Isotopic fission fragment distributions as a deep probe to fusion-fission dynamics
F. Farget, M. Caamano, O. Delaune, O. B. Tarasov, X. Derkx, K.-H., Schmidt, A. M. Amthor, L. Audouin, C.-O. Bacri, G. Barreau, B. Bastin, D., Bazin, B. Blank, J. Benlliure, L. Caceres, E. Casarejos, A. Chibihi, B., Fernandez-Dominguez, L. Gaudefroy, C. Golabek, S. Grevy

TL;DR
This study investigates how isotopic fission fragment distributions can serve as a detailed probe into the fusion-fission dynamics, revealing the influence of nuclear structure and energy landscape during fission.
Contribution
The paper presents the first comprehensive measurement of isotopic yields in fission fragments over the full atomic-number range in inverse kinematics experiments.
Findings
Shell effects diminish at higher excitation energies.
Fission fragment distributions reflect the potential energy landscape.
Fission dynamics influence isotopic yields.
Abstract
During the fission process, the nucleus deforms and elongates up to the two fragments inception and their final separation at scission deformation. The evolution of the nucleus energy with deformation is determined by the macroscopic properties of the nucleus, and is also strongly influenced by the single-particle structure of the nucleus. The fission fragment distribution is a direct consequence of the deformation path the nucleus has encountered, and therefore is the most genuine experimental observation of the potential energy landscape of the deforming nucleus. Very asymmetric fusion-fission reactions at energy close to the Coulomb barrier, produce well-defined conditions of the compound nucleus formation, where processes such as quasi-fission, pre-equilibrium emission and incomplete fusion are negligible. In the same time, the excitation energy is sufficient to reduce significantly…
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