228 research outputs found
Connection of four-dimensional Langevin model and Hauser-Feshbach theory to describe statistical decay of fission fragments
We developed a method superposing two different fission modes calculated in a
four-dimensional Langevin model to obtain more accurate fission fragment yield
and total kinetic energy (TKE). The two fission modes correspond to the
standard I and standard II modes reported by Brosa et al., and parameters in
the Langevin model and the superposing ratio were determined to reproduce the
fission fragment yield of Pu of spontaneous fission. We also
investigated the fission fragment yields and the TKEs of other Pu isotopes by
using the same Langevin parameters and different superposing ratios, such as
spontaneous fission of Pu and neutron-induced fission of
Pu. The prompt fission observables, such as the neutron multiplicity,
the prompt fission neutron spectrum, and the independent fission product yield
were calculated in the Hauser-Feshbach statistical decay model implemented in a
nuclear reaction code TALYS with Pu(n,f) in the incident energies
ranging from thermal energy up to 5 MeV. The calculated fission observables
qualitatively reproduce several known trends while calculated results have
quantitative discrepancies between reported data. Although more improvements
are needed for the most important nuclides, it turned out that our approach has
the capability to provide prompt fission observables for difficult-to-measure
nuclides.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, Under review in Journal of Nuclear Science and
Technolog
Research and development for accuracy improvement of neutron nuclear data on minor actinides
To improve accuracy of neutron nuclear data on minor actinides, a Japanese nuclear data project entitled “Research and development for Accuracy Improvement of neutron nuclear data on Minor ACtinides (AIMAC)” has been implemented. Several independent measurement techniques were developed for improving measurement precision at J-PARC/MLF/ANNRI and KURRI/LINAC facilities. Effectiveness of combining the independent techniques has been demonstrated for identifying bias effects and improving accuracy, especially in characterization of samples used for nuclear data measurements. Capture cross sections and/or total cross sections have been measured for Am-241, Am-243, Np-237, Tc-99, Gd-155, and Gd-157. Systematic nuclear data evaluation has also been performed by taking into account the identified bias effect. Highlights of the AIMAC project are outlined
Neutron capture cross section measurements of 120
Preliminary neutron capture cross section of 120Sn, 122Sn and 124Sn were obtained in the energy range from 20 meV to 4 keV with the array of germanium detectors in ANNRI at MLF,J-PARC. The results of 120Sn, 122Sn and 124Sn were obtained by normalizing the relative cross sections to the data in JENDL-4.0 at the largest 426.7-, 107.0- and 62.05-eV resonances, respectively. The 67.32- and 150-eV resonances for 120Sn and the 579- and 950-eV resonances for 124Sn which are listed in JENDL-4.0 and/or ENDF/B VII.1 were not observed
Evaluation of neutron total and capture cross sections on 99Tc in the unresolved resonance region
Long-lived fission product Technetium-99 is one of the most important radioisotopes for nuclear transmutation. The reliable nuclear data are indispensable for a wide energy range up to a few MeV, in order to develop environmental load reducing technology. The statistical analyses of resolved resonances were performed by using the truncated Porter-Thomas distribution, coupled-channels optical model, nuclear level density model and Bayes' theorem on conditional probability. The total and capture cross sections were calculated by a nuclear reaction model code CCONE. The resulting cross sections have statistical consistency between the resolved and unresolved resonance regions. The evaluated capture data reproduce those recently measured at ANNRI of J-PARC/MLF above resolved resonance region up to 800 keV
- …