humus~content. Effectiveness
of, isophos lasted for 30-10.0 days after application. Analysis of the soil
horizons indicated that it remained mainly in the top 0-1.6 cm of soil., The
-roperties of amid
structure of the aryl radical determines the~phytoto~dc p~ es
of thio-,and di.thiophosphanic acids. Presence.of two Cl i1toms in the phenyl
group increases the herbicidal.effe6t.s ~of 6eselcompoundsIi~
212
26 -
'F ME OF,
M- E NO ~A-G; ~M Pip
USSR
VOLKOV, A. A., VOLKOLUPOVA, R. T.
The Problem of the Use of Methods of Graph Theary for Calculation of Complex
Network Systems"
Pribory i Sistemy Avtomatiki. Resp. Hezhved- Ternat. Na-uch.-Tekhn. Sb.
[AutomatiDn Instruments and Svstems.~ Republic Interdepartmental Thematic
Scientific and Technical Collection), 19,73) No.26, pp M-42 (Translated from
Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika, No 6, 1973, Abstract~ No 6V408, by the
authors).
Translation: The principle of decomposition of graphs modeling complex net-
work systems is studied. Amethod is suggested for aggregation Of SUbgraphs
into a single graph in the process of transformation of, initial information
on a graph into a system of equations describing the given network system.
A-method of selection of all and the optimal:(accordin to a.given criterion)
9
trees of a graph, as well as calculation of this number,~ are studied.
:USSR
uDc: 681 325.3
0V A
A SARAYEV, G. H .
oltage-to-Code Conver er
t
USSR Author's Certificate No 285382, filed~ 16 may 693 piiblished 12 Jan 7.1
(from Kh-Avtonatika, Telemekhanika i VychislitellpayaTekhniks, No 10, Oct
71, Abstract No 1OB475 P)
Translation. Converters are known -which change voltage to divital code and
to a voltage which varies according to a I&w of "trian&]Ar fanctionsit.
-eationp
These converters contain ope I DC amplifiers, a digital-analog con
verter, a reversible counter, and a comparison circuit. ; The proposed con-
verter, which contains two operational amplifiers, a reversible counter, a
comparison circuit, switches,and a biasing source, has t~he following dis-
tinguishing features. The amplifier inputs are connected through the out-
puts~ of some svitches to the outputs of the* corresponding digital-ana-log
converteIrs, to the input, resistors of the convertcr, an& to the feedback
resistors of the amplifiers, and.througl) other,switches tand resistors to the
biasing. source and the outputs of -the-amplifters respectively. The amplifier
1/2
-7
USSR
UDC 621.396.622
VOLKOV A. A. REMIZOV, YE. N.
Selecting the Intermediate Frequencies,of.'the Receiver,for Binary Frequency
A Conversion Circuits with One Heterod
yne
'Tri, 'Mosk.- in-ta inzh. zh.-d. transp. (Works of the Institute of Railroad
Transportation Engineers),19.70, v -Rad-
yp. 30.,~ pp 132-136 (fron Uh Lotekhaika,
Sep-70i Abstract No 9D21).
Translation: In this article a procedure,is proposed for determining the
heterCdYne frequencies and first-intennediate frequenc! vith respect to a
given. secondlintermediate frequencyj and the sign,
al frequency. Relations
obtained'whi- relate the,mentioned freque
ar.e- -h ncies to e,,,.ch other for all
possible cases. By the given second intermediate frequeacy, harmonic
number of the heterodyne and the-frequency, it is possible to calculate the
first intermediate.frequency and.then check the exclusion of combination
noise in the signal reception channel graphically. The bibliography has two
entries.
L11
USSR
VOLKOV. A. F., KOGLN, Sh M
M. (Institute,of Radio Engi eering and Electronics,
USSR Academy of Sciences)
str
"Collisionless Relaxation of the Energy,.Gap in Superconductor
Moscow, Zhurnal Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki, November 1973,
pp 2038-2046
Abstract: Equations for the Green functions with coin~zldinj times are
derived which describe the dynamics of superconductors,over a Deriod of
time which is small compared with the electron energy Telaxation times
Tp and -ree- The time evolution of small initial perturbations of the
h
order parameter A is investigated.,:i- It it.fo-dnd- that i6r initial pe=12rba-
tions of a-certain type the energy 6ap relaxes o~aly at 'the expense or in-
elastic electron collisions during.times:of the order of Tph and T,,,. In
the general case the order parameter for t- z_~, =) asignal of boncorrespondence (-- or between
two code numbers or a signal of their equality W, alle: used to m-rform
operations of associative code comparison.. The proposed device differs in that
in it the 7miltidigit logic circuit in each digit uger; tiro oppouinrl voltage-
stabilizing tubes connected to the volta6e_6+,j:xbilizin!,-, -Eubes ot the next diCit
thmiVi a jr-rallel-connected resistor and capacitor. . Tbo. anotLa of the low-
order digit voltage -stabilizing tiSbe is connected throuj,~-,h thia resistor to the
zero line. The anode of the high-order tube:is connected to.the output !in-- of
'This simrylifies the device and,makes ;it more reliable.
the device.
