Microscopic analysis of fusion hindrance in heavy systems
Kouhei Washiyama

TL;DR
This paper uses microscopic TDHF simulations to analyze fusion hindrance in heavy-ion reactions, revealing that increased potential at small distances is the main factor, unlike in lighter systems.
Contribution
It provides a microscopic analysis of fusion hindrance in heavy systems, highlighting the dominant role of potential increase over dissipation, which was not well understood before.
Findings
Potential monotonically increases with decreasing distance in heavy systems.
Energy dependence of friction coefficients is sizable and similar across systems.
Potential increase contributes more to extra-push energy than dissipation in heavy systems.
Abstract
Background: Heavy-ion fusion reactions involving heavy nuclei at energies around the Coulomb barrier exhibit fusion hindrance, where the probability of compound nucleus formation is strongly hindered compared with that in light- and medium-mass systems. The origin of this fusion hindrance has not been well understood from a microscopic point of view. Purpose: Analyze the fusion dynamics in heavy systems by a microscopic reaction model and understand the origin of the fusion hindrance. Method: We employ the time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) theory. We extract nucleus--nucleus potential and energy dissipation by the method combining TDHF dynamics of the entrance channel of fusion reactions with one-dimensional Newton equation including a dissipation term. Then, we analyze the origin of the fusion hindrance using the properties of the extracted potential and energy dissipation. Results:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Cold Fusion and Nuclear Reactions · Chemical Thermodynamics and Molecular Structure
