1 / 15

Global view on fission channels

Global view on fission channels. C. Böckstiegel, S. Steinhäuser, H.-G. Clerc, A. Grewe, A. Heinz, M. de Jong, J. Müller, B. Voss Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt A. R. Junghans, A. Keli ć , K.-H. Schmidt GSI, Darmstadt. Low-energy fission - Complex structures.

zev
Download Presentation

Global view on fission channels

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Global view on fission channels C. Böckstiegel, S. Steinhäuser, H.-G. Clerc, A. Grewe, A. Heinz, M. de Jong, J. Müller, B. VossInstitut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt A. R. Junghans, A. Kelić, K.-H. Schmidt GSI, Darmstadt

  2. Low-energy fission - Complex structures - Similar kind of complexity seen in e.g. TKE, mass-dependent neutron yields or gamma-ray multiplicities.

  3. Theoretical description • Strutinsky-type calculations of the potential-energy landscape • (e.g. Pashkevich, Möller et al.) • Statistical scission-point models • (e.g. Fong, Wilkins et al.) • Statistical saddle-point models • (e.g. Jensen et al., Duijvestijn et al.) • Dynamical approach based on the solution of Langevin equations of motion • (e.g. Asano et al., Aritomo et al.) • Time-dependent Hartree-Fock calculations with GCM • (e.g. Goutte, Dubray et al.)

  4. Experimental difficulties • - Restricted choice of systems • Available targets  stable or long-lived nuclei • Secondary beams  no beams above 238U by fragmentation • Reaction products  limited N/Z range in heavy-ion fusion • - Physical limits on resolution • Z and A resolution difficult at low energies • Scattering in target/detector at low energies (tails in A/TKE • distribution) • - Technical limits on correlations • No experimental information available on AandZ of both fission • fragments simultaneously

  5. What to do? An empirical overview on the observed structures in low-energy fission.  Common features behind the large variety of the complex structures seen for the different fissioning systems.  Use as a test of different theoretical approaches. Same kind of approach done by other authors (e.g. Unik et al, Rochester (1973); Brosa et al, Phys. Rep. (1990); Dematte et al, Nucl. Phys. A (1997); Mulgin et al, Phys. Lett. B (1999)), but for a limited range of N/Z of the fissioning nuclei.

  6. Which kind of empirical overview? - Method of independent fission channels (Super-long, Standard 1, Standard 2) as proposed by e.g. Brosa et al, Phys. Rep. (1990). Böckstiegel et al, Nucl. Phys. A (2008) - Analysed data:Z and A distributions measured in EM-induced fission of secondary beams, low-energy particle induced fission and spontaneous fission; for refs. to data see Böckstiegel et al, Nucl. Phys. A (2008)

  7. Relative yield of fission channels - Superlong channel decreases with increasing A - For given Z of the fissioning system, Standard 1 channel increases with increasing A and Standard 2 decreases.

  8. Position of fission channels in A Standard 1Standard 2 - For a fixed Z of fissioning system, average positions of Standard 1 and Standard 2 are increasing with increasing mass of the system.

  9. Position of fission channels in Z and N Standard 1Standard 2 - For both fission channels, position in Z is stable, while position in N increases with A of the fissioning system.

  10. Position of fission channels in Z and N Calculations based on macro-microscopic approach using input from shell model: N=82 and Z=50 as responsible for Standard 1, and N=88 as responsible for Standard 2. Something beyond shells.

  11. Conclusions and outlook • - "Lesson" from the fission-channel study: • The parameters of the fission channels vary in a smooth and • systematic way from Ac to Cf. • Position of St1 and St2 "stable" in Zfand not in Nf. - Still, we need experimental data with much better quality, especially information on N and Z of both fission fragments simultaneously  Need for new experimental set-ups, like e.g. ELISe at FAIR.

  12. Standard deviation

  13. Position of fission channels in Z and N

  14. Relative yield of fission channels N/Z(132Sn) = 1.64

  15. Shells of fragments Importance of spherical and deformed neutron and proton shells Wilkins et al. PRC 14 (1976) 1832

More Related