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Russia Journals published

G. E. Zaikov is a member of many editorial boards of journals published in Russia, Poland, Bulgaria, the United States, and England. In the... [Pg.336]

The report gives eonsideration to the eontribution of the seientists from Russia to the development of XRF analysis in the period from 1999 to nowadays. The state of XRF in the earlier period was diseussed in the reviews. Presented in detail are only the most important advanees eonneeted to the speeial features of XRF method. The reviews and the monographs, published in this period, the Conferenees on XRF problems, held in Russia, the defended dissertations are separately diseussed (-380 papers, 5 monographs and 17 dissertations). The statistieal analysis of the publieations on XRF is presented (the distribution in the Russian and foreign journals and in the towns Moseow, Irkutsk, Novosibirsk, St. Petersburg and others). [Pg.415]

A. B. Sheremetev and N. N. Makhova (N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Moscow, Russia) and W. Friedrichsen (University of Kiel, Germany) have reviewed the monocyclic furazans and furoxans. While much of the early work in this area was published in the German and Italian literature, more recently, a large amount has appeared in Russian journals, much of it being released for publication only during the last ten years. This survey should be of great utility to Western readers. [Pg.316]

He is a recognized expert in solid state and materials chemistry and environmental chemistry. He has active programs in solid state f-element chemistry and nanomaterials science. His current research interests include heavy metal detection and remediation in aqueous environments, ferroelectric nanomaterials, actinide and rare-earth metal sohd slate chemistry, and nuclear non-proliferation. He currently maintains a collaboration in nuclear materials with Los Alamos National Laboratory and a collaboration in peaceful materials science development with the Russian Federal Nuclear Center - VNIIEF, Sarov, Russia, U.S. State Department projects. He has published over 100 peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and reviews, while presenting over 130 international and national invited lectures on his area of chemistry. Dr. Dorhout currently serves as Vice Provost for Graduate Studies and Assistant Vice President for research. He has also served as the Interim Executive Director for the Office of International Programs and as Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Education for the College of Natural Sciences at Colorado State University. [Pg.359]

A joint Russian and American team of physicists created two new super heavy elements—115 and 113—that provide more support for the island of stability concept. The experiments were conducted between July 14 and August 10 in 2003, but the results of the experiments were not published until February 2004. The experiments were conducted in the Joint Institute of Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, Russia, and also involved the scientists of the Lawrence Berkely National Laboratory located at Berkeley, California. Only four atoms of two isotopes of ununpentium (element 115) were produced, and the results were published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. Following is the nuclear reaction that produced these four atoms ... [Pg.360]

Ruthenium was the last of the six platinum group metals to be isolated, and was discovered in Kazan (now capital of the Tatarstan Republic, Russian Federation) by Karl Karlovich Klaus (1796-1864) in 1844. The original papers were published in Russian journals which are difficult to obtain now, but were published in Western Europe in 1845 [1,2] with a summary in English [3]. Klaus made the metal by reduction of RuOj with H3 and named it Ruthenium in honour of his native land (Ruthenia, Latin for Russia) there are short biographies of him [4, 5],... [Pg.3]

When Alexander von Humboldt, Gustav Rose, and Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg made a scientific expedition to Russia in 1829 the Russian Minister of Finance E. F. Kankrin made arrangements for their comfort and security. Humboldt made important observations on the gold- and platinum-bearing alluvial deposits of the Urals (92). Professor B. N. Menschutkin published in the Journal of Chemical Education an excellent historical sketch of the Russian platinum (36). [Pg.428]

In 1815 he went back to Dorpat, passed the pharmacy examinations at the University, and returned to the St. Petersburg apothecary. His study of the natural sciences having awakened in him a desire to study Nature at first hand, he went to Saratov in 1817 as provisor of a pharmacy so that he might spend his leisure hours investigating the flora and fauna of die Volga steppes, or prairies, in eastern Russia. The results of this ten-year research were published in the Russian journals. [Pg.441]

Marx had to confront this problem in a practical form when Russian writers drew the conclusion from his work that Russia had to pass through the stage of capitalism before socialism could be developed. In 1877 he drafted a letter to the editors of a Russian journal that had published an article asserting this view. Marx first refers to Chemyshevsky, who "in remarkable articles has discussed the question whether Russia must begin, as the liberal economists demand, with the destruction of the peasant community, and then make the transition to a capitalist regime, or whether on the contrary it can appropriate all the fruits of the Utter... [Pg.307]

Journals. No American scientific journals deal exclusively with the field of meat research. The Journal of Meat Science is yet to be published. Russia appears to be the only country that has brought out a journal approximating this. The Library of Congress list of periodicals of the Soviet Union (6) cites three journals in the field of meat, two of which deal with both the meat and dairy industries, but the third. [Pg.265]

In February 2004, tbe Dubna and Berkeley groups announced their collaborative discovery of elements 113 (ununtrium or Uut) and 115 (ununpentium or Uup). Using hot fusion the researchers fired Ca at a target with formation of both Uup (expulsion of 4 neutrons) and Uup (expulsion of 3 neutrons). The lifetimes of these two nuclei were tens of milliseconds and they each ejected an a-particle to form Uut and Uut respectively with half-lives of tens of milliseconds. The results, published in a respected journal, are not yet confirmed by the JWP. The researchers also very tentatively noted the observation of one possible decay event from element 118 and, in 2006, corroborating evidence was obtained in the United States and in Russia. [Pg.363]

We turn now to Mendeleevs armouncement of his discovery. Having arrived at a consistent periodic system, Mendeleev had 200 copies of his table printed and sent them to chemists in Russia and the rest of Europe. Nicolai Alexandrovich Menshutkin communicated the initial discovery to the Russian Chemical Society on March 6. Later in the same month, it appeared in print (in Russian) in the first volume of the journal of the newly formed Russian Chemical Society. The full article contained several periodic tables, and a shorter abstract was published in German a few weeks later. [Pg.106]

Russian Journal of Electrochemistry (Elektrokhimiya), Grafov BM (ed) Maik Nauka/Interperiodica Publishing, Moscow, Russia (http //www. maik.rssi.ru/journals/elchem.htm)... [Pg.317]

Society of Chemistry, and Elsevier). He has been invited as a visiting researcher in Russia (2014 to present), Portugal (2013, 2014), the Czech Republic (2012, 2013), Italy (2009, 2012), Argentina (2010), Sweden (2010, 2011, 2012), Switzerland (2010), Spain (2011, 2012), Slovenia (2011), France (2011), Belgium (2012), and Austria (2012) for his research work. He visited 12 countries he visited 15 universities in Europe. He published 13 publications, 3 reviews, and more than 18 book chapters. He has attended and presented more than 28 conferences, he has 320 citations, and his h-index is 9. He acts as a guest editor for 4 international journals. [Pg.414]

The debate in Russia could be followed by readers of the Journal of Chemical Education, 29 (1952) 2-15 31 (1954) 504-514. The journal also published an article of the Russian historian of science G.V. Bykov on the importance of Butlerov ]39, 1962, 220-224]. [Pg.38]


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