175 research outputs found
La stabilité des éléments super-lourds sondée par des mesures de temps de fission
Une technique originale fondée sur la mesure de temps de réactions nucléaires a été développée au laboratoire du Grand Accélérateur National d'Ions Lourds à Caen (GANIL) pour mettre en évidence l'existence de noyaux d'éléments super-lourds - de masse très supérieure à ce qui existe sur terre à l'état naturel - et pour sonder leur stabilité
Heavy Ion Dynamics and Neutron Stars
Some considerations are reported, freely inspired from the presentations and
discussions during the Beijing Normal University Workshop on the above Subject,
held in July 2007. Of course this cannot be a complete summary but just a
collection of personal thougths aroused during the meeting.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, Summary Talk, Int.Workshop on "Nuclear Dynamics
in Heavy Ion Collisions and Neutron Stars", Beijing Normal Univ. July 07, to
appear in Int.Journ.Modern Physics E (2008
Heavy Residue Isoscaling as a Probe of the Process of N/Z Equilibration
The isotopic and isobaric scaling behavior of the yield ratios of heavy
projectile residues from the collisions of 25 MeV/nucleon 86Kr projectiles on
124Sn and 112Sn targets is investigated and shown to provide information on the
process of N/Z equilibration occurring between the projectile and the target.
The logarithmic slopes and of the residue yield ratios
with respect to residue neutron number N and neutron excess N--Z are obtained
as a function of the atomic number Z and mass number A, respectively, whereas
excitation energies are deduced from velocities. The relation of the isoscaling
parameters and with the N/Z of the primary (excited)
projectile fragments is employed to gain access to the degree of N/Z
equilibration prior to fragmentation as a function of excitation energy. A
monotonic relation between the N/Z difference of fragmenting quasiprojectiles
and their excitation energy is obtained indicating that N/Z equilibrium is
approached at the highest observed excitation energies. Simulations with a
deep-inelastic transfer model are in overall agreement with the isoscaling
conclusions. The present residue isoscaling approach to N/Z equilibration
offers an attractive tool of isospin and reaction dynamics studies in
collisions involving beams of stable or rare isotopes.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Lett.
Long lifetime components in the decay of excited super-heavy nuclei
For nuclear reactions in which super-heavy nuclei can be formed, the essential difference between the fusion process followed by fission and non-equilibrium processes leading to fission-like fragments is there action time. Quite probable non-equilibrium
Nuclear fission time measurements as a function of excitation energy - A crystal blocking experiment
CASFission times of lead and uranium nuclei have been measured at GANIL by the crystal blocking method. The inverse kinematics was used. Fragment atomic numbers and total excitation energies were determined. For data analysis, full Monte-Carlo trajectory calculations were used to simulate the blocking patterns. The effect of post-scission emissions, included in our simulations, is discussed. At high excitation energies, the scissions occur dominantly at times shorter than 10−19 s, whereas at low excitation energies (E∗<250–300 MeV), scissions occurring at much longer times with sizeable probabilities are observed both for uranium and for lead nuclei, leading to average scission times much longer than those inferred from pre-scission emission
Isotopic Scaling of Heavy Projectile Residues from the collisions of 25 MeV/nucleon 86Kr with 124Sn, 112Sn and 64Ni, 58Ni
The scaling of the yields of heavy projectile residues from the reactions of
25 MeV/nucleon 86Kr projectiles with 124Sn,112Sn and 64Ni, 58Nitargets is
studied. Isotopically resolved yield distributions of projectile fragments in
the range Z=10-36 from these reaction pairs were measured with the MARS recoil
separator in the angular range 2.7-5.3 degrees. The velocities of the residues,
monotonically decreasing with Z down to Z~26-28, are employed to characterize
the excitation energy. The yield ratios R21(N,Z) for each pair of systems are
found to exhibit isotopic scaling (isoscaling), namely, an exponential
dependence on the fragment atomic number Z and neutron number N. The isoscaling
is found to occur in the residue Z range corresponding to the maximum observed
excitation energies. The corresponding isoscaling parameters are alpha=0.43 and
beta=-0.50 for the Kr+Sn system and alpha=0.27 and beta=-0.34 for the Kr+Ni
system. For the Kr+Sn system, for which the experimental angular acceptance
range lies inside the grazing angle, isoscaling was found to occur for Z<26 and
N<34. For heavier fragments from Kr+Sn, the parameters vary monotonically,
alpha decreasing with Z and beta increasing with N. This variation is found to
be related to the evolution towards isospin equilibration and, as such, it can
serve as a tracer of the N/Z equilibration process. The present heavy-residue
data extend the observation of isotopic scaling from the intermediate mass
fragment region to the heavy-residue region. Such high-resolution mass
spectrometric data can provide important information on the role of isospin in
peripheral and mid-peripheral collisions, complementary to that accessible from
modern large-acceptance multidetector devices.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Nuclear structure and reaction studies at SPIRAL
The SPIRAL facility at GANIL, operational since 2001, is described briefly.
