Microscopic Theory of Nuclear Fission: A Review
N. Schunck, L. M. Robledo

TL;DR
This review discusses the microscopic nuclear fission theory based on energy density functional formalism, highlighting the computational methods, key concepts like quantum tunnelling, and recent results for spontaneous and induced fission.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the current microscopic approach to nuclear fission, emphasizing the role of energy density functionals and collective Schrödinger equations.
Findings
Successful modeling of spontaneous fission half-lives
Detailed description of induced fission fragment properties
Recent computational results demonstrating approach coherence
Abstract
This article reviews how nuclear fission is described within nuclear density functional theory. In spontaneous fission, half-lives are the main observables and quantum tunnelling the essential concept, while in induced fission the focus is on fragment properties and explicitly time-dependent approaches are needed. The cornerstone of the current microscopic theory of fission is the energy density functional formalism. Its basic tenets, including tools such as the HFB theory, effective two-body effective nuclear potentials, finite-temperature extensions and beyond mean-field corrections, are presented succinctly. The EDF approach is often combined with the hypothesis that the time-scale of the large amplitude collective motion driving the system to fission is slow compared to typical time-scales of nucleons inside the nucleus. In practice, this hypothesis of adiabaticity is implemented by…
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