................
USSR UDC 8.74
V..
'Y& ~Vi UkUT~AN R' Lf~
_.~,N_: N. AEGIAZAR, 49,
7777777.
flOrganization of the Dictionaries of th e. Garni Computer"
Tr. Vvchisl. tsentra AN ArmSSR i-Yerevan.-un-ta (Works of the Computation
Center of -the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences and Yerevan 'University) , 19 i2,
No 7, pp 120-139 (from M-Klbernetika, No 9, Sep 72, Abstract No 9V561)
Translation: The synthesis of an automaton which realizes associative access
is presented. It is.demonstrated that the given associative access system
differs advantageously from the known ones in that the proportion of the dic-
tionary information retrieval;time in the! total trans4tion time is reduced
appreciably.
USSR
BRbTYAN, V. K.
"One Mathematical Model of the DistributIon of Production Programs Among
Dependent Objects"
Sb. tr. Tsenty. N.A. lab. Avtomatizir. Sistem upr. nar. kl-vom [Collected
Works of.Central Scientific Laboratoty for Automation of Systems of Control
of the National Economy], No 1,11971, pp 49--)2, (Translated from Referativnyy
Zb:urnal, Kibernetika, No 2, 1972, Abstract No 2 IV607-unsigned).
Traaslation: An analysis. in the spirit of the, theory of controllable
Markov processes.
LU
1/z 018 UN C L AS S 1'r- t fi. 0 PkOCESMG DATE--040EC7(2
:.T:ITLE--GENETIC ANALYSIS OF ULTRAVIOLET LESIONS OF PHAGE TRANSFOR14ING DNA
1~', C. 10 fFOR 'THE HOMOLOGOUS
'Rif PRIME POSITIVE MARKERS* 1. SIZE OF 'TH*E PEG W
~.AUTHOR.W3)-ALEKSANDROVAt N.M.1 VARTANYANY R.Gy~-j VINETSKIY, YU.P.
~.COUNTRY-OF INFO--USSR
;'SO.URCE-GENETIKA 1970v 6(3), 97-10.0
,-DATE PUBLISHED ------ 70
_.~,SUBJECT-AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
,:TOPIC~TAGS_DNAt UV RADIATION BIOLOGIC EFFECT, ESCHERICHIA COLIt CELL
P.HYSIOLOGYt MOLECULAR STRUCTURE~
:CONTROL- MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO
,PROXY-REEL/FRAME--3003/1139 STEP NO--VR/04731-(0/00,6100310097/0109
CIRC ACCESSION .NO--APOL30167
-2/2 018 UNtLASSI F I ED PkOCESSING DATE--040EC70
C.IPC ACCESSION NO-AP0130163
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, _THE CURVES OFIRII PRIME POSITIVE
MARKER SURVIVAL (IN PHAGE T4 TRANSFORMEO'BY UV.IRRADIATEO DONOR DNA)
HAVE BEEN INVESTIGATED IN EXPTS. PERFORMED IN ESCHERICHIA COLT B
~SPHEROPLASTS. FOR ALL THE :DELETIONS STUDIED, THESE CURVES SHOW A RAPID
DROP AT LOW UV DOSE FOLLOWED BY A LENEARREGION *- EXTRAPOLATION OF THE
STRAIGHT LINF REGION TO LERO UV DOSG INDICATES THA'r ABOUT HALF OF THE R
-PRIME POSITIVE RECOMBINANTS APE DESTROYED, AT LOW DOSEs WHILE THE OTHER
HALF~ is IMUCH MORE RESISTANY TO U.V AND! REPRESENTS lik DISTINCT CLASS OF R
'PRIME POSITIVE RECOMBINANTS. THE DONOR MOLS., WHICHFIRST COM-31NE WITH
,THE NONIRRADIATED PHAGE RECIPIENT, ARE~ LATE.R INCORPORATED IN THE RAPIDLY
DELETED RII PRIME POSIYIVE MARKERS (EXPTS4 WITH DELETION 164).
WEEN THE SIZE OF DONOR ONA''MOLS. AND. THEIR SENSITIVITY TO
COMPARISON BET~
UV INDICATES THAT THE REGION OF PAIRING OF DONORiAND ACCEPTOR 14OLS. IS
FACXLITY: INST4:GEN. GENET.v MOSCOW#
_800~~900 NUCLEOTIDES LONG*
Oil UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
TITLE--CHEMISTRY OF UNSATURATED COMPOUINDS4 SYNT~4ESI,S AND SOME REACTIO;"IS OF
TERTIARY( ALLYLETHYNYL)CARBINCLS- ~U-
.-AUTHOR (.03)-PIRENYANt S-K., KINGYANt F.~S* ~VARTANYANj SoA#
_t.OUNTRY 'OF INFO--USSR
il..SOURCE----~-ARM. KHI,4. ZH. 1970t 23(2), 140-iS
POLISHED ------- 70
UBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY
TOPIC TAGS--ACETYLENE, ALCOHOL, 'ALLYL CHLORIDE, I SDKER I ZAT TON, BUTENE,
CHEMICAL SYNTHESISP HETEROCYCLIC NI TROGEN COMPOUND , HET EROCYCLI C OXYGE14
COMPOUND# AM114E
MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFtED
,~PROXY FEEL/FRAME--1995/1444 STEP NO--UR/0426/70/023/002/0140/0142
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0116886
2/2 Oil -UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
CIRC ACC E-S S, I ON NO--AP0116886
ABSTRACT'/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. TERTIARY ACETYLENIC CARBINOLS RR
PRIME C(OH)C TRIPLE BOND CH (1) REACT. WITH ALLYL CHLORIDE OR BROMIDE AND
l-.r3tDICHLORO,2,BUTENE AT 40-50DEGRHS UNDER N IN THE PRESENCE OF CL) SUB2
CL SUB2 AND AN AQ. SOLN. OF NH.SU84 CL TO GIVE RR PRIME C(OH)r TRIPLE
BOND CCH SUB2 CH:CXR DOUBLE PRIME (11), X BEING F1 OR CL AND R DOUBLE
PRI-ME BEING H OR ME. ISOMERtZATION OF 11 (X EQOALS H) WITH HGSO SUB4
(fill IN MEOH AT 30-5DEGREES GAVE-RR PRI14E C:CHCGCH SUB2 CH(OME)ME (IV).
SIMILARLYt 11 (X EQUALS'CL) GAVE RR PRIME C:CHCOCH.SUB2 CH:CCLME (V).
11 (X'EQUALS H) WERE CYCLIZEO TO VI BY TREATMENT~;WITH,IOPERCENT H SUB2
SO SUB4 AND 111. (ADDITIONAL SYNTHESIS AND REACTIONS SHOWN ON
MICROFICHE), FACILITY:~JNST.~ ORG. KHIM.I.EREVANY USSR.
:112 010, UNCLASSIFI'C-D~i PROCESSING 0ATE--ZJt)LllU
TITLE--VINYLACETYLENE CHEMISTRY. LXXXVI,lo. ACETr -ENE, ALLENESCUMULENE
~~-REARRANGEMENT DURING THE REPLACEMENT:bF CHLOP:NE,dY AMINES IN
,,AUTHOR-103)-VARTANYAN# S.A,q BARKHUDARYANP M.R.* BADANYAN, SH..O.
C OUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--ARM. KHIM. ZH. 1970t 23tl)t 31-71
------- 70
ATE PUBL
AREAS--CHEMISTRY
,~'_TOPlC-TAGS--ACETYLENEt ALLENE, CHLORINEt :AMINEt HALOGENATED ORGANIC
:COMPOUND
':;C~ONTkOL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
fjOCUMENT CLASS--UtICLASSIFIED
:-:-PROXY REEL/FRAME--1995/1446 STEP ND--Uk/0426/701023/001/0031/00--17
.CIRC ACCESSION NO-00116687
UNCLASSIFtED
------- ----- --
, LAS" ti"IlE D--~-- --
-UM, ~>
-1/2 003
-TITLE-ALKYLATION OF PHENCLS
-A-LCOH(3LSI CHLORIDES,
A,UTHOR-1013J-VA
COUNTRY Of IPJFD~--USSR
UNCLAISSI.PI.ED PkOCE~SING OATE--160CT70
'AND THEM FTHERS BY I.S,)Pk0PElJYL ACETYLENIC
AND DIViNY(XET0NES -U-
SsA.t VARDAPTEYANt '-..K., BADANYANt SH40.
CfiA.0RJlJ-r_r KFTOi'-IE
ROXY REEL/FRAME--1995/1454 STEP NG--UR/0426/70,10231001/0085/0038
IRC.ACCESSION NO--AP0116891
UNCLASSIFIED
.008
212 UNCLA$SIFIE:D PROCE$SUNG DATF-16OCT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0II6891
_-ABSTRAGWEXTRACT-M GP-0- ABSTRACT TO A MIXT. OF 0.1 MOLE OF A PHENOL
AND 5 ML H SU83 PO SUB4 WAS ADDED D6WISE 0-1 MOLE
DIALKYLIS(JPROPENYLETHY-,',.YLCARBINUL9 AND THE MIXT.:HEATED 30 HR Al
16,0-70DEGREES TU GIVE 211,P PRIMFI (RO) C SUB6 H SLI33 CK PRIME2 R PRIME3
C TRIPLE BOND CC f4E:CH SUL12,4, (Ri R PkUME1, R PRI.NIE-2, 14 PRImE3, PERCENT
YIELD,.B.P. (Ml N PRIME20 SUBD~AND D?Rl'E20 GIVEN)". (SHOWN ON
fl
MICROFICHE). FACILITY: I NS T. IORG. KHIM.. ~EREVAN, USS.R.
!-7-77777777777--~---7
212 0,20 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
~CIRC- ACCESSION NO--APOL25225
GP-0- ABSTRACT. ~STUDY OF THE COOLING TIME AND
INTERh
IAL CHARACTERISTICS OF HOT NEUTRON STARS OF $MALL MA55. ON THE
'BASIS OF AN EVALUATION OF THE HERTISPRUNG RUSSELL:LIIAGRAM FOR WHITE
DWARFS AND NEUTRGJN STARS OF SMALL mAss IT IS REGAkDED AS PHYSICALLY
UNLIKELY THAT SUCH NEUTRON STARS.ARE FORMED AS A~RESULT OF CATASTROPHIC
PROCESSES ZCCURING OURING.THE COLLAPSE OF STARS W[.TH A,,14ASS GREATER THAN
THE.-RAXIVUM MASS OF STA13LE WHITEIDWARFS. ~FACILITY:
BIURAKANSKAIA ASTROFIZICHESKAIA OBSERVATORIIA; EkEVANSkll
GOSUDARSTVENNYI UNIVERSITET, YEREVAN, 'ARMENIAN SSR:*
UNCI
..............
USSR uDc: 577.1:615.7/9
FZZEUMAN, L. M. and
"Activity of Alkali Phosphatase.of Liver and Bloo;i Serum After Treatment with
Dichlorob utene"
Zh. ekspeerim. i klinich. med. (;Journal of Exparimantal~and Clinical Mp-dicine),
vol II, No 1, 1971, pp 27-33 (from Referativnyy Zhurnal -- Biologichtskaya,
'10 15P1710)
nimiYa~, go 15, 10 Aug 71,, AbstractI
Translation: Inhalational intoxication.of rats with dichlorob-atene in
concentrations from 0-1 to 3 mg/1 ofairl(once or,daily for 45 days or 5 mOnths)
induced increased activity of alkaline phosphat-ase in the liver and blood serum.
The degree and nature of these changes are directly related to concentration
of the poison and the exposure tirad.
Abstract. Leukocytes isolated from the peripheral blood of dogs and treated
with Newcastle disease virus strain A produced interferon, whose activity
varied with the dose of the interferon inducer, the number of leukocytes, and
the time the leukocytes were used (freshly isolated cells were best, while
refrigeration of cell suspensions for 24 and especially.48 hours markedly
reduced their capacity to produce -interferon). Single wholc--~Ibody X-irradia-
con titers on,dayq J1 and 7 after
tion (400 r) uIgnificauLly IM-10red interfe
exposure fit morit of rhe dogo.- A Mild courne of rud-Lation nitil,noar, occurred
in those animals in which irradiation did not iiapair Lhat! flyathoSIG Of leuko-
cyte Interferon. Analysis of interferon isolated Irom dogs before and after
irradiation ahowed that it wast identical in: re-vistanct to beating to 56*C
for 30 minutes mid sensitivity to trypsin.
U2 013 U-~t L ASI I CcD ROCESSING DATL-27NOV70
TITLE--4PPARATUS FOR OETERMINING VAPOR PRESSURE A010 BOILING Pouii-s OF
LIQUIDS!-U-
AUTFOR-(03)-VARUSHCHENK0, R.M.t GALCHE4KO? G.L., SKURATOVr S.M.
.COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
__SOURCE--ZH* FIZ. KHIM. 19701 -4411)
2 813-5
PU8LISHED ------- 70
~SUaJECT AREAS-PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY
TOPIC TAGS -CHEMICAL LABORATORY APPARATUS,. VAPOR PRESSURE, CHEMICAL
PURITYr BOILING
C CN T R 0 L-4 A RK I N G--N 0RESTR. ICTION's
90-CUMIENT GLASS--tJNCLAMFfED
PROXY REGL/FRAIME--1994/1004 STEP NO--UR/0016/70/(J"i-4,/001/02,33/02P~,5
A CC E S S 1 ON N Q --A P 0 115 0 2 5
--UNCLAS -1 F I F
2/2' 013 UNCLASS[FIED ..PROCESSING DATE--27NOV70
-..:CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0115025.
