A very exotic process of -delayed fission of 180 Tl is studied in detail by using resonant laser ionization with subsequent mass separation at ISOLDE (CERN). In contrast to common expectations, the fissionfragment mass distribution of the post--decay daughter nucleus 180 Hg (N=Z ¼ 1:25) is asymmetric. This asymmetry is more surprising since a mass-symmetric split of this extremely neutron-deficient nucleus would lead to two 90 Zr fragments, with magic N ¼ 50 and semimagic Z ¼ 40. This is a new type of asymmetric fission, not caused by large shell effects related to fragment magic proton and neutron numbers, as observed in the actinide region. The newly measured branching ratio for -delayed fission of 180 Tl is 3:6ð7Þ Â 10 À3 %, approximately 2 orders of magnitude larger than in an earlier study. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.252502 PACS numbers: 24.75.+i, 23.40.Às, 27.70.+q Nuclear fission, discovered more than 70 years ago [1], represents one of the most dramatic examples of a nuclear metamorphosis, whereby the nucleus splits into two fragments releasing a large amount of energy. Initially, the fission process was described within the liquid-drop model [2,3], in which shape-dependent surface and Coulomb energy terms define the potential-energy landscape through which fission occurs. However, this macroscopic approach naturally leads to symmetric fragments and cannot explain observed asymmetric mass splits of actinides. Only by including a microscopic treatment based on shell effects can asymmetric fission be described [4]. Importantly, only in fission below or slightly above the barrier, so-called low-energy fission, can the interplay between the macroscopic liquid-drop contribution and the microscopic single-particle shell corrections be most fully explored.Until recently, such low-energy fission studies were limited to nuclei from around thorium (Th) to fermium (Fm) using spontaneous fission, fission induced by thermal neutrons or -delayed fission. These studies showed the dominance of asymmetric fission over symmetric fission for most isotopes of these elements [5][6][7] and suggested that structure effects due to, specifically, the spherical shell structure of doubly magic 132 Sn dominate the mass split. A decade ago, a new technique, developed at GSI [8]-Coulomb-excited fission of radioactive beamsallowed for a more extensive experimental survey of lowenergy fission in other regions of the nuclidic chart. These studies demonstrated the transition from mostly asymmetric fission in the actinides towards symmetric fission as the dominant mode in the light thorium to astatine region. This is also consistent with earlier studies by Itkis et al. [9], in which fission of stable targets in the mass 185-210 region was induced by bombardment with protons and 3;4 He beams. Itkis et al. found mostly symmetric mass distributions in the region around 208 Pb, with about four systems in the mass A $ 200 region having a slight reduction of PRL 105, 252502 (2010)
This Colloquium reviews the studies of exotic type of low-energy nuclear fission, the -delayed fission (DF). Emphasis is made on the new data from very neutron-deficient nuclei in the lead region, previously scarcely studied as far as fission is concerned. These data establish the new region of asymmetric fission in addition to the previously known one in the transuranium nuclei. New production and identification techniques, which emerged in the last two decades, such as the wider use of electromagnetic separators and the application of selective laser ionization to produce intense isotopically or even isomerically pure radioactive beams are highlighted. A critical analysis of presently available DF data is presented and the importance of detailed quantitative DF studies, which become possible now, is stressed, along with the recent theory efforts in the domain of low-energy fission.
Article:Bree, N., Wrzosek-Lipska, K., Petts, A. et al. (67 more authors) (2014) Shape coexistence in the neutron-deficient even-even 182-188Hg isotopes studied via Coulomb excitation.
In-source resonant ionization laser spectroscopy of the even-A polonium isotopes (192-210,216,218)Po has been performed using the 6p(3)7s (5)S(2) to 6p(3)7p (5)P(2) (λ=843.38 nm) transition in the polonium atom (Po-I) at the CERN ISOLDE facility. The comparison of the measured isotope shifts in (200-210)Po with a previous data set allows us to test for the first time recent large-scale atomic calculations that are essential to extract the changes in the mean-square charge radius of the atomic nucleus. When going to lighter masses, a surprisingly large and early departure from sphericity is observed, which is only partly reproduced by beyond mean field calculations.
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