New information on survival probabilities in hot fusion reactions
ORAL
Abstract
Recently we studied the fission-neutron emission competition in highly excited (E$^{\ast}$ = 63 MeV) $^{274}$Hs (Z=108) (where the fission barrier is due to shell effects) formed by a hot fusion reaction. At this excitation energy, these shell effects are expected to be ``washed out'' leaving a barrier height of $\leq$ 1 MeV. Matching cross bombardments ($^{26}$Mg + $^{248}$Cm and $^{25}$Mg + $^{248}$Cm) were used to identify the properties of first chance fission of $^{274}$Hs. A Harding-Farley analysis of the fission neutrons emitted in the $^{25,26}$Mg + $^{248}$Cm reaction was performed to identify the pre- and post-scission components of the neutron multiplicities in each system. ($\Gamma$$_{n}$/$\Gamma$$_{t}$) for the first chance fission of $^{274}$Hs is 0.89 $\pm$ 0.13, i.e., $\sim$ 90\% of the highly excited nuclei survive. The high value of that survival probability is due to dissipative effects (Kramers) during de-excitation. A proper description of the survival probabilities of excited superheavy nuclei formed in hot fusion reactions requires consideration of both dynamic and static (shell-related) effects. A re-analysis of several hot fusion survival probabilities under these constraints is presented.
*This work was supported in part by the Director, Office of Energy Research, Division of Nuclear Physics of the Office of High Energy and Nuclear Physics of the U.S. Department of Energy under Grant DE-FG06-97ER41026
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