MR UDC 66~?.1,5-15~6.5:669-017-3
1701MOV A. N. Kcatro:r:a Agricultural.-Tristitute "K ,Lrav'ai'!e"*o
"Transformations in the Surface Layers of Awnganese Cast- Iror-I Vith Abrasive Wear"
No-scow, MLetailovedeniye i Ter,,,Llcheskaya..Obi~~otka MetaIllov, 11o 12, 1970, pp 12-
Abstract- It is sug.gested that the high wear resistancrit of irim-ganese cast iron
is due specifically to deconiposition processes occurring in the- surf ace layer
-1 - - r has shown that ~.abrasive wear of, parts
during service. X-ray diffraction stud5
from IChG7Ch, MOM, IChG'IlCh, IMG11M,~and IChG11U c4ist irons effects a -
transformation (austenite is transformed io martensite),~ a olight decrease in
the lattice parameter, a re-duction in thesize of crystaI blocks, and an in-
crease of microdistor-li ions. Data on the phage,compositiOns of -thin surface
layers of parts made from cast iron a3 cast, are presented. in %- -table. The
least wearr is exhibited by parts made from cast iron wifJ,i 11% !MIg and high, con-
tent of carbon. The highest wear is shown in aU tests, by parts from. IGh01 1
with lamellar graphite.
u,
0 121 NC LAS S I F f E D 'ROCESSING DATE-ZONOV70
~-~-TJTLE--UJACLTYLENE OLRIVATIVES: XVAI.. S.Y14f+iCSIS OF.UHILGAPHL-~YLENYINF AND
A;
EfH'E.. THIO~ E THERS iANO AM[INES ~U-
m.~~.AUTHOR-(Cl+)-VuLKOV, S&VUATSOV, YU.M., DANDA I f . SHOS rA.-,OV SK I Y
'm. F , t
Uf f NiFU-L 5 Sil
'-SCURCE---ZH. GfiG. KFI'I. 1~)70r -902
5 897
!:-DATE. FUEL ISEED--70
-SUBjECT A k LS --C i-EM I S r kY
-S LS r,41 GL E: T I i C I-, C C N UN SA T I U-N
AMINE !E- I kiA,T- I V E'j, APOPIATIt, A1,11NE
C" Tx, C L4,~ ~K I A G-- 1% G; RS IT0!"1 S
pkoXY S, i'L L i f-1 c 13,
-j" C E! L
Q, 12 D T C- - 20 N "i V 7 0
212 ~IC LASS I F I L P. S S I NG
C URC ACCE S 1:1 1 ~]:-i Nil- +"p I
'T/ E" STRALT UNDEP
.4 S T v A I. T R C. U C, f F E. C -;Si~ T I C N UF PHC TRIPLE
M '3G' L) C, I 'I I T t i I (C, H R IS Eyv 'C C E OF KOH
c 8U J I ~N I'F, E P R a L-
P
G A V E 6 5 - 7 GP F H. (1- E IN f PH, c r I P L E' SIMIlj'.ALy t~%lrli PHC
T ~d. I P L E i,,C ", 1; C h. - C t- b 0 1 0 f. TRIPLE 6~:lqj CLf1-'CHSkl 113 L L i i", P R I I UA L 5
',-,E?,E PREPIU. T Hl~ REA'-TIGN UiR 'dI'TH
U 'PHC TR I PLE
R :CHC T.,~IPLE -t,) r -P
L CF BL,v) LH ~AVI- P T i~, I P L E, e i Ul , C G T R .,' P- L E jjCij~)
T 'ET PREN).
, R I . I C C TRIPLE B T HE
ANA LZ G C US L 'Y P1 I C PLE CCH: U6
SEALEU TL&f- ;'EACTf(.:N L-. I f. E. I Ai'10 HNE I U fl 2 G AV f-- "FiC Tz:,,IPLE BOND
'1;)N~ P D 5 . GA V,-~ TH E
CCP:GH%Ll 50~Z. T HE l;Y'LjkJG~NATl0,N OF :THE A 3 b kJ L- t,
EXPEC TEG CIA T f. ET,
HE R S THIC ETHEKS. I L I TY: IRKUTSK. INST.