AB&TRACT/EXTRACT-M GP'-O- ABSTRACT. THE EBULLiOSCOPIC l'--,ETHOQ WAS USED
FOR DETG. THE VAPOR PRESSURE AND B.PS. OF LIQS, AT 40-2-00DEGREES AND
30-660 MM HG. THE ADVANTAGE OF THE :,METHOD IS THE -MEASURE-MENT OF THE
DEGREE OF PURITY OF LIO. COMPOS. ACCORDING ro TI:I*ETR B.PS. THE APP.,
WHICH INCLUDES A DIFFERENTIAL EBULLIOSCOPE, A HG MANOMETEi AN
R t
ELECTRIJ'4AGNETIC VALV[t AN y R~, OF NIS DtSCqlrlE0 IN DETAIL. THE
D A C LUNDE
PRECISION OF THE MEASUREMENIT WAS PLUS Oft MINUS Q.0040EGREES AND THE MAX.
DIFFERENICE FOR THE PPESSURE MENSUREMENT. 14AS 1,41 THIN 0.02-0.09 N14 HG.
METHYLCYCLOHEXAME AND N DECANE WERE: USED AS TES;Ti COMPOS . ANO THE RESULTS
~WERE VERIFIED BY CHROMATOG FACILITY: MPSK. G0S# UNIVo
-LOMONOSOVA, MOSCOW, USSR.
UINCLASS I IL
JED
USSR
VARVAK. L. P.
"One Generalization of the Kernel of aGraph"
Mr. Mat. Zh. [(Ukrainian Mathematics Journal], 1973, Vol 25, No pp 95-99
(Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Klbernetika, No 6, 1973, Abstract No
OV383, by the author).
Translation: The concept of the quasi-kernel is introduced, an algorithm
-is indicated for construction of all quasi-kernels and kernels, estimates
of their number are found and the form of quasi-kernels in the sun. of graphs
is studied (see RZhMat, 1971, ISV390).
USSR
DEKHTYAR, A. S., VARVAK, 14. S H-
'"Limiting Equilibrium of Flat Shells under the Effect of a Load Distri-
buted over Part of the Surface"
issled.-po stroit. mekh (Structural Mechanics Researda), Thilisi,.Hetsni-
Yerebla Press, 1970, pp 94-103.(from )L~h-_HekhanikaL Vo, 11, Nor 70, Abstract
No 11V409)
Trapslation; This article contains a study of the limiting equilibrium
of Yreely- supported square and round shells in the plan view made of an
ideal rigid-plastic material. It is assumed that exhautution of the
supporting capacity in accompanied by the formation of Plastic hinlres
along certain lines on the surface. Th.9 upp~dr bound of; the nupporting
-.capacity is.found by the kinematic method of the theory.of limiting equi-
'librito. ~ Exhaustioa of the supporting capacity is aldb;studied in con-
nection with stamping of the shal,
The mid surface of a flat shell which is square in the plan view Is
assumed in the form of a paraboloid of rotation
2 2 2:
1/2 z f(x + y )/a
A
USSR
A. S., et al., Issled. _pio stroit. mekh (Structural Mechanics
Research), Tbilisi, Metsniyereba.Press, 1970, pp 94-103
where 2f is the rise of the shell at the center; 2a is the length of the
side of the shell in the plan view. The shell has a constant thickness
6. Its edges can be shifted freely in the horizontal direction. The
vertical load is distributed uniformly over part of the surface. The
horizontal projection of the loaded area has the shape:"of a square, and
it is arranged symmetrically withxespect,to the center of the shell.
The.shell.material follows the idealized...Hises diagram ln~:addition, it
is assumed. that.'a+ -C< a-.. Aere'. 6t and -e, iare thetensLe and compressive
yield strengths of the material.-respectively.
2/2
I Jl 035 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
oTITLE-ESTIPIATIGN OF YHE UPPER LIMIT OF THE CARRYING CAPACITY OF SHELLS OF
UNDEa THE EFFECT OF INTERNAL GAS FLOW ~U-
14.SH.
OF INFIO-USSR
-..,sGURCE-7PRGBL.EMY PROCHNOSTI, VOL. 2t MAR'.: 11970, P., 63-64
0 A T EPUBLISHED - ----- 70
AREAS-PHYSICS
TOPIC TAGS-ShELL GF PEVOLUTION, REINFORCED SHELL STRUCTURE, SHELL
"_ _.-_~DEFORMATIGNv AVIABATIC FLOW, IDEAL GASo FLOW RATC-
.-C-CNTRCL 14 P R K I N G-0RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME--20001lZ3L STEP NIO--UR/3663/'?"It)02/000/0063/0067
:C I PC ACCESSICN NO-AP0124985
212 035 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
-.C-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0124385
-ABST.
qACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-O-. ABSTRACT. ~ANALYSIS OF ]'HE LIMITING
EQUILIBRfUM OF AN AXISYMMETRICAL SHELL OF CONSTANT THl'c,'-lllql:-5S ;~ElNlzORCED
BY A PEGULAR 5YSTElA OF RIBS# THE-SHELL IS SUBJECIED INTERNALLY TO THE
AVIA2ATIC FLC-14 CF AN IDEAL GAS. GENERAL, FORNIULAS ARE OBTAINED WHICH
.'~:-JIAKE I.T POSSIBLE TO ESTIMATE TH&CARRYING CAPACITY OF THE SHELL WITH
RESPECT TO GIVEi
N GAS FLOW PARAMETERS.
u 14 L' L A S -S I F I El 0
USSR UDC 539.3
VARVAK, P. M., KRAVCHUK, V. S.1 RASSKAZOV, A. 0.
-'Txperimental Study of the Effect,of the- Rigidity of a Tie-Beam cn the
Stress-Deformation State of a Shell in the Form of a iiydrobolic Paraboloid"
V sb. Prostranstv. konstruktsli v Krasnovarskom krffe ~Three-Dimensional
Designs in the Krasnoyarsk Border..-- Collection of Works), Krasnoyarsk,
-252 (from -Mekhanika, No 4, A 14)
pp 243 RZh 70, Abstract No 4V1
Pr
Translation; The change in the stress-deforination state of a shell in the
ith a rectilinear contour is,studied as a
form of a parabolic paraboloid w-,
function of-Ethe rigidity of the diagonal,bond between fae lotier angles of
the thin-walled structure. Authoro abstract.
r, Y, :I I F
UNCLASSIFIED ~.PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
TITLE--RATE OF FORMATION OF.CONDENSATION NUCLEI IN SUPERSATURATED VAPOR
',.AUT,HOR-(03)-8LOKH, A.Gol'BAZAROV9, So M.. iV A R VA S . V
moor
COUNTRY.OF INFO--USSR
-~.'SOURCE-INZH. FIZ. ZH. 1970,:18(3), 467-73
~DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJECT, AREAS--PHYSICS
TOPIC TAGS--VAPOR CONOENSATION, NUCLEATIONi KINETIC, EQUATION, MOLECULAR
.:,~'~.,INTERACTIONt COMPLEX-MOLECULEr-:80ND ENERGY
~CONTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
'-~:OGCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
;.PRIJXY REEL'FRAME
--1996/1437 STEP NO--UR/017C/70/0181003/0467/0473
C.IRC. ACCESSION NO--AP0118426
UNC LA S S 1+ IE D
1, Ilo 14P1 I,
2/2 019 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP01L8426
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. :KINETIC EQUATIONS FOR THE PHASE
TRANSITIONS IN SUPERSATO. VAPOR~MERE DERIVED ON THE BASIS OF THE .
DYNAMICS OF CONDENISATIOPROCESSES. IT~IS.ASSUMEO THAT THE FORMATION OF
AN EQUIL. STEADY STATE COMPLEX OF G, Mot-So IS~PR-ECEOEO BY THE FORMATION
OF INTERMEDIATE UNSTABLE ASSOCS. CONSITING OF A SMALLER NO. OF MOLS.
COLLISION OF 2 MOLS. IS CONSIDERED THE STARTING POINT. A BOND IS FORMED
BETWEEN THEM AND AN UNSTEADY -STATE DOUBLE SATO. C014PLEX APPEARS* SUCH
A MOL. COMPLEX IS DESIGNAT-ED AS ACTIVATED BECAUSE THE BOND ENERGY IS
CONCD. IN IT* THE REMOVAL OF THE 80110 ENERGY FROM THE ACTIVATED COMPLIX
CAN BE BY COLLISIONLESS WITH A 3AD GA~'MOL. OR WITH A SOLID SURFACE.
THE RELATIVE LIFE OF THE ACTIVATEO COMPLEXES~JNCREASE WITH THE NO. OF
MOLS. 'IN THE COMPLEX. THIS~ IS ESP..,N0T.ICEA5LE IN~ICOMPLEX CONTG, LESS
THAN 1'0 MOLS. WITH INCREASING NO. UF~MOLS# 114 THE DEACTIVATED COMPLEX
THE7
-INCREASES NOTZCEABLY*:~
-FREQUENCY OF COLLISIONS~
UNCLASSI-PIED
17
~UDC
USSR
-550.42~546,791
MELIGUNOV, S. V., and VARVARINA, Ye. K.:..
"Use of Neut-ron-Fragment Radiography for .the Study of Distribution of
Uranium in Certain Metamorphic FormatiIns"
0
Novosibirsk, Geologiya i Geofizika, No: 10, Oct 70, pp,38-44
Abstract: The neutron-fragment radiogFaphy method briefly described in
this article is used to determine the nature-of the distribution and
the form of uranium in.ore and rock-foi ing minerals, Most of the
rM
uranium in the outer portions of pegmatoid units is~concentrated in
ilmenites, accessory minerals,and biotite' forming bi~anches and
fringes around the units. The track densities in ilme-nites of vari-
able composition depend on the coatent of.the ilmenite component in
the structures resulting from decomposition of the solid solution,
and indicates a direct correlation between the contents of,uranium and
titanium. The nature of the distribution~of the tracks indicates
isomorphic inclusion cf uranium in thelcrystalline lattice:of the ore
1/2
- - - --------
USSR UDC 550.42+546.1191
MELGULNOV S. V., and VA~R Geologiya i Geofizika,
No 10, Oct 70, pp 38-44
and accessory minerals. In case of rutilization, the uraniiun contained
in the ilmenites is redistributed. The method of neutron-frag-Ment
radiography in combination with lumine~;scent-pearl aniLlysis,indicates
the general direction of migration of Pranium durirg,~formation of
pegmatoid units.
2/2
87
11=M Iasi EMWMF~~Mrlffll 11M. gm HUFF,
USSR UW 539.67
PANIN, V. E., and SOLOVIYEV, L. A.
"Amplitude Dependence of internal Friction of a Series of Concentrated Copper
Solid Solutions"
Sb.."Vnutrenneye treniye v inetallicheskikh materialakh" (Internal Friction in
Metal-lic Faterlals), Moscow, Izd~vo "NaWm,!~ 1970, pr_,lo4_llo
Abstract: Internal friction of single-phased concentrated Cu - Ga and Cu - Ge
solid.solutions was investigated in the raz-4tf
.,e of 10-0-10-3 relative atmilitudes.
An amplitude-inde-pendent region and sections described by linear function
appeared on characteristics of the decrement dependence on deformation ampli-
tude.
It is shown that critical stress T1, determininp, the onset of micro-
deformation., depends on alloy concentration and is determined by the resistance
to- motion of a free dislocation from solid solution impurities atoms. The
second critical stress Z" characterizes the app,.,arancp of Irreversible pro-
cesnes-in structure. 5 figuresi 13 ref6rences.
Acc. Nr. - AR6113831 Ref. Code:
USSR UDC: 669.017:539.67
"Hysteresis of the Amplitude Dependence of Internal FrLction of Polycrystalline
Solid Solutions"
Tula, Vzaimodeystviye Mezhdu Dislokatsiyval i Atommni Primesey v Metallakh i
Splavakh -- Sbornik (Interaction Between Dislocations and Admix', re Atcwns in
W
Metals-and Alloys -- Collection of Works). 1969, pp 98-101 (from Referativnyy
Zhurnal, Metallurgiya, No 1, 1970,, Abstract No 11264)
Translation: In the article is discussed the nature of the instability of
the effects of internal friction brought about by the generation of dis-
-o
locati ns, and the redistribution of the initial stresses of the sources with
loading in excess of the critical amplitude Ecr The,concentration
dependence of Ecr" in Cu-Ge alloys has been detected.
19930997
Gal" I'a"
USSR UDC 620.197
VARYPAYEV V. N.
"Corrosion of Metals"
'Leningrad, Korroziya metallov (cf. English above), Leningrad University Press,
1972, 87 pp (from Korroziya metallov.,,1972, pp.2-4)
Translation: This training aid comprises two chapters. The first chapter con-
tains material on the fundamentals of physical metallurgy. The basic laws of
the crystallization of metal, the methods of study and -variation of the struc-
ture of the metal are presented; the standard phase equilibria in binary alloys
are investigated; the relationa of the.diagrams of state to the properties of
the alloys are demonstrated. The second chapter is devoted to the corrosion
of metals and methods of protecting metals from corrosion. A classification of
t-jpes of corrosion is presented, and the inathods of studyini, and.estimating
corrosion are described. A study is made:6f the theoretical prerequisites of
electrochemical corrosion, the effect of external and internal factors on the
process rate, the characteristia.features;of the most widespread types of elec-
trochemical corrosion. When investigating the types ofIchemical corrosion,
primary attention has bi,~,en given to gas corrosion. Among the methods of pro-
tection from corrosion, versions of electrochemical pr:Dtection and also che
treatment of corrosive media have been isolated.
The text is designed for students of the chemical technological insti-
tutes and departments and corr-eGponds. to- the training pro,,rwi-of th-ce coarz-le int
C2
MOVE
USSR
VARYPAYEV, V. N., Korroziya metallov, Leningrad University Press, 1972, 87 pp
11physical metallurgy and the corrosion of metals" approved by the 211inis try
of Hi.aher and Middle Specialized Education of the USSR for students in the
specialty of "electrochemical production:technology.":Ibe publication can be
useful to workers in the chemical-.industr -There are~38 iLlastrations
y and 6
stables; the bibliography has 28-'entries.:
ontents.
