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Russia Science

Tazaki, K., Okrugin, V., Okuno, M. et al. (2003) Heavy Metallic Concentration in Microbial Mats Found at Hydrothermal Systems, Kamchatka, Russia. Science Reports of the Kanazawa University, Vol. 47, Issue 1-2, 1-48. [Pg.230]

Bukharin, Oleg, Integration of the Military and Civilian Nuclear Fuel Cycles in Russia, Science Global Security, Vol. 4, No. 3, 1994, pp. 385-406. [Pg.46]

V.A. Rudnitsky, S.V. Tsarik - National Academy of Sciences, Belarus. M.B. Bakirov - All-Russian Research Inst, for Nuclear Power, Russia. [Pg.239]

V.D. Naboschikov, V.P. Drankov - Ministry of Science and Technology, Russia. [Pg.430]

Proceedings of the International S olvent Extraction Conference 1988, USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, 1990. [Pg.82]

S. T. Konobeevsky, Conference of the A.cademy of Sciences of the Ui i R on the Peaceful Uses ofA.tomic Energy Eng. Trans., Moscow, Russia, 1955. [Pg.206]

The main suppHers and manufacturers of polymethine dyes are Aldrich Chemical Company, Eastman Organic Chemicals (U.S.), Japanese Institute for Photosensitizing Dyes, NK Dyes (Japan), Riedel deHaen (Germany), Institute of Organic Chemistry of the National Academy of Sciences (Ukraine), and NIIKhim-EotoProekt (Russia). [Pg.500]

Anatoly K. Babko was bom on October 15, 1905 in the province of Tomsk (Russia) to a railwayman s family. In 1908 the family moved to the Ukraine, where he graduated from secondary school in 1921. In 1922 he was admitted to the Chemistry Department of the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, and in 1928 he was accepted there for PhD study under the supervision of Professor N.A. Tananaev. In 1930 he became a lecturer at the Kyiv Institute of Food-processing Industry, and in 1934 he was appointed senior lecturer in the Department of Analytical Chemistry at Kyiv. State University where he worked for the rest of his life, working also from 1937 in the Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. [Pg.7]

Kurnakov Institute of General and Inorganic chemistry of Russian Academy of Sciences Leninskii pr.31, Moscow, 119991 Russia, e-mail mukhanova igic. ras. ru... [Pg.137]

Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences Favorsky St.,lA, Irkutsk 664033, Russia, E-mail lsuvor igc.irk.ru... [Pg.152]

Institute of Geochemistry, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia, 664033, Irkutsk, Favorskiy st. 1 A, pavpla igc.irk.ru... [Pg.177]

Institut of metallurgy, Ural division of Russian Academy of sciences Amundsen st., 101, Yekaterinburg 620016, Russia, shun ural.ru -Ural State University, Lenina av., 51, Yekaterinburg 620083, Russia, Ludmila.Neudachina usu. ru... [Pg.225]

Vernadsky Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Kosygin street 19, Moscow 119991, Russia, e-mail fedotov ps mail.ru... [Pg.243]

Faculty of Material Science, Moscow State University, 119992, Lenin Hills, Moscow, Russia Puganova mail.ru... [Pg.321]

Russian Academy of Sciences, Siberian Branch, Institute of Geochemistry Favorsky St. 1 A, 664033 Irkutsk, Russia, obel igc.irk.ru Irkutsk State University, Institute of petroleum coal chemical synthesis Lermontov St. 128, 664033 Irkutsk, Russia, sskornikova mail.ru... [Pg.438]

Prof. Dr. Michail Bolshov Institute of Spectroscopy Russian Academy of Sciences 142092 Troitzk, Moscow reg. Russia... [Pg.350]

In Russia, after many years of a successful but purely metallurgical journal entitled Fizika Metallov i Metallovedenie (the last word representing knowledge of materials and not, as I had supposed, metallography (Rabkin 2000)), a group of influential materials scientists in 1997 started a journal entitled Materialovedenie, which word I believe to be the best current Russian form of materials science . In spite of the editors best efforts, the journal is finding it difficult to break away from a metallurgical focus. [Pg.514]

Nina N. Makhova (65), N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow II79I3, Russia... [Pg.315]

D. L. Rakhmankulov, V. V. Zorin, F. N. Latypova, R. S. Musavirov, and I. N. Siraeva, Metody Sinteza 1,3-Digeteroanalogov Tsikloalkanov [in Russian], Reaktiv, Ufa (Russia), Nova Science Publishers (USA), 1998. [Pg.299]

Volume 79 of Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry commences with an overview of Tellurium-Nitrogen-Containing Heterocycles by I. D. Sadekov and V. I. Minkin of Rostov State University, Russia, andrepresents an update of the review published by the same authors in Volume 58 of Advances, eight years ago. The field has expanded markedly in the recent past, and the compounds show promise in an increasing number of applications, particularly in the material science field. [Pg.321]

Russian Academy of Sciences, 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia. This work was supported by a CRDF grant (REC-008) and by a grant 003-03-40135 (The Russian Foundation for Basic Research). [Pg.89]

A. E. Favorsky Irkutsk Institute of Chemistiy, Russian Academy of Sciences, Sibenan Branch, 1 Favorsky Street Irkutsk 664033, Russia... [Pg.156]


See other pages where Russia Science is mentioned: [Pg.142]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.455]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.511]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.535]    [Pg.432]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.23 , Pg.323 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.23 , Pg.323 ]




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