OR, G . Kfi If-!. i I vKUTSKr US S R
kj~-if, LA f F i t~ D
'PROCESSING DATE-30OCTIC
1/2 022 UNCLASSIFIED,
:TITLf-DI ACETYLENE DERIVATIVES. 17. SPECTRAL STUDY::OF THE MULT1.13LE EFFECT
or. HETEROATOMS AND MULTIPLE BONDS IWENYNE SYSTEMS -u-
AUTHOR-( 041 -S HERG INA vN. IvG0LGVAN0VA#,,N..;l..t NIKOLSKAYA, A.N., VoLKOV,
'A ul.
Uv ..SPECTRUM* CONJUGAtE
~USSR UDG 621.AB5.6
VOLKOV, A.P., SHCHEDRIN, I.S.
"High-Frequency Field Or Iris Waveguide AndSome Problems Of The Dynamics Cf The
'Longitudinal Motion Of ElectronoV
V Bb. Uskoriteli (Accelerators--Collection Of, Works), No 12, Moscow, Atomizdat,
(from Klh-Elektronika~ i XeX a - primene niye iNo 10i: October. 1 70,
1970, PO '9
Abstract No 16A24)
Translation: This paper is concerned with a thorough experimental investigaticrt by
meano of measurements of the changes (modulation) of amplitude and phase of the
longitudinal component of an electrical high-frequenoy field along the axis of the
round iris waveguide of a linear accaleratori The results of the meaBuresente are
used for a calculation of the dynamics of the longitudinal.motion of electrona in
this waverguide. The nonraeonsnt method of omall porturbstibna is used during the
meaeuremente. T e error of determination of the relative phave Velocity frolu the
conducted tit
meseuremetits date z~,~ 6 percent (can be redu od). Mosourema to wort,
two sections of different -weiveguides with var'isbla dimonsilotiv along the weveguide.
The dependence is shown of the AM and FM high-frequency fiald along the axis of the
ucture, the rjcde of the oscillations
waveguide, on the period of the wavogulde atr U
which are used for acceleration, and the radium of the relative aperture of the
iris. The calculations showed. that taking account of the mcdulatlon and phase of
the accelerating high-frequency field has a strong effect on the vutput spectrum
of the accelerated electrons and on the part of the alote-trono captured in an
B*601eration regime. 7ref. D.Ya.
-290
-2/3 OC9 UNCLASSI F-I ED
OCESSING DATE--13NOV70
Pit
~-CIRC ACCESSIr
CN NO--AP0108425
GP-0- ABSTRACT. TECTGNICALLY,, THE REGION OF TATAR
-:.STRAIT9 BEING A CONTINUATION OF THE DEEP VA'TER 55EA OF J,',PA,xl z3ASI,\,, IS
SITUATED IN THE TRANSITION ZGNE FROM THE :ASIATIC CONTINENT TO THE
PACIFIC OCEAN'. DURIING THE SUMMER :AND AUTUMN OF 19(,6 TIE 0 1 v I S [ON OF
::..--MARlNE- GEOPHYSICAL WORK OF THE ALL UNIO~4- C[ENTIFI-'
S RESEARCH INSTITUTE
OF GEOPHYSICS,FOR THE FIRST TIME CARRIED OUT M'%RINE SEISMIC STUDIES IN
JHE TATAR STRAIT BY THE METHOD OF CONTINUOUS PROFILKiNG BY THE REFLEr.TED
RAVES 4111ETHOD. POST GF THE WORK WAS, PGN~ O~.THE SAKHALIN: ISLAIND SHELF 1,14
~TPE SECTOR BETWEEN CAPE LAiMANO-N AND THE SOUTHEASTERN SHORES OF DELANGLI
GULF. WITHIN THIS AREA THREE SEISMIC PROFILES mrEPSECT TA'fAi STRAIT
FROM SAKHALIN TO THG ASIATIC CONTINENT I N A LAITITUDENAL DIRFCTION (FIG.
