Extending Progress in Multi-Step Abrasion Reaction Mechanisms
ORAL
Abstract
A major objective of rare isotope beam facilities is the exploration of unstable isotopes far from stability, characterized by extreme proton-to-neutron ratios and short lifetimes. Production probabilities for these exotic nuclei are extremely low, a challenge addressed through the use of high-power accelerators. Recent experimental results from RIKEN [1–3], focused on the search for new isotopes, have measured production cross sections that significantly exceed predictions from the LISE++ Abrasion-Fission 3EER model [4], particularly in the more neutron-rich regions. These findings underscore the need for a substantial revision of Abrasion-Fission models (3EER and IFN [5]) for neutron-rich rare-earth isotope production and suggest a notable contribution from multi-step reactions.
Updates to the LISE models incorporating dedicated multi-step reaction analyses are presented and compared with experimental in-flight fission data. The impact of multi-step processes is discussed both for in-flight fission and for projectile fragmentation of a 48Ca beam, in the context of recent FRIB results. The analysis is conducted using the latest LISE++ framework, which extends the Abrasion-Ablation model to include secondary reaction steps. The potential of using new differential binding energy (dBE) systematics [6] to extract multi-step reaction factors is introduced.
Updates to the LISE models incorporating dedicated multi-step reaction analyses are presented and compared with experimental in-flight fission data. The impact of multi-step processes is discussed both for in-flight fission and for projectile fragmentation of a 48Ca beam, in the context of recent FRIB results. The analysis is conducted using the latest LISE++ framework, which extends the Abrasion-Ablation model to include secondary reaction steps. The potential of using new differential binding energy (dBE) systematics [6] to extract multi-step reaction factors is introduced.
*This work was supported by the US National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-23-10078.
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Publication: 1. Y. Shimizu et al., Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 87, 014203 (2018).
2. T. Sumikama et al., Phys. Rev. C 103, 014614 (2021).
3. Y. Shimizu et al, Phys. Rev. C 109, 044313 (2024).
4. O. B. Tarasov et al., NIM B 541, 4 (2023); http://lise.nscl.msu.edu.
5. http://lise.nscl.msu.edu/10_1/11_0_28_IFN_search.pdf.
6. O. B. Tarasov et al., submitted to PRC.
Presenters
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Oleg B. Tarasov
- Michigan State University