Collinear cluster tri-partition: Kinematics constraints and stability of collinearity
Patric Holmvall, Ulli K\"oster, Andreas Heinz, Thomas Nilsson

TL;DR
This paper investigates the feasibility and stability of collinear cluster tri-partition (CCT) in nuclear fission, providing kinematic constraints and models to guide experimental verification of this proposed new fission mode.
Contribution
It offers a detailed analysis of the kinematic constraints and stability of collinearity in CCT, and presents models to predict energy ranges and assess the likelihood of observing CCT.
Findings
CCT has a high net Q-value but is energetically and geometrically unfavorable in sequential decay.
Perfect collinearity in CCT is extremely unstable and easily broken by perturbations.
Detecting the central fragment in CCT is very difficult due to its low kinetic energy.
Abstract
A new mode of nuclear fission has been proposed by the FOBOS collaboration, called Collinear Cluster Tri-partition (CCT), suggesting that three heavy fission fragments can be emitted perfectly collinearly in low-energy fission. It is surprising that CCT escaped observation for so long given the relatively high reported yield, of roughly 0.5% relative to binary fission. These claims call for an independent verification with a different experimental technique. Verification experiments based on direct observation of CCT fragments with fission fragment spectrometers require guidance with respect to the allowed kinetic energy range, which we present in this paper. We discuss corresponding model calculations which, if CCT is found in such verification experiments, could indicate how the breakups proceed. We also study the intrinsic stability of collinearity. Three different decay models are…
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