Introduction .............................. ........................ 5
Chapter I. Principles of Physical Metallurgy ...................... 7
1. Crystallization and Structure of Metal ................
Construction of Metal ..... ........................
Crystallization of Metal ............................... 10
Variation of the Structure of Hetal ................... 15
Study of the Structure of Metal ......................... 17
9 2. Structure of Alloys ................ ........ - ......... 18
Phase Rule .......... I ................................... 19
Alloy Mechanical Mixture. ............................ 20
Alloy Solid Solution ........................... 22
Alloy Chemical Compound ............................ 26
Secondary Transformations in Alloys ................... 27
Ternary Alloys -30 -
MOT,
USSR
VARYPAYEV, V . N., Korroziya metallov, Leningrad University Press, 1972, 87 pp
Electrolytic Alloys ................................... 311
9 3. Properties of Alloys.~ .................................. 32
~Chapter 'I.
i
.......... I. ...........
Corrosion of Metals .......
-16
� 1. Definition and Methods of.Studying Corrosion .........
Classification ... I .........................
Method of Estimat.ing.Corrosion ........................ 38
Methods of Corrosion Research ........................ 41
5 2.
..........................
Chemical Corrosion ......... 44
F-.-teraal Factors of Gas Corrosion ..................... --
Oxide Films ................. :.......I ................. 46
Methods of Protection from ~Pz 00=01sion 51
Corrosion in Nonelectrolytes, ................ .......... 52
9 3. Electrochemical Corrosion ........... 11~ ............. 53
Causes of the Occurrence of Corrosion ................ --
Corrosion with Hydrogen and Oxygen Depolarization .... 61
Effect of External Factors on~the Corrosion. Rate ..... 65
An F-ffect of Internal Factors on the Carronion %ste 69
Atmospheric Corrosion .................... ........... 71
Marine Corrosion:-" ......
. ...... ........... 74
.
Underground Corrosion ................................ 75
Electrocorrosion ... ...... ........... ...... 76
3/4
VARYPAYEV, V. N., Korroziya metallov, Ldnin8rad University Press, 1972, 87 pp
4. 11ethods of Protection from Electrochemical Corrosion 77
Treating the Corrosion Medi,um ....................... 78
Cathode Protection ........I .......................... 80
Protector Shielding ..................... ............ 82
Anode Protection ........................ ............ 84
Bibliography ................... ......... ....................... 86
414
-196,6711.3
USSR UDC: 621.
KOIAMOWSMr, F. I., UtL -OV, V. jr.
~~Vjl~!, t_V. S., OVSYANII,
"Using Capacitive Elements to increa-se the Bwndwidth of Folded Dipolec"
Moscow, Radiotekhnikaq i Elektronika.. Vol 27, Elo 11, N.ov 72, pp 2429-2h3l
Abstract: An analysis is made of folded dipole antenras vith discretely
connected imredaL-ces, and in particu2ar, vith capacitive, el~!II-entsz. Fesults
are given on calculation and experimental analysis of n. broadband syn-nutric
V antenna uith inserted capacitors. The remalts shcw that the capacitors
smooth out the current distribution on the dipolc~ and prevent phase ip--
versions at current "nodes". Conditions close to the txav.Oirr wavc, -'PrA10
are net up in the atit-enria- Both the input it"'POC1,1111cez; (Ind rod-jution P'---ttern
are stabilizetI, input reactance is considerably reducod in atsolute value
and the resistive component of the input imped-anae if, :r-tabij-1 zed. The V
dipole gives at least 0-5 fcr-thc~TWR in a frequency bjnd 04f '-0-60% as
c oymn
,ared with 201'; for a similar antenna without capacitors.
Ent,6-no 08Y
USSR tal: 6D2.9-~L
VA-SE-CHKO G.I., ITZ12U-sov, M. V. SMELYANLTS V.P., GUZ14YE-NOX, Ukrainian
~~cienlz Research Inst4,ute of Plant P:~otzczion, Institute of Organic
~U
'Che M-stry, Acade=y of Sciences, Msxainian SSR
"Insecticidpl Properties of Scme Components of Essential Oils."
~Kiev, Doklady Akademii Nauk Ukra-.znskoy,SSR. Seriya B,
o 3, 1970, Pr, '75-278
Abstract: Essential oils with inse.cticid.~41 properties are vide spreaa in- the
vegetable kingdom. TIsec'-;cidal proDerties of essentia-I oils in .,7-ild, five-
leaved grapes (which are a-,most never attacked by insects), conifers, grains
and leguumes, rnnint, etc. were determined-, Boils were e4tr~,(-,ted and their active
components isolated by chr-camtography. The LD 50 of oils with respect 1-1.0
insects was determ-ined. Five in,-ecticides Were effective against the Cz)lor--do
beetle., and manny iniecticides aff-ainst larvae of Tribolium deElnictor, O'niong
which cola-mine (ethanolamine), obtained from gerniraatinL.,,~ -,---ed,--;;, is Mther
effective. , A substance by ge~minatirig rye st*,~~ds TO= the ba,313
'fat one of the least i"rmffull ard.mobt poweirfia insecticitles, -N.Aalon.
USSR uDo 62.,~, .822 .3
MTYRYA, V. A., and VA ment of Cerebral Cortex Faysiolo-
T. V., Depart, ZKV
' I
Institute of Physiology imeni-b.~d-. Bogomol~ets, Acadle-W of Sciences Ukraindan
SSR
Analysis of Evoked Potentials With lnitial~Electrone,
;a ivity
Kiev, nilziolohichn~T Zhuxma jV61, 19 Nd,2, 1973, PP~2-71-177
Abstract- Previcnisiy-, the authors delineated two areas in the auditory Cortex
in the anterior and posterior superior regions of the superior te-.I)oral
gyrus -- in which 'the prinmxy evoked potential (F-4,F) N-18.o preceeded by a ne'-a-
tive wave. Presently, further evaluation of these areas was performned under
'ive" centers, and
the influence of cold an:1 mechanical pressure on tbese 'In Eat,
a layer by layer analysis was m- de~ of the focal potentials at ~Ufferent depths
in response to stimdi vith different frequencies (clic1cfng'). 1101 were
obtained from do(gs
obtained with monopolar electrodes; contiIol data im
pentobarbital anesthesia (35 mGlkG). Localized coolino -wao achievcd -vith a
narrow ice-filled test -Woe applied for 1..3 and 5 mi-a (M N CA'allical effeet/'~
and PEP studies were comenced witbin a few cecondr, for 30-0
nin. J,':ech---iical pmssurt~ ,raa aj-1-.,lind by meanr, of an elec:trojO tip (0.r): juli
1/4
72
USSR
MSYRYA, V. A. and VASECMCO., T. V., riziolohichnyy Zh-urnal, Vol 19, No 2, 1973,
pp 171-177
diameter) covered by filter paper soaked with a ph-,ysiolagic solution. Focal
potentials at different depths -were obtained with electrodes 20-50A(in diarne-
ter. The results showed that short-term cooling of the auditory zone A-1 (A-1)
prolonged the duration of the positive -wave on the PE11, but decreased its axoli-
tude; in soLqee cases tile secondary negative wave was elin-Anated. The latent
period of the -response was not altered. . Long-term cooling of A-1 resulted in
-ndr, to iidnutes~ followed by a 6radual
the disappearance of PEP for:severalseco
return: first- the positive vave returned and., 15-20 run later, the negative
wave reappeared. In addition, while prior to cooling -the "+,-" complex of the
PEP was characterized by a negative wave with a much Z2-eater amplitude, after
repeated coolings the wwm,.litudes of the positive and.
n%ceative %raves equal
for some tir)e. In the negative centers ~hort-terin cooling depressed the azmpli-
tude of the negative vave, with its subsequent restoration in 3-5 nin. Long-
term cooling caused the negative potential to0isappear initiplly, and
reappear in 5 to 30 min. In these centers with a "--F" type- of PEP co.,in3lexes,
cooling elijoinated the negative ,mve and,,. on lonFg-term tppLication, depressed
the amplitude of the positive wave. Occasionally, clasrical ~PZP were sei-.n in
these ~entarn on cooling along vith. the PBP vith initlO'
-.7 2/4
~P
1150~ M~MMPMWMR ~OKMW_'
USSR
MMYA, V. A. and VASEEMO, T. V., FiziolohichnYY ZhUrnal, Vol 19, No 2, 1973,
pp 171-177
the former disappeared 10-'30 min after cooling was discontinued. Changes in
J?EP similar to those, elicited by cooling I vere obtaineti vith the application of
mechanical -pressure in A-1 and in the negative centers. Both coolinr- and pres-
sure caused slov rhythms to become dominant on tthe MG. In A-1 proCressive
insertion of electrodes into deeper layers,resulted ir~ inversion of P P
polarity at a depth of 0-5-0-8 rxii- Prior to Inversion, there was a gradual
diminution of the positive wave and eventual disappearance. Subzequently,
negative polarity app-eared with inltially increacing an(i then dccreasing,
-hose
tude and eventual disappearance at 1-5-Z nn, - Superficial electrodes and
at a depth of 0 - 3 mm picked up PEP in response to s i1i with a frequency of
15 hertz. At 0-5 rro. Stim-ali with a frequency of 5 hert;7, elicited PEP occasion-
ally. At 0.6 = polarityreversal occuri-ed vitb a 5 hertz stjxnulus, but a 10
hex7t tz atimullas elicited a response only 5Vp of the tin'le. A-,- 0.9 =-,, the _-noli-
-tude. of the negative potential increased responzes i..,ere Obt-airicd to i,-rcater
frequencies; at greater deDthz the amplitde dAminished,and xrea-ionsivere5s
dropped sha3~-,)ly. Ila inversion of potential vas olbserveO. in the negative cen.
koers, but the armlitude of the neCative 7)6tenUal decre4i-scd as, the alc-ctro~lc-
vas:inaerted dt~epui, with a concomitant deare-ase in rouponsive
ness to hilih
3/4
73
USSR
-11
M
'RYA, V. A. andl VASEECTIKO, T. V., Fizi6lohichnyy Zhurral, Vol 19, No 2,
~1973, PP 171-1-77
frequency stimuli. With the electrode'on ithe cortical surface of the negative
centers, responses with initial electronegativity vere c~btained to stirr-21i
with a frequency of 1r- hertz, at 0.9 mna xasponseq wereL seen only to stbruli
with a freTuency of 5 hertz,. and- at 2 -inmaresponse was obtained to onlY 70;4,
-of the hertz stimuli.
4/4
EM
ft
USSR uDc 66q.14.o18.85:66q-l54.q
BOYCHEMO, Yu. A., and VASEME.' R. V.
"The _P"ect of Vacuum Remelt on Properties of High-Strength Steels for
Rotors":
Moscov, Metallovedeniye, No 5, 1971,, PP 57-59
Abstract:, A study was made of the effect of electric are vacuam remelt (VR)
on properties of the 4r,1131722W-Ts and 42KhSN4TTT-s high-strength steels used for
rotors of high-speed electromotors. Results show that IM decreases the content
of oxides and silicates, results in increased plasticitY, and ductility,
increases t:,.,,e enduxance liveit of wooth specinans, butdoes not affect it on
notched specimens. The favorable effect,'of VR devxeaset;:by the presence in
specimens and parts of rigid stress: concentiMionil intlae form of very sharp
-notches or -cracks.
USSR UDC 616.988.25:313-13(571-55)
BOLISHEV, L.. N., XRUOPIS, Yu
GORIN, 0. Z., LIVOV, D. K.. VAZ
Q
and KORYAKOWSEVA, X. M., Irkutsk Institute or apidem-iology and microbiol,)gy,
f Health RSFSR, Instituto of Viiology imeni, D4 I. lyanovsKiy, Academy
Ministry o
of Medical Sciencos USSR, Hoscov, Mathematics InstituteAmeni V. A. Steklov,
Academy of Sol--nces USSR Moscow, and Republic Sanitary:.~pldemiological Station.
Buryatskaya ASSR, Ulan-Ude
"Calculating the Intensity of Inf ection With Tickborne~Encephalitis of the Popu-
lation of Zabaykalt"
Moscow, Meditsinskaya Parazitologiya i Parazitarnyye Bolezni, Vol 39, No 3,
Ray/Jun 70. pp 259-263
.4bstract: The intensity of infection of the population'li-Ith trickborne ancephal-
itis in the Zabaykall was calculatea, and'also the.rato of infectation of ticks
with the -irus (9-IY~). The analysis was.based on data of sorological examina-
tion of 6,42o persons by the hem-ogglutination test, and on data from questioning
uf 26,781 subjects about their. exposure to tick and attacks 1W ticks during the
epidemic seaaoni Specimens wore-collected in 1966i-1968,in Chttlnskaya Oblast and
the Buryatskaya A-53H. According to tho intensity of Ul'sation, it was possiblo
to 4-ombine the territories sititated,in.Aitferant pbyoicalgeo~raphical and land-
scape conditions into two main landscaPO-epidexiological. areas. One of these
areas, distinguished by an extremely low Intensity of imfection (0.4-0.9~)' in-
cludes the Central Asian arsd Friselenginskaya steppes ai4 the North Zabaykal
mountain taiga. The other area, with higher.intensity of infootion (2-2.1%).
includes the territories within the Daursluya: nountain tniga ard subtaiga, as
we.U as the Pribaykal and South Zaabaykal Uiga arA vubti~iga.
