147 KARAVAEV 



Office: S. I. Vavilov Institute of Physics Problems 



Vorob'evskoye Shosse, 2 



Moscow, USSR 

 Telephone: B2 32 30 



KARANDEEV, KQNSTANTIN BORISQVICH (Electrical Engineer) 



K. B. Karandeev was born July 18, 1907. He graduated in 

 1930 from Leningrad Polytechnic Institute. In 1929-1935 he 

 worked in the Electro-Physical Institute in Leningrad. He was 

 professor at the Leningrad Institute of Signal Engineering in 

 1937-42 and also deputy director of the AU-Union Scientific 

 Research Institute of Metrology. In 1944 he became professor 

 at L'vov Polytechnic Institute. Beginning in 1952, he worked in 

 the Institute of Machine Studies and Automation of the Ukrainian 

 S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. Karandeev was made Director of 

 the Institute of Automation and Electrometry of the Siberian 

 branch of the U. S.S.R. Academy of Sciences in 1957. He was 

 elected a Corresponding Member of the Ukrainian S.S.R. Acade- 

 my of Sciences in 1957 and in 1958 a Corresponding Member of 

 the U. S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. In 1954 he was made an 

 Honored Scientist of the Ukrainian S.S.R. 



Karandeev' s main works deal with developing exact methods 

 of electrical measurement, methods of measuring low and high 

 currents, low electromotive forces, and the theory of bridge 

 methods. He has been concerned with semiconductor rectifiers, 

 telemetry, use of computors in measuring schemes and devices, 

 and with geophysical apparatus. 

 Bibliography: 



Methods of Electrical Measurement (Differential, Bridge, 



and Compensation). Moscow-Leningrad: 1952. 



Bridge Methods of Measurement. Kiev: 1953. 



Semiconductor Rectifiers in Measuring Techniques. Kiev: 



1954. 



Direct Current Galvanometers (Theory and Practice). 



L'vov: 1957. 

 Office: Institute of Automation and Electrometry, Siberian 



Branch of USSR Academy of Sciences 

 Novosibirsk, Siberia 



KARAVAEV, NIKOLAI MIKHAILQVICH (Fuel Chemist) 



N. M. Karavaev was born June 7, 1890. After graduating 

 from the Moscow Technological College in 1920, he taught there 

 until 1930. From 1925 to 1932 he was at the Moscow Chemico- 

 Technological Institute, and from 1924 to 1932 he also worked 