I iS A.MAP OF THE WOPK AREA.) THE COLLECTED DATA TNDICATE THAT THE
STRUCTURE OF THE UPPER PART OF THE SEDIMENTARY CCMPLEX IS CHARACTERIZED
FOR THE MCST PART BY TWO GROUPS. OF DEPOS.ITS. T4 AR~A CAN BE imloLic
ANTO EASTERN AND WESTERN PARTS 0,nJHE BAS-15:*OF THE !S.EISMIC DATA. THE
EASTERN PART, CORRESPUNDING IN GEOMORPHOLOGICAL RESPECTSJO THE SHELF
NEAR SAKHALIN, IS CHARACTERIZEDBY WELL EXPRESSED:,61SLOCATION OF THE
DEPOSITS. THE DURATION OF THE SEISMICRECORD,HERE VARIES FROM 1.4-2.0
SEC, LESS FREQUENTLY 2.5 SECYAN SY.NCLINA,L,OOWNWARPS'TO 'Z).7-0.9 SEC AND
~CGMPLETE DISAPPEARANCE IN ANTICLINES. THE WESTERN PhRT CORRESPONDS 70
T
HE ABYSSAL..SECTOR AND THE EASTEkN SLGP.EiOF~;wTHE STRAIr. -THE SEISMIC
:,AECORD IS CHARACTERIZED BY A GREAT.bUlt-ATIONi UP TO 3 1, 0- 3.5 SEC. THE
:~-STRUCTURE OF THIS REGION IS DESCRIBED IN;OETAIL.~
UNCLASS.IFIED
/3 '009 UNCLAS51HEIJ" PROCESSING DATE 131
NOV70
ClAC. ACCIzSS I ON. NO-
.7-AP0108425
T PACT ' THE_ - ARINSKAYA FOLDED ZONE, DETECTED BY THE
R ACT 7- LAMANON-TCM
F L E C-T E '' HfN THE SAKHALIN-HOKKATDO
D 14AVB~,MFTHOD, IS SITUATED~VIIT
_FOLOEO~'PEGION, IN THIS 1~.SECTOR'-CO INC tD ING Wi'fH THE SHELF
G,SAKHALIN.- THE FOREDEEP~GF THE TATAR STRAIT IS SITUATED TO
WEST; IT.-l_IS:.GEsNFTICALLY RELATED TO T14E PRESENT DAY ABYSSAL
EP'kESSION.~GFITHE SEA OF JAPAN. THE WESTERN MARGIN OF THIS DOWNWARP IS
40TALLY-SUPERPOSED Ot.11 STRUCTURES OF THE SIKHOTE-ALIN' fiND THE EASTERN
',""-SlKH0TE-ALIN' VOLCANIC ZONE. THE NEW FOLDED ZONE OfTECTEO ON THE
'AK hA L I N' SHELF IN THE SAKHALIN PETROLEUM AND GAS ACCUMULATION. ALL THE
~_S
LIPLiFrs ARE FOUNO AT SEA -DEPTHS UP TO 100 M ikN0 INUST OF THE
4
FOLDS BARE ACCESSIBLE FOR MARUNE DRILLING, THE FOP,[-QEEP OF TATAR STRAIT
MUST BEI.REGARDED AS A MAJOR REGION ~GF PETROLEUM AND GAS FORMAT I ON
~_7:" 7
'LA.
U~SR
NOVAK, I. I., Physico
MQQIXOV,~ A. S-1 WTMI A. A., !J' MENKOV, G. V. ,
technical institute imen! A. F Io~fe,:USSR Academy of Sciences, Leningrad
Quantun Yield of the Photocond~ctiye*Effect. in Germanli-=
L6iingrad, Fizika Tverdogo Tela, Vo 706-27,07
-D 7 3, pp 2
1 15, No 9, Se-
Abstract: To explain-the contradictions in previous e~-perimental data on
yield of'the Dhotoco
the quantum nductive effect in,germa-nium, the authors
investigate the spectrum for this semiconductor at room temperature in
the photon energy region of 1-1.9 ev. The results sho-w that within linits
of experimental error of �3% the quantum yield of the photoconductive ell-
feet of gerrmnium in this enerFy region remains.constanti The authors
thank. A. 11. Imenkov, D. N. Nusledov, A. A. Plogachev, and !I. V. Tsarenkov
for taking part in discussion of the experimentaIresults,
14
777777-777=77
USSR UDC: 621 .3T4.5
VOLKOV, A. S., CHINENKOVA, S.1V.
"On the Selection of Material for Acoustic Lines in Magnetostriction Delay
Lines"
Tr. uchebn. in-tov syyazi. 14-vo svyp-zi SSSR (Works of Academic Institutes of
Communications. Ministry of Communications:of -the USSR), .1970, vyp. 51,
pp 165-172 (from'RM-Radiotekhnika, Ito 5, May 71, Abstract No 5G292)
Translation: The authors study the coefficient of dynamic.magnetostriction,
mechanical figure of merit, Curie point, reversible permeability and tempera-
ture coefficient of delay of magnetostrictioh delay lines*made from 42NKhTYu,
44NEhTYU and H45KhT pre cipitat.ion-h ardened Elinvar alloys as a function of
heat-treat temperature. Taking an estimate of the effect Vnich,the proper-
ties of the material of the acoustic line have on the characteristics of the
delay line as a basis, the authol-s~.present'recommendations,on the selection
of acoustic line material for different deleky.lines. Bibliograp1hy of six
titles. Res
ume.
154