UNCLASSIFIE6~'. I)RPCESSING DATE-30OCTTO
TH TICK BORNE
~TITLE-CALCULATIGN GF THE INT.ENSIrY OVINFECTION 141
ENCEPHALITIS IN THE POPULATION OF. ZABAIKALIE -U-,:
iAUTHOR-t05)-GFJRINw O.Z.i LVOV, DwK.v,VASENlNv A.Af
BOLS.FIEVP L-N.f
KRUGNIC* YU.Iv
COUNTRY:OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE-IMEDITSINSKAYA PARAZITOLOGIYA I PARAZITARNYYE BOLEZNlo 19701 VOL
~39i %R:-ai PP 259-263
,..DATE-PUBLISHED 70
AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
,~TOPIC.-TAGS-ENCEPHALITISt TICKi SEROLOGIC.TESTi HEMAGGLUTINATION
INHIBITION TEST
~~CC4TROL MARKING-NO.RESTRICTIONS
,DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
'OROXY REE-L/FRAME-2000/0222 STEP NOI-UP./0358/701039/003/0259/0263
'CIRC. ACCESSIGN NO--AP0123986
UNCLASSIF180.1
-2/2 '016 'UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-30OCT70
CIRC.ACCESSIGN NC--AP0123986
-:ABSTRAC,T/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT. :ON THE BASIS OF PREVIOUSLY
.PUBLISHED METHODS BY THE AUTHORS CALCULATION OF THE INTENSITY OF
INFECTIGN RATE OF THE POPULATION WITH TICK BORNE ENCEPHALITIS INN THE
ZABAIKALIE WAS MADEt AS WELL AS:CALCULATION OF THE INFECTION RATE OF
rICKS WITH THE VIRUS (9-13PERCENT). THE ANALYSIS.WAS BASED ON THE DATA
OF SEROLOGICAL EXAMINATION OF 6420 PERSONS BY THE HI TEST, AS WELL AS ON
THE DATA OF QUESTIONING OF 26r781- SUBJECTS WITH RE-GARD TO TICK EXPOSURE
A
'D ATTACK DURING-THE EPIDEMIC SEASON.~~SPECIMEPIS WERE COLLECTEL; IN
IN
1966-1968 IN THE CHITA REGION AND THE BURYAT ASSR.; ACCORDING TO
INTENSITY OF INFECTION, IT WAS'FOUND POSSIBLE,TO C OMBINE TERRITORIES
SITUATED IN DIFFERENT PHYSICO GEOGRAPHICAL~AND LANDSCAPE CONDITIONS INTO
2. MAIN LANDSCAPE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL AREAS. ONE OF THEM Is DISTINGUIS41ED BY
AN EXTREMELY LOW INTENSITY OF INFECTION 10.4-0.9PERCENI) AND INCLUDES
CENTRAL ASIAN ANO.THE PRISELENGINSKAYA,STEPPE AND,NORTH ZASAIKAL
MOUNTAIN TAIGA. THE OTHER AREA HAS.HIGHER INTENSITY OF INFECTION
(2-2.1PERCENT) AND INCLUDES TERRITORIES WITHIN THE~DAURSKAYA MOUNTAIN
TAIGA AND SUBTAIGA AS WELL AS THE, PR18AIKAL AND SOUTH ZABAIKAL TAIGA AND
SUBTAIGA. FACILITY: IRKUTSKIY tNSTITUT EPIDEMIDI-OGII I
MIKROBIOLOGIlt MZ RSFSR. FACILITY: JNSTITUT VIRUSOLOGII IM D. 1.
IVANOVSKOGO, AMN SSSR. FACILITY: :M.(ISKVA MATEMATICHE-SKlY INSTITUi
ZH..V*..A..STEKLOVA, AN SSSR*, FACILITY: ..MOSKVA REPUBLIKANSKAYA
sANEPIDSTANTSLYAt SURYATSKUY:ASSRI ULAN-UDE.
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR UDC 616-938-25-022-3,,)5.42-036.22(571-53+571-54)
A., GOMN) 0. Z., and EZREZITT,, V. G., Irkutsk Imstitutue of
Epideidology and NUcrobiology
"Epidemiological Assessment of the Threat of Tickborne Encephalitis in the
CisbkYkal. Region"
Foscow, Meditsinsk"ja Parazitologiya i Parazit,=nyye Bolemi, NO 3, 1.972,
PP~269-247
Abstract: New tourist facilities and sanatoria are being built along the chores
:Of. lake Baykal in Eastern Siberia I
an area in which an we.eimg or 1.6 cases o-
tickborne encephalitis per 100,000 populattion is recordod. every year. In order
to evaluate the danger to the increasing hw=n popttlation presented by the
disease, 'Che authors analyzed the incidence of tickb,orne ence]~aalitis in Irkut-
skaya Oblast and the Buryat ASSR over the.last 15 yearn--., ran sexological t;~st5,
ancl interviewed Gone 2000. persons living in 23 v~llagas. . ~Tiiey founcl that,
infected ticks are most likely to attack humans and animals in a band 10 to 100 m
vide around Lake Bay'ml due to the mitigating influence of:. the water on the
local r-limate. Me grouinE_-, season extends for 15 to 25 dsxyr, into the auturrm
and- the period of activity of the imin vector Ixodes Persulcal-us P. sch. is
nhifted to mid-miamr, 'Rico disease peaks toward the end of July.
16
12 '026 U N C L A S$I F I F D, P.~df*.E:S'SING D AT E-~-27NOV 0
T.I.TLE-EFFECT OF THE STRUCTURE OF: POLYI.VtWeL. CHLORIOE). W4 THF RATE 'OF
DIFFUSION OF A PLASTICIZER -U-
AUTHOR-041-KOR06KO, V. I m-f (N m "Ll"OKVANOV ICH
?~'.'--CWJWFO:~OF lNFO--USSR
,-.50URCE-PLAST. MASSY 1970, (2)v 41-2
ATE PU- ISHED --- ---- 70
DL
SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY
NYL CHLOR I DE,. PHYSICAL DIFFUSION,
-TIOPIC TAGS-MOI-C-CULAR STRUCTURE, POLYVI
'PLASTL CI ZER4 ACTIVATION E -FECT/(tJ.)!*5 POLYVINYL CHLORIDE,
RGY 1: TIIER14AL: Ef.
W)S60 POLYVINYL CHLORIDE, AU.)ST5 PIOLYV FNYL C. HL OR: II--- ,(um POLYvItlYL
CHLORIDE
C 011 T R 0 L-PARKING--PIO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASS [FIED
P!kOXY RELE-L/FRAME-1992/1704 STEP NO-UR/0191 I01000i0021GOW0042
ClRr ACCESSION '40--AP0112698-
212 026 UNCL A SS IF I ED KOCESSING DATE-271,10V70
C, I R CACCESSION NO--APOIL2698
.'*8STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. JHE OfFFUSION OF DI-BU PHTHALATE
(1) INTO SEVERAL BRA 'N' 0 S 0 FPOLY(VINYL ':CHLORIDE) ( I I ) (THE MOL o W1. XlJD
0. 114 G-CM PRIME3 ARE GIVEN) E.G.~, S-5 ~(5070001, 14403Yt S-150 (500007
S-75468,000, 1.415)y AND L-7 447t000,t I kiO3) 14AS SfUDIED BY AiN
OPTICAL METHOD (R. M. VASENIN, ET AL.,1965)., THE EFFECTIVE DIFFUSION
COEFF4 (D) WAS A LINEAR FUNCTION~OF 1--~,T FOR THE EIITI.I- TEMP. RANGE.
THE :APPARENT ACTIVATIO,"i EINERGY OF D[F.F:USION (E) FOR THE VARIOUS 11
BRANDS DECREASED IN THE ORDER E SVBS-5, ~SMALLER THAIN E WaL-7 SMALLER
THAN :E SUBS-60 SMALLER THAN E. SUBS-35,~ MISREAS D GaFY1*0 JHE ORDER: D
SUSS-5 GREATER THAN D SUHL-7 Gl*~'.EATERJHA,%~O SU13S-6;.O G;~EATER THAN 0
SUBS-756 S-75 GLOBULES WERE ELONGATED .AND R2SEMB.;LED A FlIBRILLAR
SUPRAMOL. STRUCTURE, WHICH MADE ITS PACKING D. CONSIDERABLY HIGHER THAN
OTHER BRANDSp AND CONSEQUENTLY~- S"75 EXER-,TF-D GREATER RESISTA,',,ICE
~THAT OF
TO THE.~PENETRATION OF 1.
UNC L A S S I F UED
F,
001AMIliG SILIC01. ErITAAIAL FILM. BY THL SILAN'. HL11021)
[Article by S. A, Ptatcnberv.._tj 0 VIA
L. V~, -Macs,. IIstrilk. P-t-
rudy
L"Italial filet; of Silicon ilre obtained by three chemical M-thk-dz.- br
tranevort rejoctioun. reduction of the heltdo ca=s-tnids~464 ther I datomp"j-
tic" of Allasse ;led Is ii ~a n4siter of ativ.1int"
n9en asssunF; -hich
this, _bazlt amaz:',jjc 016 dbsenCe at cherictllv A&tiva r-ti!Atnts and lower pro'Mss
ierniviratures which offer the poa-lbiilv! of obtaininr thir. hi P'll-reals t ante
Mesa wLth a ishtrp diflualon tranat"ton. The d4njter.of ths: axplasibn -of Air-
x1lano m-ixs:uru3 Is eliminated by, uvinsm cylinders with a mixture of hydtogen
W
ith silane. in -zhq. ease of low stl4ne 4ailtant in the hydrogen (3-5 Percent)
the vsIxt.re In not Pyronharic 151.
The article contains a dincunsion, of tile results of the theoretical
and
exvierloantel study, of the conettosi of thermal dacomposittion,ot silefte in order
to obtain Isiah-quality OpItaxial films,
Thsrm&dvnamlcs of the Px0cess
The basis for the allane method Is the reaction
sas at . a a,
A d*tailad thvrsodyfi~ialx invastixation of reaction, (1) hAS not AS yet Be" pet-
0 in the tevistrature range of 300-IsMe~ K the
If raidd. It to known ~t3j only that I
standard free energy of the roattion to negoti". The dapendenee of tile equi-
Itbriva constant r of tho reaction (1) o,, Use temeraturss T CkItulatod by the
thermodynamic dat4lof (61 iss expressed b), the equation
W-1.4 r . fj-10-11 11,94-10-4 T, I
Kp 27.*5
T-2 t 6's.
(2)
1/2 025 UNCL4SSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
TITLE--CONCENTRATION FUNCTION-OF.THE DIFFUSION OF'REAOILY CONDENSED GASES
THROUGH RUBBERS -U-
,AUTHOR-(04)-SHOROKHOVA, N.V.t VASENlNv,R!M.j KOLYADINA, N.G.v IOSSELt G.Fo
-,COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
.,SOURCE--KAUCH. REZINA 1970v.Z9(3Yt 21-3
DATE, PUBLISHED ------- 70
-AREAS--MATERI ALS
-SUBJECT
~TOPIC_TAGS-~-PERMEABILITY MEASUREMENTi GAS ABSORPTION, GAS DIFFUSIONt
:AMMONTAl FREONP SYNTHETIC RUBBERM)F12 FREON, (U)F22 FAEONr (U)SKMS10
SYNTHETiC :RUBBER,
PONTROL MARK NG-440 RESTRICTIONS.
MENT CLASS-ONCLASSIFIED
PROXY, REE-L/FRAME--1997/0531 TE PNO--UR/0138/,J'0/029/003/0021/0023
~:~,C I R C~ ACCESSION NO--AP0119450
UNCLASS, I F I ED,
-------- - -------
2/2 025 :~I~NCL A S -S IE 0 PROCESSING bATE--230CT70
CIRC-ACCESSION NO--AP0119450.
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-M GP-0- AaSTRAM THE PERMEABILI,TY COEFF. (P3, THE
GAS-ABSORPTION COEFF. (SIGMA)I,AND THE GAS DIFFUSION COEFF. (0) OF NH
SU53, FREON F-12, AND FREON F-22 WITH RESPECT TV; UNFILLED SKMS-10
SYNTHETIC RUBBER MEMBRANES ARE ~DEPENPE?IITON THE.,PARTfAL GAS PRESSURE (OR
CONC-N.),IN GAS MIXTS* P, SIGMAt AND:'D INCREASE LINEARLY 'WITH NH SU33
PRESSURE AND NONLINEARLY WITH F~-12 ORJ-22 PRESSURE. THE CALCO. P
VALUES FROM THE RELATION P EQUALS DSiGNIA AND TIIE~EXPTL. P VALUES
CQJ NC I DED. FACILITY: LENINGRAD. FILIAL. -tifAUCH.-ISSLED, INST.
REZ.IN. PRO"M.t LENINGPAD, USSR.
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR UDC 621.357.1.035,224
VOLOSYU]", YU. m., CliErdlov, G. 1~., KUKOZ, L. A.,, VASENIN., V. N.
."Granulated and Powdered Anodes"
Tr. llovocheekas._ politekhn. in-ta Oyorks of Novacherkassk Polytechnic Institute)
1971, 2 9, pp 93-99 (from RZh-Khimiya,,No 12, Jun 72,!Abstract No 121,342)
Translation: A study was made of the possibility of using iground metal as
soluble anodes in electrolytic production or metal refiningi The anode chamber
the electrolytic cell made from an insoluble material (vinyl plastic,
plexiglass) was filled vith granules of the processed metal. Daring) operation,
the chamber was filled with granules from a bin locatOd above it. It was
demonstrated that better movemaent. of tile granuics as th2 solution procoss takes
place is observed when their linear, dimenvions~ ar~., los~j~ Oan half the chamber
thickness. An increase in tile anode surfaca as a reault of using granules
leads to a reduction in the ovcrvoltage of.solution of the anode metals and
improves the conditions of purificatiou of the electrolyte when refining the
metals. BT 1004% .
a
OBIAINING SILIM; t;PITNLAL FIVIS BY TK SILAINE HETHOD
A All. j,4%R,;ij
[Atticle by 5, A. S~Attnbetp, R~N vriqc1lin jju~ ~_Vnal~nlnJ4 fi,)VCa1blr9k, Prot-
P.U.'rian. rart 2, 1969, pp 116-1211
Pnitaxial film of ailicon aro obtalneti bT
transport ir~ actic"4 "Teduct ion hz"Idir tothpounda and t1wrzal. de Composi-
Cicri of silitar (11-41. -,he' allane ffintliod Atas a numVer.af adYantAges among which
Z-;* baalc ones are_th~ abserice of ch4mically active revirants and loimr process
t-~"vrazurvii which offer the pos"ibility of obtaining thin hinh-r4mizitance ,
(Ll= wLtli a aharn diffusion travaitLon. Tlia JAinger of Via explosion of air-
allana mixtures is eliminated by usinft cylinders with a mixture at hydrogen,
with gilene. In the cast of low silaine content in the hydrogen (3-5 percunt).
the wixture is not vywharic 1~1.
