128 research outputs found
Angular Distribution of the Scission Neutrons with Respect to the Fission Axis
AbstractWe study the angular distribution of the scission neutrons in a time dependent approach. This implies the numerical solution of the bi-dimensional time-dependent Schrödinger equation (TDSE) with time-dependent potential. To describe the axially symmetric extremely deformed nuclear shapes involved, we have used modified Cassini ovals. The Hamiltonian in cylindrical coordinates is discretized on a bi-dimensional grid, using finite difference approximations of the derivatives. The initial wave-functions for TDSE are the eigensolutions of the stationary Schrödinger equation whose potential corresponds to the pre-scission point (when the neck connecting the primary fission fragments starts to break). The time evolution is calculated by a Crank-Nicolson scheme until the neck dissappears (the post-scission point). The resulting wave-functions are then propagated keeping the last configuration to further intervals of time. We investigate the nucleus 236U at different mass asymmetries. The numerical solutions can be used to evaluate relevant physical quantities. Among them, the current density, a key quantity in the angular distribution calculation. The angular distribution of the scission neutrons is a priori a way to separate them from other neutron components. Moreover our preliminary results show a striking similarity with the angular distribution of the neutrons evaporated from fully accelerates fragments
Alpha-decay lifetimes semiempirical relationship including shell effects
A new version of the semiempirical formula based on fission approach of alpha
decay is derived, by using the optimum values of the fitting parameters
determined for even-even nuclei, combined with hindrance factors for even-odd,
odd-even, and odd-odd nuclides. The deviations from experimental data for two
regions of nuclear chart (493 alpha emitters with Z=52-118 and 142 transuranium
nuclei including superheavies (Z=92-118), respectively) are compared with those
obtained by using the universal curve and the Viola-Seaborg semiempirical
relationship.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, revtex
Emission of Scission Neutrons in the Sudden Approximation
At a certain finite neck radius during the descent of a fissioning nucleus
from the saddle to the scission point, the attractive nuclear forces can no
more withstand the repulsive Coulomb forces producing the neck rupture and the
sudden absorption of the neck stubs by the fragments. At that moment, the
neutrons, although still characterized by their pre-scission wave functions,
find themselves in the newly created potential of their interaction with the
separated fragments. Their wave functions become wave packets with components
in the continuum. The probability to populate such states gives evidently the
emission probability of neutrons at scission. In this way, we have studied
scission neutrons for the fissioning nucleus U, using two-dimensional
realistic nuclear shapes. Both the emission probability and the distribution of
the emission points relative to the fission fragments strongly depend on the
quantum numbers of the pre-scission state from which the neutron is emitted. In
particular it was found that states with = 1/2+ dominate the
emission. Depending on the assumed pre- and post-scission configurations and on
the emission-barrier height, 30 to 50% of the total scission neutrons are
emitted from 1/2+ states. Their emission points are concentrated in the region
between the newly separated fragments. The upper limit for the total number of
neutrons per scission event is predicted to lie between 0.16 and 1.73
(depending on the computational assumptions).Comment: 31 pages, 16 figures, 2 table
Time-dependent properties of proton decay from crossing single-particle metastable states in deformed nuclei
A dynamical study of the decay of a metastable state by quantum tunneling
through an anisotropic, non separable, two-dimensional potential barrier is
performed by the numerical solution of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation.
Initial quasi- stationary proton states are chosen in the framework of a
deformed Woods-Saxon single-particle model. The decay of two sets of states
corresponding to true and quasi levels-crossing is studied and the evolution of
their decay properties as a function of nuclear deformation is calculated
around the crossing point. The results show that the investigation of the
proton decay from metastable states in deformed nuclei can unambiguously
distinguish between the two types of crossing and determine the structure of
the nuclear states involved.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A dynamical model of surrogate reactions
A new dynamical model is developed to describe the whole process of surrogate
reactions; transfer of several nucleons at an initial stage, thermal
equilibration of residues leading to washing out of shell effects and decay of
populated compound nuclei are treated in a unified framework. Multi-dimensional
Langevin equations are employed to describe time-evolution of collective
coordinates with a time-dependent potential energy surface corresponding to
different stages of surrogate reactions. The new model is capable of
calculating spin distributions of the compound nuclei, one of the most
important quantity in the surrogate technique. Furthermore, various observables
of surrogate reactions can be calculated, e.g., energy and angular distribution
of ejectile, and mass distributions of fission fragments. These features are
important to assess validity of the proposed model itself, to understand
mechanisms of the surrogate reactions and to determine unknown parameters of
the model. It is found that spin distributions of compound nuclei produced in
O+U O+U and O+U
O+U reactions are equivalent and much less than
10, therefore satisfy conditions proposed by Chiba and Iwamoto (PRC 81,
044604(2010)) if they are used as a pair in the surrogate ratio method.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Molecular dynamics in shape space and femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy of metal clusters
We introduce a method of molecular dynamics in shape space aimed at metal
clusters. The ionic degrees of freedom are described via a dynamically
deformable jellium with inertia parameters derived from an incompressible,
irrotational flow. The shell correction method is used to calculate the
electronic potential energy surface underlying the dynamics. Our finite
temperature simulations of Ag_14 and its ions, following the negative to
neutral to positive scheme, demonstrate the potential of pump and probe
ultrashort laser pulses as a spectroscopy of cluster shape vibrations.Comment: Latex/Revtex, 4 pages with 3 Postscript figure
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Time-dependent formalism for the decay of ground-state deformed nuclei by proton emission : a numerical challenge /.
The numerical challenge associated with the time-dependent approach to the general problem of bi-dimensional quantum - tunneling is discussed and methods towards its application to concrete problems are developed
Parameterisation of the residual temperature distribution based on the modelling of successive emission of prompt neutrons
A new deterministic modelling taking into account the successive emission of prompt neutrons from initial fragments of a fragmentation range {A, Z, TKE} constructed as in the Point-by-Point (PbP) treatment is described. The good agreement of different prompt emission quantities obtained from this modelling (e.g. v(A), v(TKE), E-γ(A), E-γ(TKE), etc.) with the experimental data and the results of the PbP model and other Monte-Carlo models validates the present modelling of sequential emission. The distributions of different residual quantities, including the residual temperature distributions P(T) of light and heavy fragments allow to obtain a new parameterisation of P(T) which can be used in the PbP model and the Los Alamos model
Quasi-fission reactions as a probe of nuclear viscosity
Fission fragment mass and angular distributions were measured from the
^{64}Ni+^{197}Au reaction at 418 MeV and 383 MeV incident energy. A detailed
data analysis was performed, using the one-body dissipation theory implemented
in the code HICOL. The effect of the window and the wall friction on the
experimental observables was investigated. Friction stronger than one-body was
also considered. The mass and angular distributions were consistent with
one-body dissipation. An evaporation code DIFHEAT coupled to HICOL was
developed in order to predict reaction time scales required to describe
available data on pre-scission neutron multiplicities. The multiplicity data
were again consistent with one-body dissipation. The cross-sections for touch,
capture and quasi-fission were also obtained.Comment: 25 pages REVTeX, 3 tables, 13 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev
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