The diverse physics program using the re-accelerated (1.2 to 25 MeV/u) beams
ranging from He to Kr and the instrumentation specially developed for their
exploitation are presented. Results of these studies, using both direct and
compound processes, addressing various questions related to the existence of
exotic states of nuclear matter, evolution of new "magic numbers", tunnelling
of exotic nuclei, neutron correlations, exotic pathways in astrophysical sites
and characterization of the continuum are discussed. The future prospects for
the facility and the path towards SPIRAL2, a next generation ISOL facility, are
also briefly presented.Comment: 48 pages, 27 figures. Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics
Evidence of Z=120 compound nucleus formation from lifetime measurement in the U+Ni reaction at 6.62 MeV/nucleon
CAS NIMThe formation of compound nuclei with Z=120, followed by fission, has been evidenced in the 238U+Ni system at 6.62 MeV/nucleon by very long reaction times (t ~ 10-17s) measured by the blocking technique in single crystals
Evidence for the Role of Proton Shell Closure in Quasifission Reactions from X-Ray Fluorescence of Mass-Identified Fragments
The atomic numbers and the masses of fragments formed in quasifission reactions are simultaneously measured at scission in Ti48+U238 reactions at a laboratory energy of 286 MeV. The atomic numbers are determined from measured characteristic fluorescence x rays, whereas the masses are obtained from the emission angles and times of flight of the two emerging fragments. For the first time, thanks to this full identification of the quasifission fragments on a broad angular range, the important role of the proton shell closure at Z=82 is evidenced by the associated maximum production yield, a maximum predicted by time-dependent Hartree-Fock calculations. This new experimental approach gives now access to precise studies of the time dependence of the N/Z (neutron over proton ratios of the fragments) evolution in quasifission reactions.The authors acknowledge
support from the Australian Research Council through
Discovery Grants No. FL110100098, No. FT120100760,
No. DP130101569, No. DE140100784, No. DP160
101254, and No. DP170102318. Support for accelerator
operations through the NCRIS program is acknowledged.
Two of us (C. S. and M. A.) acknowledge support from
the Scientific Mobility Program of the Embassy of France
in Australia. This research was undertaken with the
assistance of resources from the National Computational
Infrastructure (NCI), which is supported by the Australian
Government
EVIDENCE OF PRIMARY EVENTS IN 20Ne, 22Ne FRAGMENTATION FROM COINCIDENCE MEASUREMENTS IN 20, 22Ne + 93Nb REACTION AT 30 MeV/A
Evidence that primary ejectiles formation strongly depends on the projectile structure is given by comparison of 20Ne + 93Nb and 22Ne + 93Nb reactions at 30 MeV/A. Pick-up, stripping, break-up mechanism are identified using light particles-projectile fragments coïncidence measurements
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