The articlm contaln4, a discussion of the rtsiiilt
u of the theoretical And
4.4 qxnarteental studv of the reaction or ttiacmai-decomposition of, *Ll&n*.Lu ardet
to obtain hiph-q.ality ooikoxiji-fillm.
namicA
The basis for the aLlano tmthod to the reaction
WL a a %
am
A detailed thermodynamic Invantigation.of reaction (1) line not ad Yet been vqr-
formed. , It is known (31 only that in the temperature rxn~,o of 300-1,600' K the
k"T ot=d*rd free enfrgy of. the reaction is; napative. Thu dependence of the oqui-
11brium constant K of the reaction (1) on the temoeratutii.T calcuUt*4 by tha
thertiod7nabic datal'of. (6) Is expressed by the equation
xp WIP r$ U.95. la-4 T~
o.4$
r.s.
97
USSR UDC 669.046.54
VASHCHENKO, A. I., SEN'KOVSKIYj A. G., LIFSHITS, A. Ye., and SHUL'TS, L. A.
Okisleniye i Obezuglerozhivaniye Stali'(Oxidation and Decarburization of
Steel), Moscow, 1972, Izd-vo Metallurgiya, 336 pp
Translation of Introduction: Steel items are produced mainly from ingots
and billets by heating them to high temperature and applying high pressure
(rolling, stamping, forging, and others)._Thereafter a great number of
items are subjected additionally to heat treatment. Both processes require
heating of.the meta-I in flame or electric furnaces to temperatures.
After heating, the metal interacts with-the furnace atmosphere (with com-
bustion products in the open-flame furnace, and with air in,electric fur-
naces) and the ensuing reaction with gases-oxidizers 16.~ds to oxidation and
decarburization of steel.
The oxidation of steel increaaeg with the heating temperature, provided
ther conditions are equal. The p
0 ressure treatment of steel requires heat-
ing to-high temperatures (1100-1300%). ,As a result tite oxidation is
excessive. Under the hest conditions about 1% of the mecal undergoes
oxidation and is lost in the form of scale, and in some cases the percentage
reaches 1.5-2% or more during eachsheating.
1/14
USSR
VASHCHETKO, A. I., et al., Okisleniye Obezuglerozh':ivaniye Stali, Moscow,
1972, Izd-vo Metallurgiya, 336 pp
Considering that during the production of steel items it is often necessary
to heat the steel several times, the oxidation increases to 5-6% and the
metal is lost as scale. However, the ham produced,by oxidation does not
end here. The scale which, is formed on the metal surface damages high-
pressure equipment and causes an~excessive wear'of it~
In cases when scale is rolled (during hot roll�ng) and stamped (during
stamping) into the metal during the high-temperature treatmint, the metal
becomes unusable and is lost as scrap.
During production, for example, of sheet metal, thin-wa.1led pipes, and other
items, the scale is removed.by pickling in specia 1 solutions. This compli-
cates the production process and raises 'the price of p,-":,rts produced by high-
temperature treatment.
In addition to oxidation, the furnace gases also cause the decarburization
of steel, which results in losses for the national economy. ~As a result
of decarburization the quality of,the metal's surface layer it; low. In
2/14
-,52
~
USSR
US"
VASHCHENKO, A. I., et al.. Okisleniye i Obezuglerozhivaniye Sta-Li, Moscow,
V~
Izd-vo Metallurgiya, 336 pp
1-9c
order to produce items with predetermined qualities,;this layer must be re-
or,
moved, and that part of the metal is lost. The, production of steel items
m0
becomes expensive and complicated.
b e,
All these facts indicate that the production of steel without the oxidatien
and decarburization processes is a very important prc6lem for the national
econovrj. This explains why the problem of the nonoxidative and non-decar-
burizative heating of steel in furnaces is the foctLs of a great deal of
attention in the Soviet Union and. elsewhere. A considerable number of works
have been published on this subject. Among such Soviet works are those of
V. I. Arkharov, A. V. Smirnov and L. V. Beloruchev, V. F. Keipytov, V. A.
Kuroyedov, A. A. Skvortsov, N. Yu., Taytg, A. A. Shwqkov, I. 1ND, Frantsevich,
ytovich, V. A, Lavrenk vartsman, and~others. Among foreign
R. F, Vo o., 1. A. Sh
authors the following should be named: H. Tamman, C., Wagner, H. F. Mott,
K. Hauffe, 0. Kubashevski and B. HopkinsT A.4. 131oclikiss, C. M. Webber, G.
Benar, D. V. Marphy, V. E. Joinini, P. Cofstadt, and othe,zs.
Industrial workers also contribute to the decrease of oyl.datiot-t and de-
carburization of .qteel. The com!)J,ned ElffOrtS of scientlats and engincero
3/14
USSR ITDC 621.791:53.087.92
NETSVITAY, A. M., VASILICHWAO A. V., Engineers
"Lowm-Ampere Are Welding of Diaphiagm-Type Sensors"
Moscow, Pribory i Sistemy Upmvlenlya, No 11, 1973, pp 56-57
Abstract: The use of low-ampere are,velding with a noncGnsumable timgsten
electrode and argon gas shielding has led to much more exact manufacture of
the cases for diaDhragm-type sensors, better indexes,-control and regulation
of the technological process. Several pressure gauges on -.,hich this type of
weldine is used are described.
The described welding technique excludes electrode manipulation. The
torch is inclined at 5-200 opposite to the direction of welding. Vith great
difference in the thicknesses (0.1 to 1.0 mm). the are is struck on a minizim
current of 3-5 amps after which the current~is increased.
56
USSR UDC 669.71.48
VASHCHENKO, K. I FIRSTOV, A. N.1 zilizHaIENIm, V. V.
"'Improving the Quality of Secondary Aluminum Alloys",
'Usadochn. protsessv v sDlavakh i otlivkakh V sb. (Shrinka-e Processes and
Alloys a-Lid Castings -- collection of works), Kiev, Nitikova Duml-a Press, 1970,
pp 274-277 (from R-Zh-Metallurgiya, No 4, Apr 71, Abstract No 4G196)
Translation: The effect of degassinc., and refining on the mechanical and cast-
ing properties of secondary ALWand ALIOV alloys, is investigated. The quality
of secondary alloys is improved by effective methods of degassing and re-
fining the alloys, for example, evacuation and blowing'of the alloys with
Ar as a result of which the gas porosity~,is decreased sharply and the,vater
~tightness and mechanical properties of the alloys are~i#roved. There are 2
tables.
112 027 UNCLASSIFIEU PROCESSING OATE--30OCT70
TITLE--LX9ktSS 00 1 EKI I "T lil, OF HV0Alj6k" CC,11TE4T IN.ALUMINUIl SILICON
I ALLUYS UNDERPRODUCTION GCNOITIONS -U-
AUTHCk-(04)-l~SllCt6llK&, K.I.t CH.PVNEGA, D.F., B,YALtr%v OoNot REMIZOV, G.A.
~CCUiTAY UFIINFO-LSSR
'_SG'UNLE-KIEV, TEKHNCLOGIYA I JRGANI'ZATSIYA'PR0IZVUL)ST%fAt NO It 1970, PP
2-55
5
:5ATE ~PUELISHED--70
15UBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS
-Jopic TAGS-HYDROGEN, METAL C(INTAINING:GAS, GAS CONTAI.INING.METAL, ALUMINUM
ALLCY or--S ILI C(;N ALLOY9 LIQUID METAL_
PlARKING-N.0 RESTRICTIONS
VOCUMENT -CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
--PROXY REEL/F.RAME-1999/1321 ~STEP NO--UR/0418/70/000/001/0052/0055
-C IAC:-ACCESSICN NO-APOL23280
UNCLASSMED".
USSR UDC 535, 343. 2_
VASHCHENK0, V. 1. , and Tl.',',DFh-YEV, V. B.
IfSpectra. of Free Reflection and Optical Transitions in B113 and S Monocrystals
in the 1-5 ev Energy Areall b13
Spektroskopiya Atomov i M01ekul (Spectroscopy of Ator4 and Molecules Collec-
tion of Works] Kiev, Nauk. Dumka
-Press, 1969, pp 247-149 (translated from
Referativayy Zhurnal Fizika, No 6, 1970, Abstract No 6D540 by V. B. B.)
Translation: Optical refl2ction of Bib and Sb13,monocry8tlls is studied in the
UV and.visible areas of the spectrum, in the 90-2930K, temper,ature intervai. It
is shown that the main part of the reflection spectra,is located near the long-
wave edge of.the natural absorptionof,each compound. It is established that,
the reflection, spectra of B'13 and. SH3 have a similar doublet SLructure, and
it is shown that this similarity can be explained by the identical origin of
-the valence zone of both crystals. It is shown that in the t&,perauirc interval
90-293*K the distance between the components of the-doublets in the spectra both
of the crystals and Of B113-SbI3 solutlons,remair'.s identical 4 0.42+0.02 ev),
which fact is explained by the primarily ionic nature of the bond in these
1/2
L/2 015 UNCL.ASS I FOD, PROCESSING DATE--230CT7(
_1TLE--METHODS OFPPE ESTIMATION OF
T OVERHAUL COSTS~-U-
AUTH,OR-(03)-VAS,HCHENKOr V*K%r DERKACH#i.G.M.v SULPOVAR# L*B*
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
..-...,SDURCE--STANDARTY I KACHESTVOY 1970,' NP. So PP 76--~T7
DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
~SUBJECT AREAS--MECH., IND.v Q_jYIL AND:MARINE ENGR, BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL
SC-IENCES
TOPIC TAGS--ENGINE MAINTENANCE# ECONOMIC INCENTUVEP COST ESTIMATE
CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-n-UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAM6-1997/1551' STEP 10--UR/04?,2/70/000/00510076/0077
ACCESSION NO--AP0120330
UNCLASSIFIED
~4
USSR
VASHCHEINK0, V. I., and TIM10FEYEV, V.,B., Spe:ktroskopiya Atomov i Molekul [Spec-
troscopy of Atoms and Molecules -- Collection of Works) KA-ev, Nauk. Dumka Press,
.1969, pp 247-249 (translated from Referativnyy~Zhurnal Fizika, No 6, 1970,
Abstract No 6D540 by V. B. D.),
crystals. At 90'K an additional maximum is discovered in the B113 spectrum,
related to the elimination of degeneration in.the upper p zone. The spectra
of both crystals show a number~of.maxima in.the UV,area,cdrresponding to deep
interzone-transitions. 4 biblio. relfse
212
2/2 015 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT7
CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0120330
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* THE ARTICLE CONSIDERS THE METHODS
OF PRELI-MI.NARY ESTIMATION OF~EXPENSIS FOR ENGINE OVERHAUL REPAIRS. THE
EXPENSES ARE REGARDED AS INFLUENCED BY THREE GROUPS OF FACTORSt VIZ*,
THOSE DEPENPENT ON THE DESIGN,;MANUFACTURING MEtHODS, AND OPERATIONAL
CONDITIONS*- THE DIFFERENT LOVELS DFANFLUENCE OF THESE FACTORS UPON TH!
OVERHAUL COSTS SUBDIVIDE THE EXPENSE.S.lNrO.CICNVE,'4TIONALLY CoNSTANT AND
CONVENTJ ON ALLY VARIABLE ONES, - FORMUL AS. FOR: CALCULAT-[ON OF THE EXPENSES
ARE:-GIVEN Ilq THE ARTICLE*'.
UNCLASSIFIED-
USSR UPC 595-775:591.1
VASHCMOK. V.-S., and SOLM, L. T., L.eningrad Antiplague Station
"Age-Determined Changes in the Fat Tissue of Female Xenopsylla cheopis Fleas"
~Ioscow, Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 51j, No 1, Jan 72, pp 79-85
Abstract: During the imaginal period of its life, the fenii1e Xenopsylla
cheopis fleas undergoes substantial changes in fat tissue which, under condi-
tions of permanent access to the host,,are of an age-detexTUned nature. Large
specimens have an abundance of reserve~inclusions which, in the form of fat
vacuoles, glycogen granules and large spherical protein granules, comprise
the principal cellular content.' Weakly active cytoplasm is represented in the
form of narrow layers betueen the inclusions. With the onset of feeding, the
protein,granules are rapidly.destroyed.: As the ectoparasites remain vith the
the fat vacuoles gradually dwindle in size, anti the cell diameters in-
host
crease due to the increase in volume of cytoplasm; the cytoplasm becomes
constantly more basophilic due to increase of the TUIA concentration. In
fleas living more than 35 days, and in-aame speciLvens still earlier, some
changes-are noted in.trophocytes, which are due probably to senile degenera-
tion of fatty tissue.
7: 7- ggg ~,Ip rnlff--~qv 100--.1imu - -H
44H
U S S.R.
