The two-step process that characterizes the intermediate-and high-energy photonuclear reactions (between 40 MeV and 4 GeV) has been successfully described by Monte Carlo calculations. Recently, a new class of codes capable to perform those calculations according to a more realistic method has been developed, improving the possibilities for simulating the reactions in more details. In this work we present the CRISP package (standing for Rio-São Paulo Collaboration), which is a coupling of the multi collisional Monte Carlo (MCMC) and the Monte Carlo for evaporation-fission (MCEF) codes. The first one describes the intranuclear cascade process, while the second one is dedicated to the evaporation/fission competition step. Both codes have already shown to be useful for calculating several features of different nuclear reactions. The CRISP code, coupling these two software, represents a good tool to describe the complex characteristics of the nuclear reactions, and opens the opportunity for applications in quite different fields, such as studies of hadron physics inside the nucleus, specific nuclear reactions, spallation and/or fission processes initiated by different probes and many others.
We use the recently developed MCMC/MCEF ͑multicollisional Monte Carlo plus Monte Carlo for evaporation-fission calculations͒ model to calculate the photofissility and the photofission cross section at intermediate energies for the 243 Am and for 209 Bi, and compare them to results obtained for other actinides and to available experimental data. As expected, the results for 243 Am are close to those for 237 Np. The fissility for preactinide nuclei is nearly one order of magnitude lower than that for the actinides. Both fissility and photofission cross section results for 209 Bi are in good agreement with the experimental data.
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