31 research outputs found
Living on the edge of stability, the limits of the nuclear landscape
A first-principles description of nuclear systems along the drip lines
presents a substantial theoretical and computational challenge. In this paper,
we discuss the nuclear theory roadmap, some of the key theoretical approaches,
and present selected results with a focus on long isotopic chains. An important
conclusion, which consistently emerges from these theoretical analyses, is that
three-nucleon forces are crucial for both global nuclear properties and
detailed nuclear structure, and that many-body correlations due to the coupling
to the particle continuum are essential as one approaches particle drip lines.
In the quest for a comprehensive nuclear theory, high performance computing
plays a key role.Comment: Contribution to proceedings of Nobel Symposium 152: Physics with
radioactive beams, June 2012, Gothenburg, Swede
Isotopic distribution of fission fragments in collisions between 238U beam and 9Be and 12C targets at 24 MeV/u
Inverse kinematics coupled to a high-resolution spectrometer is used to investigate the isotopic yields of fi?ssion fragments produced in reactions between a 238U beam at 24 MeV/u and 9Be and 12C targets. Mass, atomic number and isotopic distributions are reported for the two reactions. These informations give access to the neutron excess and the isotopic distribution widths, which together with the atomic-number and mass distributions are used to investigate the fusion-fission dynamics