Decisive role of wriggling vibrations in the formation of angular and spin distributions of products originating from binary and ternary fission of oriented nuclei
- Authors: Kadmensky S.G.1, Bunakov V.E.2, Lyubashevsky D.E.1
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Affiliations:
- Voronezh State University
- Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute
- Issue: Vol 80, No 5 (2017)
- Pages: 850-857
- Section: Proceedings of LXVI International Conference on Nuclear Spectroscopy and Atomic Nuclei Structure October 11–14, 2016, Sarov, Russia/Nuclei
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7788/article/view/192508
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S106377881705012X
- ID: 192508
Cite item
Abstract
It is shown that the multiplicities and angular and energy distributions of neutrons and photons evaporated from thermalized fragments originating from the spontaneous and low-energy induced fission of nuclei, the relative yields of ground and isomeric states of final fragments, and the features of delayed neutrons emitted upon the beta decay of the above fragments can successfully be described by employing nonequilibrium distributions of spins and relative orbital angular momenta of fission fragments formed in the vicinity of the scission point for the fissile nucleus being studied. It is also shown that these distributions, which are characterized by large mean values of the spins and orbital angular momenta directed orthogonally to the symmetry axis of the fissioning nucleus are successfully constructed upon simultaneously taking into account zero-mode transverse wriggling and bending vibrations of a fissile compound nucleus in the vicinity of its scission point, the wriggling vibrations being dominant. It is confirmed that the zero-mode wriggling vibrations considered immediately above are directly involved in the formation of the angular distributions of fragments originating from the spontaneous and low-energy fission of nuclei. This makes it possible to describe successfully such distributions for photofission fragments.
About the authors
S. G. Kadmensky
Voronezh State University
Author for correspondence.
Email: kadmensky@phys.vsu.ru
Russian Federation, Universitetskaya pl. 1, Voronezh, 394036
V. E. Bunakov
Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute
Email: kadmensky@phys.vsu.ru
Russian Federation, Gatchina, Leningrad oblast, 188300
D. E. Lyubashevsky
Voronezh State University
Email: kadmensky@phys.vsu.ru
Russian Federation, Universitetskaya pl. 1, Voronezh, 394036
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