A study of the almost sequential mechanism of true ternary fission
R. B. Tashkhodjaev (1, 2), A. I. Muminov (2), A. K. Nasirov (2 and, 3, 4), W. von Oertzen (5, 6), Yongseok Oh (4, 7) ((1) Institute of, Nuclear Physics, Uzbek Academy of Science, Tashkent, Uzbekistan, (2) Inha, University in Tashkent, Uzbekistan

TL;DR
This paper investigates the almost sequential collinear ternary fission of Cf-252, revealing how Coulomb interactions influence fragment yields, with specific predictions matching experimental observations and explaining the elusive detection of the middle fragment.
Contribution
It introduces a model for the almost sequential ternary fission mechanism, highlighting Coulomb effects on fragment yields and explaining experimental data on specific cluster production.
Findings
Probability of about 10^{-3} for specific cluster yields.
Large yield of Ni and Sn due to potential energy landscape.
Middle fragment has very small velocity, explaining experimental non-detection.
Abstract
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 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 --. The results show that the yield of a heavy cluster such as \nuclide[68-70]{Ni} would be followed by a product of --…
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