6533b82dfe1ef96bd129088a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Nuclear structure dependence of fusion hindrance in heavy element synthesis
Aditya WakhleJ. WalsheJ. KhuyagbaatarBettina LommelK. Vo-phuocDuc Huy LuongAlexander YakushevE.v. PrasadCedric SimenelEdward SimpsonIan CarterMahananda DasguptaC. SenguptaCh. E. DüllmannH. M. DavidD. Y. JeungElizabeth WilliamsBirgit KindlerJ.f. SmithD. C. RaffertyKaitlin CookDavid Hindesubject
PhysicsFusion010308 nuclear & particles physicsFissionNuclear TheoryNuclear structure7. Clean energy01 natural sciencesNuclear physics0103 physical sciencesProduction (computer science)Heavy ionHeavy elementDetector arrayNuclear Experiment010306 general physicsdescription
The production of the heaviest elements in fusion-evaporation reactions is substantially limited by very low cross sections, as fusion cross sections (including fusion-fission) are greatly reduced by the competing quasifission mechanism. Using the Australian National University Heavy Ion Accelerator Facility and CUBE detector array, fission fragments from the $^{48}\mathrm{Ti}+^{204,208}\mathrm{Pb}$ and $^{50}\mathrm{Ti}+^{206,208}\mathrm{Pb}$ reactions have been measured, with the aim to investigate how the competition between quasifission and fusion-fission evolves with small changes in entrance-channel properties associated mainly with the nuclear structure. Analysis of mass-distribution widths of strongly mass-angle-correlated fission fragments within the framework of the compound-nucleus fission theory demonstrates significant differences in quasifission (and therefore fusion) probabilities among the four reactions. The impact of nuclear structure on fusion highlights the importance of future radioactive beams.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018-06-28 | Physical Review C |