NAYTIS, V, A. ,Leningrad Scientific Research Institute
VASHCff;U -1 and Oi
-10101" -YaCtultu're
40raphic Recording of Hotor2eictions and Maximum .55'requency of -lovements after
Adequate Stimulation of the VestibularAnalysor"
Moscow. Teoriya i Praktlka Flzicheskoy KUltury, ING 2. 1971, p 62
Abstract; A brief description is given with a disgram oe an attachment to an
electrocardiograph Afor we in recording the paranqt4)rs oe various bodilir move-
ments L~3fore, during. axid i=ediately after rotatio..n on a Bara'ny chair. 1'rxe
knofdn speedat which tho paper. in the ele atro cardioq-, rap.,-,, moves (100 in. Per
sec or 0.5 = Der 0.005 see) -makes it possible to calculate the len-th of the
latentperiod of visual-motor reactions, the maximuni frequency of movements
at any.time, and the duration of each movement.
USSR
SAYCHFUM, I.. P., ancL VAS.HCIIIL-W,,T.',. V. Leningrad.*Scienti--ic
Research Institute- %C. vi Leningrad.*
"Changes in. the Reproduction o.E;i7-blovevient nt a Young-Age During
Adequate Stimula-tion. of the. Veszibular Analysor"
Moscow, Teori-y-a i PraktUa: FEzi~aheskoy Kul tliry-,, Vol 34, No I
~Jan 71,pp S61-59
Abstract: Measurement~a- af th e_-, amplitude of bending of the right
elbow joint followin.g rotat-i-on- of-,' the body to. the- left -were
carried out on. children: 4-13 yrs: old undergoing systei:iatic train-
ing irt athletics (diving and. gymmastics) and, childron-not
engaged in such training., Repraduction of the assigned movemont
(bPending of the elbow at, an angle, o-f 200) was silinificantly
altered by the preceding, rotatIoni in the majority of cases; the
amplitude was increased.- in, mos _t~~ihstaiices in comparison with
that which had been. assLgned:.. Ifith- increasing age and.
Increased ath-letic. prcLfftiency- of-7the children, the change in
amplitude fa-Llovlng vatwEion-, an&,' xliio- the time- required Jor
1/2
USSR
RAYCHENKO,- I.. P., and' VASJICIIII;A',.- W. V. , Teoriya iPraktik a
Fizicheskoy- Kulltury-,, Val 3-4:, Mcc,,E,., Jan 71, pp 56:,..59.
rep roduction. of the movement. dec*r-e-ased. Under the effect of
rotational loads, the balance: h-etween inhibition. (reduced
amplitude) and stimulati-on .pracess-es (increased. amplitude) was
changed toward stimulation- Wi-th increasing age and advancing
athletic proficiency,. the magni-m&e. of this change decreased
1-.L., adequate st-imulatLon of~the vestibular. apparatus produced
a-- less -ationst i-V ~between inhibition and-stim-
er shift in the rel
ulation.
2/2
MIM-111"M FF
.-.:'1-/2 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCES,'SING DATE--18SEP70
~TIITLE--EF.FECT OF CHROMIUM9 MOLYBOENUM9 ANO.-PHOSPHORUS ON THE
~SUSC.EPTIBJLITY OF LOW CARBON, CHROMIUM-STEELS TO.REVERSIBLE TE14PER
AUTHOR-:102)-RIZOL, A.I., VASHCHI.LOi TOP#
'COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
-SOURCE--IZV. -AKAD. NAUK SSSR, METAL. 1970, IH# 246'
~-:DATE PUBL ISHED ------- 70
-SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALSp MECH.t IN04Y ClVfL AND MAR,INE ENGR
jOPIC-TAGS--CHROMlUM* MOLYBDENUM9 iPHOSPHORUS, TEMPER BRITTLENESS, METAL
METAL: TUSE
CRACKING9 CHROMIUM STEELt LOW CA.R3ON ST,EEL,
4ARK I NG--NO RESTRICTIONS
.CG
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
'PROXY REEI-IFRA14E--1984/0162
STEP NO--UR/0370110/000/001/0246/0246
:CIRC, ACCESSION NO--AP0054958
_UNIC LAS 5-1-FIE-D-
uEllf; 1-3 T = mipm; 4
UNCLASSIFIED okbCESSING DATE--18SEP70
2/2 026
~CIRC ACCESSION ND--AP0054958
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE REVERSIBLE TEMPER BRITTLENE-SS
OF LOW-C, CR STEELS IN INCREASED BY INCREASING CONTENT IN CR AND P. FOR
TUBES COLD ROLLED FROM THESE-STEELS, THE POSSISILI.TY OF CRACKING IS NOT
EXCLUDED. CRACKING OF TUBES IS' LESS. FOR STEELS WITH L01WER Cil CONTE114TS
WITH LOW P CONTENTS.
.-AS-WELL AS FOR CR SIEELS CONTG. 0.4-D.*6PERCENT MO
89
UNCLAS-51FTED
UDC 632.9.5i/.78
e
Arnenian Scientific Research Inl9titute of viticiatux
Wine Frodii6 ion, and Fruit Growing
"An Ifisecticide that 13 Effective, Again~t the Apple CJ%earwL-ie'
Moscow, Zashchita Pastoaly, Vol I 7jj NO 5o 1972P P 31+
Ab3tract, j Tha apple clearwing does comide rable dama~!;e to apple trees in
the Arara'- '.irough of Arx-enia. After tests corducted idth 12.pesticides, the
preparation PLK which consists of gamma-hexachlorane,lkerosene, dichloroethane,
and an ezul~iifier and has been developed by the Churd cal Laboratory of the
Georgian. SS11 and the Institute of Physical. and Organic Chem,!L',t-:L7t Aclltdemy
of Sciences Georgiwi SSR, waa selected for applicatiop agdn:5t this pest,
Two methods of application were developedi I) t-reatr)o-nt itith 25% FLU at the
-a of the swelling of buds, which coincides Ath the beglming of the
t
ip
feeding of lar.-,---, and with 15% PLIK at ithe beginnina. of thv flight of the
2) two sprxfings mith 15% FUK, : e in the beaginninG of the fl: ght
oil ths. L_, ~
and the other at the tine of.the mass flight of the ujo in tests in an
apple orchaxd strongly infested ulth the apple cleainiing, treatment with PLK
~in the aprxinG bj the miethod (1) reduced the ntriber of tte izothv by 94.2,~~ and
that of larvae by 97.9%) vs. Q% and 64.e% of moths and larvae, respectively,
'14 % emulsion,of prepara, n
on sprIng treatment with I-% aevin In an tio No 30
1/2
VASHCHIMMA, N. V., Za3hchita Rasteniy, Vol 17, 11 6, '972 34
used as a st-~-Mdard for compaxis.on. Treatment in the slmrer by the method
(2) reduced the number of noths by 64A% and th-it o~ larvae by 97-T,-' vs.
0% and 50. r;-- of moths and larvae, respectively, onIzu=uer treatment with
2,IS sevin in a 2% emulsion of preparation No 30 usedas a Btandard.
2/2
7.
C Abstract n&IServIce: 01'ket Code:
-0
410047G46 CHMICAL ABSTiz--IC -,/j
104350s Inter*ction of A=001a with en xides.
4-a-ghkevich, & I . (Dnevroj=vgsk. KOhim.-
Tekhn
*sps7 The reaction rates of
(Lenirgrad) 1970,4311), Ri uss-
NO and NO!.with NHiwere stdAled ns q functi =:of temp. At
>120% the rate of reactibn of 11~H3 with INO increases %vith'an
increase in tel'Up. and the reaction proceeds with a discharge of
N2. On the other hand , thexate~ of reaction of ~ XH3 With N02
decreases r.,nd:the pro" sfop~ completely at it temp' >230*.
The math.'model of tine processis-detd. and equations are found
frorn which the degree of discharge of N2 as a f unction of the con-
ditions of th Process:can be detd. C. St nberg
REEL/FRME
19,791220
........... HSGMzMmMRr M rr,
USSR urc 6ap- 35.ol4.424.5
-partme
L., A ent of Physiotherapy and Balneology of the Ukrainian
Instituta. for the anced Training of Physicians and the Bere~ovskiye Mdneral
'Waters Health Resort
"Effect of Centimeter Microwaves on the Functional St'nte of the Liver"
-Moscow, Voprosy Kur.ortologii Fizioterapiii Lechebnoy Fizicheskoy Kul tury,
No 6
Y 1972j pp 532-535
Abstract: A study was rade ofIthe role, of racrowaves. iu the complax treatment
of patients with chronic diseases of the liver and the bile. ducts. A total
of 194 patients from to 50 years old.,were examined. 53 of them basically
had uncompl 1, cated cholecystitis, 117 had colecyatitis~ ca~mlicated by cholan-
gitif; and hepatitis and 24 had- chronic hepatitis. The first Group of patients
were treated with centiirrnter microitaves! combinc!d irith nilnertii baths (-~6 to 37
degrees every other day) and. drinking, wurm, viinornl vW'Or 200 11-1 e three timcr,
a day. The centLmeter nLicrowaves we re used every othar CLay (altarliatil"c'-1- With
the balths). 111ic-ro-waves ifith a pcrvrer of 20-30 Watts were used, and t1he treat-
ment laated from 10 to 15-20 minutes, gradually ouildlng up. over 10 treatments.
The patients in the eecoijd 1froup were us6d af; ccaitrdlil,, and they raceived truat-
ment vithoxn; the microwaves. Both. groups were mi specil al diets - 'Frie liver
exemination procedures are described and.the indexes of the functional state
USSR
Y.ASBKEVICH.9 D. L., Voprosy Kurortolo.gii Fizioterapij i IP-chebnoy Fizicheskoy
Ical,tux-ij No 6, 1972A vp 532-535
of tile liver of the patients in both group,7, are tabujjitf-d. N,)I%h the ~Ciinctio)-Ir-.I
state of the live- and the clinical course of the dioea.,;e vere improved ir.
both groups. The treatment with microwaves and mineral vaters (interrAl and
external) had a significant effect on the functional state of the liver wrhereas
pigr.*4,nt,-
the application of mineral water only improved vertain furactions
protein mn-tabolism, and lecl'thin metabolism. When the centim-ater rdcrowa,,es
were included in the treatmant, the notz-alization of the bil-irubin and lecithin
metabol I sm was. much more pronounced, and the carbohydrate metabolism,
cholesterol and antitoxic functions of theiliver were improved.
2/2
rp -n
USSR UDC 669.14.018.85
SOLOV'YEV 8. M., VASHKEVI
DEGTFV, G. F., F F. MATMEV, 0. R.
"S tudy of Some 0xidation-Re5istant CoaO.ngs Obtained by the Plasma Deposition
Metliod"_
Dnepropetrovsk, Metallurgicheskaya I gornorudnaya promyshlennost' , NIo 2 (74) ,
1972, p 37
Abstract: A study was made of the possibility of usial, iOojttiful and inex-
pensive materials to protect the, steel elemnts of industrial heat exchangers.
Oxidation-resistant coatings of aluminum oxide, magnesium oxide, zirconium di-
oxide, silicon carbide,and tungsten carbide were applied to specimens made. of
St. 3 carbon steel and Khl8N9T oxidation-resistant steel. Tile coatings were
tested independently and in combination with each other. Vari.ous conditions
of plasma deposition of the coatings were tested. The best results were ob-
tained on apply-InS aluminum oxide, aluminum-magnesia. spinel,and silicon c--r-
bide to-carbon steel with a sublayer ofIron.
-Fri.
USSR uDc 619.616.981-42-036.2-.636-294
VASHKEVICHI R. B., director, Yana Agricultural Experimental Stalk-lion
"The Viability of Reindeer Strains of Bniraella Under the Conditions of the Far
Moscow, Veterinariya, No 1973, pp 33-36
Abstract: Stud-ies were conducted on the viability of t1oo Brucella strains (,No
40 isolated from an aborted reindeer fetus, aaad No 42 isolated from reindeer
milk) on plants, water, soil, and fecal matter under the cliriatic conditions of
the Far North (Balek-hard vicinity). The temperature d=ing the Spring-Summer
season (June -.--0 Septetdner) usually ran -50 to +25o, and during Fall-
ges from I
Winter (October to May) from -6.8u to +4.90. During the Spring-,Swmer season
Brucella were found to survive on lichen -and moss for up to three days, and for
~up to 12 days in the tundra swampland.and peat bog. In loatny soil the bacteria
survived for 44 days at a depth of 5 cm, and cultures irere positive at least for
86 days at 10 cm. In addition to the acid soil (pH 44.3), soil microorganisms
were also a factor in the elimination of:Brucella nicroorgaiAsns since the
latter survived for much longer perio" of tir-- in autcv-,laved soil. The bacteria
were viable for 21-44 days in fecal matter in water, nriss, deposited on corrals,
the Fall-Ii.inter season, Brucellae retained their
and so on. When tested during
fill,
7 i iI TI T: F 17 11 i
c.s: [71~ hfl*1!FMT7H
USSR
VASHKEVICII., R. B., Veterinarlya., No'4, 1973, PP 33-36
viability for 151-233 days on different objects. The studies showed that within
the polar rircle the temperature,was a deternining faptor in. Brucella. viability,
and-suggest that longperiods~of qiiarantine.6hould be:maintained on grazing
grounds where outbreaks of brucellosis I-lad occurred along reindeer. For pastures
contaminated in March and Aprilthe quarantine period.should be 4 months, for
'pasture lands infected in May or June the quarantine pex5od s-hould be 1-5-2
months, for those contaninated during the June to k45-ust- period a quarantine of
1-5 Wnthe is recormiended,, and for lands cont=dnated iii October, November, or
erlod-of 6_10 r ths uld be institute0l.
the Winter imnths a quarantine 1. on oho
2/2
_12-- UNCILASS 'EU; l!PROC:ESSING OATE-30OCT70
:--BIS P1 METHALLYLCOBALT.ChLORIDE :_U-.~
,TITLL
AUTHOR-(02)-FOTAP0V, S.S.s VASHKEVICHV~ VvA*
GCUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
265tlDl
:~'REf;ERE14CE-.CTKRYTIYAv IZUBRET., PROM4 CBRAZTSY, TOVARNYE ZNAKI 1970,
PUBLIShED-09MARTO
SUaJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY
~.TCPIC TAuS--C?,EMICAL PATENTr CUdALT CHLORIDE# ORGANOCOBALT COMPOUNOt
SYNTHESIS
,.,CC*4TRGL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
--DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIEO
,PROXY.REEL/f;RA,'4E--3002/1457 STEP NO-UR/0482170/000/000/0000toooo
CIRC ACCESSION NO-AA0128856
UNCLASSIFIE0
.. i-41
66
2/2 008 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
CIRC ACCESSICN NO--AA0128856
GP-O-, ABSTRACT.~ THE TITLE COMPD. IS PREP0. FROM
14ETHALLYLMAGNESIUII CHLORIDE ANDCU CHLORIDE IN ETHER TGLUENE AT LESS
THAh MINUS 20DEGREES AND THEWAT ROOM TEMP, FACILITY: LOMONOSOVt
M..V., INSTITUTE OF FINE CHEMICAL TE.CHNOLOGYt MO.SCO14
j. it -T T f P I M I ~1-1.
t" Rawl.-
Us S R DDC 620.193.01:669.29
ROZENFEMD, I. L., VASBKOYt 0. 1.1 BALOWEVA, R. S.j USSR Academy of Sciences-,..
