The microscopic mechanism behind the fission-barrier asymmetry (II): The rare-earth region $50 < Z < 82$ and $82 < N < 126$
T. Ichikawa, P. M\"oller

TL;DR
This paper explains the microscopic origin of fission asymmetry in the rare-earth region, showing it is analogous to mechanisms known in actinides, and confirms the historical prediction through detailed analysis.
Contribution
It generalizes a microscopic mechanism for fission asymmetry from actinides to the rare-earth region, providing a unified explanation for observed asymmetries.
Findings
The mechanism of saddle asymmetry in the rare-earth region matches the historically predicted level coupling.
The study confirms the microscopic origin of asymmetry in $^{180}$Hg.
The analysis supports the idea that fission asymmetry is due to specific level couplings.
Abstract
It is well known that most actinides fission into fragments of unequal size. The first attempt to understand this difference suggested that division leading to one of the fragments being near doubly magic Sn is favored by gain in binding energy. After the Strutinsky shell-correction method was developed an alternative idea that gained popularity was that the fission saddle might be lower for mass-asymmetric shapes and that this asymmetry was preserved until scission. Recently it was observed [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 105} (2010) 252502] that Hg preferentially fissions asymmetrically in contradiction to the fragment-magic-shell expectation which suggested symmetric division peaked around Zr, with its magic neutron number , so it was presented as a "new type of asymmetric fission". However, in a paper [Phys. Lett. 34B (1971) 349] a "simple" microscopic mechanism…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Nuclear Physics and Applications · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
