98 research outputs found

    Mechanisms producing fissionlike binary fragments in heavy collisions

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    The mixing of the quasifission component to the fissionlike cross section causes ambiguity in the quantitative estimation of the complete fusion cross section from the observed angular and mass distributions of the binary products. We show that the partial cross section of quasifission component of binary fragments covers the whole range of the angular momentum values leading to capture. The calculated angular momentum distributions for the compound nucleus and dinuclear system going to quasifission may overlap: competition between complete fusion and quasifission takes place at all values of initial orbital angular momentum. Quasifission components formed at large angular momentum of the dinuclear system can show isotropic angular distribution and their mass distribution can be in mass symmetric region similar to the characteristics of fusion-fission components. As result the unintentional inclusion of the quasifission contribution into the fusion-fission fragment yields can lead to overestimation of the probability of the compound nucleus formation.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, International Conference on Nuclear Reactions on Nucleons and Nuclei, Messina, Italy, October 5-9, 200

    A study of the almost sequential mechanism of true ternary fission

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    We consider the collinear ternary fission which is a sequential ternary decay with a very short time between the ruptures of two necks connecting the middle cluster of the ternary nuclear system and outer fragments. In particular, we consider the case where the Coulomb field of the first massive fragment separated during the first step of the fission produces a lower pre-scission barrier in the second step of the residual part of the ternary system. In this case, we obtain a probability of about 10310^{-3} for the yield of massive clusters such as \nuclide[70]{Ni}, \nuclide[80-82]{Ge}, \nuclide[86]{Se}, and \nuclide[94]{Kr} in the ternary fission of \nuclide[252]{Cf}. These products appear together with the clusters having mass numbers of A=132A = 132--140140. The results show that the yield of a heavy cluster such as \nuclide[68-70]{Ni} would be followed by a product of A=138A = 138--148148 with a large probability as observed in the experimental data obtained with the FOBOS spectrometer at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research. The third product is not observed. The landscape of the potential energy surface shows that the configuration of the Ni + Ca + Sn decay channel is lower about 12 MeV than that of the Ca + Ni + Sn channel. This leads to the fact, that the yield of Ni and Sn is large. The analysis on the dependence of the velocity of the middle fragment on mass numbers of the outer products leads to the conclusion that, in the collinear tripartition channel of \nuclide[252]{Cf}, the middle cluster has a very small velocity, which does not allow it to be found in experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure

    Role of the target orientation angle and orbital angular momentum in the evaporation residue production

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    The influence of the orientation angles of the target nucleus symmetry axis relative to the beam direction on the production of the evaporation residues is investigated for the 48^{48}Ca+154^{154}Sm reaction as a function of the beam energy. At low energies (Ec.m.<E_{\rm c.m.}<137 MeV), the yield of evaporation residues is observed only for collisions with small orientation angles (αT<450\alpha_T<45^0). At large energies (about Ec.m.=E_{\rm c.m.}=140--180 MeV) all the orientation angles αT\alpha_T can contribute to the evaporation residue cross section σER\sigma_{ER} in the 10--100 mb range, and at Ec.m.>E_{c.m.}>180 MeV σER\sigma_{ER} ranges around 0.1--10 mb because the fission barrier for a compound nucleus decreases by increasing its excitation energy and angular momentum.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, submitted to JPS
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