Institute of Physic-aT -Cherdstry
"Some Characteristic Features of the Cathode Behavior of Titaniun in Neutral
Environments"
Mlosm.4, Zashchita I-Ifetallov, Vol 8, No 6, 19721 pp 701-703
Abstract: A study was vade.of the cathode process on a VT-l titanium electrode
in a neutral solution simulatin sea water '(0.5 normal NaCl). The polarization
curves ~-.rere taken using the P-5827potentiostat. In the range of potentials more
positive than -0.35 volts, a trend is observed toward a noticeable increase in
resistance with a decrease in frequency, at. the same ti-me as the variation in
capacitance Is insignificant; for potentialla nore negative,than -0.35 volts the
resistance e~diibits low dependence on the.frequency, and thL e dependence of the
capacitance on frequency increases noticeably. in the range of potentials
more positive than -0.35 to -0.40.volts, the conductlvity of the TO 2 oxide
layer in low nnd the vDictrode revealti attrlbutc!i c1larticLeristic of the metal
coated with a thin layer of dielectric. ror pntentialfz~ nore negative than -0,315
to -0.40 volts titaniu= behzves~ as an. electrode the elc etrocheraical behavior of
i
L u -(the electrode iT-.
k'ch, is detertained by the potential drop in a do ble' iayer
pedance is close to Faraday). Theanoinalous behavior of the time dependence of
1/2
USSR
ROZENFEL'D, 1. L., et al., Zashchita Metailov, Vol 8, No 6, 1972, pp 701-703
the current of the st.3 steel-and titanium couple and the couple St.3 and copper
couple is compared. The difference in time dependencies of the currents of the
couples is explained by the fact that the St.3-copper couple always operates in
the diffusion mode -while the current of the St. 3-titaniun couple is determined
by the reactivity of the titanium surface.which depends on the potential. When
~the titanium potential in the couple is more positive than -0.35 volts, the
cathode process on its surface is inhibited and the couiv'e current is correspond-
ingly low. Mhen the steel potential and, conseqluently, tile titanium potential,
is shifted to the negative side (more negative than -0.35 voLts) the titaniur.,
surface "opens up" to the cathode, process, and the couple current incrziases to
a value close to the limiting diffusion current.
2/2
36
r n-Tff 9,_TF-Tr-- ......... 4M
USSR UDC 632.95
VASHKOV, V. I., SIDOROVA, M-V., KUZNETSOVA, R. A.
"Insecticide Activity of Dicresyl for Certain Types of Domestic Insects and
Mosquitoes"
Sb. nauch. tr. Hosk. N11 vaktsin i syvorotok (Collection of Scientific Works
of Moscow Scientific Research Institute.of Vaccines and Serums), No 22, 1972,
pp 155-159 (from RZh-Khimiva, No 15, Au&73, Abstract No 15002)
Translation: Dicresyl (1) and chlorophos are approximiLely equivalent with re-
spect to toxicity for bedbugG and roaches. The I is more effective in dust
form than in emulsion form. The minimum:dosage of I in powdered form causing
100% death of bedbugs is 0.01 and for roaches it is 0.5g/m2. In emulsion form
~the I is effective against bedbugs in'a:d6sage of 0.1 g./m2 on nonsorbing sur-
faces and 1-2 grams/m2 on sorbing surfacesi In laboratory tests the larvae
and eggs of the housefly died after spraying,a substrate with 0.2-0.3% emulsions
of .1 (1 liter/m2). The winged flies wereresistant to 1. The larvae of
mosquitoes ages 1-2 and 3-4 died after 24 hours in bodies of water sprayed with
emulsions of I in doses of 0.5-1 and 1-2 kg/hectare respectively. According
to laboratory tests with winged mosquitoes,Aedes spp., I is equivalent to baygon
with respect to toxicity, 8 times more toxic than carbophos and twice as toxic
as DDT.
:030 UNCLASSIFIED IIRUCE-`~*ING 04Tj. --I I DEC7 a
JITLE-EFFECT CF -T&YEkATURE X43 AEROSCL CUMPd-S I I 1 -1 N LiN THE ATLI".;lZATIFj;q
CHARACTEkI S TICS -U-
02 1~_ I
_SETL IN, V.K. VASHKOV, V.r.
CCUNTRY UF lffrFC--LS5R
:.scURCE-PARFUt~., C C 5,M E T -SAVONS ~1970, :13( 3) L89-94
"''DA, rE PULL ISHED------70
.,-SUBJECT AREAS-~--CHEMISFRY
:TO P1 CTAG S--A t R US OL PAPT I CAI. S I Z EL I CUl 0PRUO ELL A.NT i:RI-ON, CHEIII,!CAL
~COMPOSITION
TROL RESTRICTIONS
DCCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
!pRbXY FICHE NC ---- FID70/605014/603 STEP jNG--FR/000O.-1'10/OL3~C,03/01,313/01.'94
CIRC ACCE SS I CM NG-001.4,0455-
w -7
7 T-I
2/2 030 UNCLASSIFIED. FIROCE, ilNG DAr~E-111_1
ACCESSILig fqtj--AP0140455
r IVEN 3ETWi-r~141 THE
....ABSTRACT/EXlkACr--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. RELAT IONS, tME'
AV. IWAM.:OF THE PAKTICLES ANG THE NO. (IF CARF,0~~,'4 OF F HE fjR0Pll.LA4',!T IN
THE MXT~,,THE DEGREE OF POLYOLSPERSION A N 0 TEMP. OF I X!XT.
THE
GFION IN ' EAV ING THF WJMi~ p TP;_ S i!" T DV 4 P Ul R'
TEMP. ANC r.HE ANGLE OF PROJE ;L
PRESSURE AND T14E COMPN'. OF THE' PRODIUCT IN FILLIfM6 THE: A fi~',iLE IS
GIVEN OF TPE CHAPACTERISTICS 114 THE EXPANSIUN (.',;F:'FRErJNS 11, 129 114 Af4D
C13,3. _DELTA V UVOL. AND WORK IN AN PROCE,-S-5 CAN BE CALCO.
q K .
FROM.-THE EQUATIONS. FACILITY: .I S T RECH~ D E.S'l N F S C 0W
USSR.
I 44Aiijilmi. Wia6i 46-tiii, ~U~
USSRI UDC: 632-95
J31E TT-'C-? "S. 'A, 0. N.1 FTUGAL,
A iOV, V. U."'U P-D M, VOLKOV, Yj DBOVA, G. IM., and IHCE
V
115tudy of Synthetic Pyretthroids Bartrin and DL-aetrin' AS Tn s e c
ici-des
Tr Tsen-ur. n.-i. dezinfekts. in-ta (Transactions of Cent:~,~-~I Bcient4l~Jc Re-
thi
search Dis:Lnfes nstitutue), 1069,~ v~rp 20, pp 236-21112 `mm RZIi-lahifflya,
No 12, 25 Jim 70, Abstract No 12 NOVO
Tr~mslati. of baxtrin 16-chloropipemnyl -dI -cis tr ans -chrys anthemate
(1) and dizrietZin (1 4-d.-L-,-c~uhy2:oen-.yl-dl-ci,-, tran5-ch_-ysant~nemate) (I!) Tor topi-
cal ap i at-ion of LD50 f housefliez; is 31 and 114, for bedbugs -- 58 and 23.7,
plic or
and for golCLC_n cockroaches -- 200 band 445 mcg/g of imsect vTeig'.11t, respectively.
Addi:bion of pi-peronylbutoxide (PPB) at a 1 :10 ratio ixftensifias insecticidal act
ivtty of (i) by 1.6-3 -tilles. (I) and (!I) are active for la.:,vae of mosquitoc-S
ct L
Uon of
by 10 - 15 times and a. u (H) by, 6 tines or less., Toxicity of (T) and (II)
for wingred mosqliitoes is low. BibliograpIW: 14 entries.
slavtseva
Flo
031 bDC: 632 .95
BESSON70V PI, T. V., VjkS~2,COV V. I., VOLKOV., J-U. P., VOT P ZF K, YE.
FU
%I., and SHC I G-AL, N. F.
"
Neopinarin-ne A a-rid Promising Preparation 'or lnsect Control"
U
'he *ral ScJ* ntific Re-
Tr. Tsmtr. n.-i. dezinf ekts. in-tan (Transactions of ti -, Cent le U
search Dissinggestation Institute), 1969, vljp. 20, pp 269-278 (fr-o-m R7,h-1411imiya,
No 12, 2' Jun 70, _~bs tract No 12 N973)
Tranziat'don. Noonim-mino (1) (estorz of dll-cio, acid and N-
oxqn,,etay_-IL. .,,~,6-t~p~~lrahydroph4~b-zfi-:Uilde contiinlng 96;, cliry_~:,mthuidc ac- was
d
' f ja
synthes.L-zed. 1P Lin5ecticidal properties 'I) is closest::) a of panese
neopina~n e containina 85% active sifbstance.* The L)50 both (T) S M-, ples for
houseflies, bodbugs, golden cock-macnes,and black crj~,-Icmaches is, respectively.
8-10.7, 5.6-io, 15-17.3~, and 24-27 -.icgla, of insect we4:Lt. Yn aerosol fozm, (I)
A
is i L- 1 .7 t--'-,c-;s more tox-Je for houseflies than na-tural. p ethrins. A
-yr
of (I) -,.-ith pipercnyib-,etc.~dde (1 :10) exhi:oits some wjne~,gism-. A mixture off (I)
u-ith DDVF &xpansion -WLIMoI..mn7 (1 :9 ) is promisming --:*cfr practic "11 uze as aeroscls
Acute ora, !Z50 of samples for w.Ute.mice is 25CO 4irji 350C raglg of insect
1/2
2/2
- L, ~
-
m
----------
112 025 UNCLASSIFtED' IFIROCESSING DATE-18SEP70
.',TITLE-AN EFFECTIVE MIXTURE OF 111SECTICIDES ON THE.:BASIS OF PIRETROIDES
~_- ~ AND DDVF -U-
_:AUTHOR-tO5)-BESSONOVA, I.V., VASHKOV, V.I.* VOLKOVt YU~Pvr ZHUKp YAoB,p
TSETLIN't: V.m.
CCIJNTRY. OF.INFO--USSR
-.SOURCE-_ME0._lTSINSKAYA PARAZITOLOGIYAIPARAZITARNYYE BOLEZNIj 19709 VOL
39 NR PP- 78-80
DATE. -PUBL I SHED---70
-,SUBJECT.AREAS-BIOLOGICAL ANDMEDICAL SCIENCES
-TAGS--INSECTICIDEt AEROSOL9 TOXICITY
ARKING-ND RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
:~PRO XY REEL/FRAME--1987/0082 STEP NO--UR/0358/-10/039/0011007,1/0080
ACCESSION NO--AP0103762
UNCLASSIFIED
212 025 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-18SEP70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0103762 ' 1 1.* .
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. INVESTIGATION OF THE ACTIVITY OF
N OL. FORM AGAINST HOUSE FLIES EVALUATED BY
-SECTICIDE MIXTURES IN AEROS
I
THE COEFFICIENT OF COMBINED TGX-lCITY: DEMONSTRATED MAXIMUM ACTIVITY IN
MlXTURES WITH PIRETRINE TO 0001 RAT10:0F. 7:3 AND PIRETRINES TO DIMETRINE
A TRIPLE MIXTURE BASED ON DDVFI:PIPETRINE*S AND DIMETRINE TAKEN IN
OPTIMAL PROPORTIONS (3:7:16).SHOWED GREATER EFFECTIVENESS THAN, DOUBLE
MIXTURESt PERMITTING TO REDUCE THE CONCENTRATION,'OF DD*VF 7.77 FOLD9
P-IRETRINES 5.58 'FOLD AND:DIMETRINE ZT04 FOLD AS COMPARED WITH THE SAME
DRUGS~ USED SEPAR, ATELY.
UNCLASStFIF0
ff., mum, -
-1-7777-77-7
USSR UDC 634-95
AMMOV, P. I., VASHKOV, V. I., VOUOVA, A. P. UKOLMKINA, V. I. , IMMOVA,
1. 1. , KEnABAM2',O ~s"XiASOVA r 1. D., STERL'111KCiYA, G. N., FROWVA, A. I.
