Observation of near-scission "polar" and "equatorial" proton emission in heavy-ion induced fission
Pawan Singh, Y. K. Gupta, G. K. Prajapati, B. N. Joshi, V. G., Prajapati, N. Sirswal, K. Ramachandran, A. S. Pradeep, V. S. Dagre, M. Kumar,, A. Jhingan, N. Deshmukh, B. V. John, B. K. Nayak, D. C. Biswas, R. K., Choudhury

TL;DR
This study observes for the first time the simultaneous polar and equatorial emission of near-scission protons in heavy-ion induced fission, revealing new insights into fission dynamics through detailed spectral analysis.
Contribution
It introduces the first observation of polar and equatorial near-scission proton emissions in heavy-ion fission, enhancing understanding of fission process stages.
Findings
Approximately 40% of pre-scission protons are emitted near scission.
Protons are emitted both perpendicular and parallel to the fission axis with similar intensities.
The results provide new avenues for studying heavy-ion induced fission dynamics.
Abstract
Proton and -particle energy spectra were measured in coincidence with fission fragments at different relative angles in O (96 MeV) + Th reaction. The multiplicity spectra were analyzed within the framework of a Moving Source Disentangling Analysis (MSDA) to determine contributions from different emission stages. The MSDA conclusively shows ``Near Scission Emission (NSE)" as an essential component in the multiplicity spectra. In contrast to NSE particles which emit mainly perpendicular (``equatorial emission"), the NSE protons are observed to be emitted perpendicular as well as parallel (``polar emission") to the fission axis with similar intensities (20\% for each). Thus, around 40\% of total pre-scission protons are emitted near the scission stage, whereas the same fraction for particles is only around 10\%. The inevitable presence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research