"Insecticidal Properties of llethyl-O-Ethyl.(Carbothoxyinethyl) Dithiophosphonate"
Tr. Val dezinfektsii I steriliz. (Works of the All-Union Scientific Resea=h
Institute.of Dininfection and Sterilization)# 1971, YYp'g 21p t. 2, pp 73-76
(from M-Khlidya, No 18, Sep 72#:Abetrac~ xo ON427Y.
Translationt The results of experiments In studying the insecticidal
~activity of Fe(KtO)P(S)SCH2COOEt %I) (boiling point 89-92'C/0.02, n2OD
1,5220) show that the compouncl has a fumigation effect and some contact
action, but less than chlorophos. When applied to absorptive surfaces# the
abezzdcal is completely ineffectlve.agains,t~:hou.5ehold Insects, Compound I
bas fumigatory activity against houseflie:s.and is a larvicide against maggots.
T. A. Belyayeva.
67
MUM-
USSR uDc 632-95
Ymixoy Y i Bnmo, z. I. and PmrmovA , N. m.
"Insecticidal Properties of Dilor"
Tr. VNII dezinfekteii I steriliz. (Worki of the All Union Scientific
Research Institute of Disinfection and Sterilization), 1971, vyp. 21, t. 2,
pp-77-81 (from RZh-XhImIya, No 18p Sep 72# Abstract lio 16V421)
Translations The results of experiments on studying the insecticidal
activity of dilor by the method of enforced contact of insects with the sur-
face of glass treated with a solution of!dilor in ace-tone show that dilor
Is an.insecticide equal in the strength of..toxic effeot, to DDT arA hexachloro-
cyclohexane on red cock-roaches and bedbugst and equivalent to DDT on house-
flies. The minimum dose of d-ijor which ensures 1001clfo destruction of lice with
a one-hour exposure 1.8 0.5 glmz; for - 10 dest
Mm truction of the tick Ixodes
persulcatus, the dose is 1.4,g/W. Heating the precipitatetl dilor for 2
hours at 600C and exposure of' the precipitate for 6 hours to ultraviolet
rays (9000 luxes) causes almost no reduction in its toxicity for grain weevils.
T. A. Belyayeva.
1A
69
USSR UDC 6,32-95
V HK. I., ZAKOLODKINA, V. I., KERWAYBY E. B.j LARIOZIOVA, V. D., arA
VKn1M"M1_1~VA* C., N.
%
wInsecticidal Properties of Agents Contairdng Bromophos &nd Ethyl-Brotophos"
Tr. VNII dezinfektsii i steriliz. (Works of. the All-Union Scientific Research
Institute of Dininfection and Sterilization:)t 1971r,vyP, 21t t- 2P PP 157-167
42
(from M-Khimiya, No 18, Sep ?2,'Abstract No 18K 5)
Transliations Insecticides Sxh-99 (active agent bromophos?, neksagen Yes-80,
filaxiol-20 and filaxiol-60 (active agent ztkyl-brozophos) were tested on
houseflies# bedbugs, red cockroaches and:mosquitoes. The contact action
was compared with that of chlorophos. The insecticides have a, considerable
residual affect, retaining their1naecticidal. activity~up -to L5 months when
applied to glass. When applied directly1o the insecisq the best of the
chemical is filariol-601 its insecticidi-a properties azo 1-8 times higher
than those of chlorophos. When insects co'me into. contact Ath a glass,sur-
face treated with the insecticidest the best chemical -is neksagan. Filexiol-20,
Skh-99 and neksagan YeS-80 are a2so effective larvicideA aeAinst Aedes
xos4ultoes. T. A, Belyayevao
USSR a 6~2.95
VD
ALIF'OV, P. I., VASHEQV,.&,J,,,*,YOLKCVA, A. P., ZAKOLODKINA, V. I., ZUBOVA,
G. M. , IRAIMOVA, 1. 1. , KMABYEV E. B. N M-MOVA L 1. , STREVNIKOVA,
G. X.t and FROWVA, A. I.
"Insecticidal Properties of 0-tvethyl-O-Dichlorovinyl-N-DimotllyI Amidorihosphate"
Tr. VNII dezinfektsii i steriliz. (Works.of the All Union Scientific
Research Institute of Disinfection and Sterilization)o 1971.p.vyp. 21, t. 2,
pp 68-73 (fron HZh-KhWyaj No 18j-Sep 72.#,-Abstract No 18N423)
TrIanslationt The substance of forzula 2HP(O)OCH-CC12 (I) has strong
contact, fumigation and Intestinalaction at the instaxit of application on
housefliesp bedbugs and red cockroaches; the sgent. is not as strong as
other organophosphorus insecticidoe with respect to mosquitoes. The most
active form for application to,a glass surface is a water emula~on prepa-red
from compound I with OP-7 (fil) an&a solution In acatorio. An alcohol
solution is considerably less active. ~Anlnvestigatlon Is tmeAe of the
laxvicidal activity of compourA 1. The in"oticid* bas iao xvsidual effect.
T., Ai Belyayeva,
r1m, r
411
USSR UDC 632.95
-BESSONOVA, 1. V., I~ASII~LV., I VOLKOV, Yu. P., VOLKOVA, A. P., ZHUK, Ye. B.,
TSETLIN, V. M., KLIMCHUK, V. 1.,~POZHARSKAYA,,Ye.~B..
"An Insecticide Composition!'
USSR Author's Certificate No 288800, filed 13/05/69, published 17/03/72
(Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Khimiya, Nc 24(IIJ', 1972, Abstract No
20593 P, by T. A. Balyayeva)
Translation: An insecticide is suggested, containing as its active ingredient a
'synergistic mixture of 0, O-dimethyl 0-(2,2,-dichlorovinyl) phosphate (1) and
an analog of the pyrethrins of the formuJ4
I Maz.C=CHCH-CHCf1jCQQCHZ hi
001
7w,
(II). Results are presented from determination of the degree of synergism and
the iiisecticidal activity on houseflies. The composition of an aerosol can
include 1, 11, xylene, kerosene.and a mixture.of freons. The preparate is
nontoxic for warm blooded animals.
42
"I.9. "04"IMMOMMM, MMIMIR MME-111FO-P-11M]"
USSR
VASHOVA, V, V. LOGRIOVA, N. arAi L'VOV, D. K,, Institute of Virology
~e ~M rit ~f --, -
.1vanovskiy, Academy of Kedical Sciences,, USSR-
"A Comparative Study of the Effects of Two Varieties of Japanese Encephalitis
Virus on Chromosomes and Mitotic Activity of Cells"
Moscow,- Voprosy Virusologii,-No 4. Jul/Aug 71, pp 494
Translation: The effects of two varieties of Japanese encephalitis virus
(Nekayam strain and clone No 33). differeing, from each other in neuropatho-
genicity with regard to white mice and,in certain other ge-netic properties, on
the chromosome apparatus in cells and on the mitotic activity of tissue cultures
were studied. The Nakayama strain had,no effect on the mitotic activity cf
tissue cultures. Clone No 33 suppressed mitotic activity,,begi-nning with the
14th hour after inoculation. Forty-three hours,:after'!inoculation, cultures
infected with the Nakayama strain had chromosome rearrangements ard those
infected Writh clone 110 33 had 11.7A of rearran-,emen~s~
all 1 F
USSR
VASMVA' YE. V.,
Tezinsektslya (Insect Extermination) Moscovr, Unisteiztoo 2dravookhraneniya
SSSRO 1970, 43 pp
Table of Contentst PaLe
Methods and-Neans of Arthropod Control 3
P.Wsical, 114eans of Insect Cont=ol, 4
Biological Hetnod of Insect.Control
Chemical-Means of Arthropod Control 9
P sects.(Attractints)
reparations Attiacting Iru 21
Preparations Repelling Imects, (Repellahfs): 24
Resistance of Insects to Insecticides: 27
Qimlity~ Control of Insect Extermination 31
Pleas arA Their Control
32
Lice and Their Control 35
-Flies and Their Control 39
END
7676~:
106
0901 1840-w
- -- -
M---
212 ozi UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 04TE--18SEP70
.ClkC ACCESSION NO--AP0104225
GP-0- ABSTRACT. AN EXPTL. STUDY WAS MADE OF THE
EMISSION FROM PARAMETRICALLY EXCITED.VOL, AND SURFACE.MA -GNETOSTATIC
%iAVESJ:rlR TANGENTIALLY M4GNETIZED SINGLE CRYSTAL.-DISKS OF FERRITES
DURING PAI-RALLEL PUlPING. THE THPESHOLD CURVES AIND THE EMISSrON ZaNES
'ARE SHOWN GOUPHICALLY. THE SURFACE~WAVES ARE UNSTABLE OVER A WIDE RANGE
-II.SSION'OF THE VCL.~!~ W'VES TAKES
OF MAGNETIZING FIELDS. THE Et A PLACE IN A
JZING FIELD (VERY NARRdW E-mrssiou, BAND). AN ANAL. OF THE
f I XED MAU4ET -A
DEPENDE14CE.OF THE EMISSION' POWER~ON T84E PUMPING POWER INDICATES THAT THE
ESTABLISHMENT OF T14E AMPLITUDE-~,Or- THE '-IAGNETOSTATTC WAVE 15 NOT RELATED
TO THE EXCITATION OF AUTOMODULATION.VIBRATIONS. THE tMISSICIN TAK S
-PLACE. "DIRECTLY"- AND NOT 13ECAUSE;:DF SCATTER EFFECTS.
5~
J' -70-
U
A.
A
GrITA, T. and 11 -0i "It! s
"Naclear e j 7, - L.,
of
-d YAj--,1nd
I e ~ -,
r-r-Mr-OULd Solution J- a
of Urmlyl 1'ra M.-
2,arunlai Tec)",
-ne skoy jj^l,
Vo 17,
Abusti-acat:
p.
ech -L-tiloa;
pin
tir, Of nuclea~f.
21-spin r-, !;~Lxation oi, p'
tions Of uml,-! t:r-" t . . i - ~-, -, Til.
--~Utlrl uhosphnte , -I -!.
(TT): p .,.L - v - C-
p
-~:Lo o L,
the I i f ejjr
c. of
so'l.
v
E.olv,atra :]~"in"
c-1
Wlth dec--1 ~
the Or:
CC),
'u, r- -
Ila
J
1,1,-
~07
1127~ 4 UNGLA$SIFIED X10CESSMG DATE--04.DEC70
.TITLE--RADICAL FORMATION IN LOW TEMPERATURE R4010L-v$fS OF TRIBUTYL
-NTS
PHOSPHATE AND SOME OTHER ORGANGP.HO&PHORUS EXTRACTING A.Gr
-AUT14-OR-102)-VASHMANf A.A#i SAVELYEV# Yu.10
COUNTRY 0F INFO--USSR
.SOURCE--LENINGRAD, RAD[OK"Imly.As. VOL l2r:,N10 it 1970r~ PP L2-17
DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
[%-SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRYt WCLEAR SCIENCE,AND TECHNOLOGY
IT OPIC TAGS--RADIOLYSISt ORGAN IC PHOSPHATEg' FREE RADICAL, EPRt GAMMA
P.l~`-:R,ADlATION,'NITRIC ACID
:CCNTROL,MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
.~DOCUMFNT CLASS--UNCLASSIFICO
'PROXY-FICKE NO ---- FD70/605017/f'-09 STEP NO--UR/0186/70?012/001/0012/0017
-CIRC ACCESSION PIO--AP0140730
~UNC- L AS SF i 9.0-
2 024 A551 FIED, PROCESSING DATE-04-DEI-70
UNC L
CIRC-ACCESSION NO--AP0140730
~~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE AUTHORS:USED THE EPR METHOD TO
iSTUOY THE FREE RADICALS FORMED IN THE GAMMA IRRADIATION OF TRIBUTYL
PHOSPHATE AND SOME OTHER NEUTRAL ORGANOPHOSPHORUS EXTRACTING AGENTS, AS
RMATION IN:IRRAD[ATED.MIXTURES OF TRI UTYL PHOSPHATE
WELL AS RADICAL FOr B
WITH NITRIC ACID AND WITH INERT OILVENTS, [Ti4AS FOUNG THAT IN
EXTRACTING AGENTS IRRADIATED IN AIR 0 ~02 RADICALS ARE FORMED IN THE
RELEASE OF RADICAL ELECTRON TRAPS. IN;FROZEN M[X:T;;JRES OF TRIBUTYL
~-PHOSPHATE WITH BENZENE AND -DECANE THE FORMATION OF.,F'AD[.CALS OF THE
EXTRACTING AGENT AND DILENT IS GOVERNEDIBY ADDITIVF LAW WITH VARIATIONS
IN THE COMPONENT CONCENTRATION. AN EXCEPTION ARE MIXTURES OF TRIBUTYL
PHOSPHATE YITH CARBON TETRA.CHLORIDEv;.WHVCH DISPLAY ISTRONG DEVIATION IN
ADDITIVITY IN THE FORRATION OF RADICALS )OF DILIJENr 41TIA VARIANTIONS IN
ITS.CONCENTRATION. IN IRRADIATED,~MIXTURES OF TR[BUTYL PHOSPHATE WITH
.97PERCENT HNO SUB3 THE EPR SPECTRA BELO,N.G.TO NO 50812 AND NO SUB3
RADICALS FORMED IN THE RADIOLYSIS OF CONGENTRATED:,NITRIC ACID, AS WELL
~AS P RAOICALS OF THE EXTRACTIING AGENT, ~THE NO SUB2 AND'R RADICALS ARE
FORMED AODITIVELY. THE NO 5U83 RADICALS ARE ELECTRON TRAPS, AND THEIR
EPR SIGNAL BEGINS TO APPEAR ONLY IN THE' REGION OF L-0',l CONCENTRAT IONS OF
TRIBUTYL PHOSPHATE. RADIATION CHENICAL REACTIONS or- THE FORMATION OF
FINAL RAGIOLYSIS PRODUCTS OF TRIBUTYL PHOSPHATE ARE:DISCUSSEO.
UpIrLASSIFIED-