scholarly journals Fission Barriers of Super-Heavy Nuclei and Search for Element 120

Author(s):  
S. Hofmann ◽  
S. Heinz ◽  
R. Mann ◽  
J. Maurer ◽  
G. Münzenberg ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Hofmann ◽  
S. Heinz ◽  
R. Mann ◽  
J. Maurer ◽  
G. Münzenberg ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 02054 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sigurd Hofmann

Professor Walter Greiner, our mentor, colleague, and friend, passed away in the age of eighty. During his lifetime, the search for elements beyond uranium started and elements up to the so far heaviest one with atomic number 118 were discovered. In this talk I will present a short history from early searches for ‘trans-uraniums’ up to the production and safe identification of shell-stabilized ‘Super-Heavy Nuclei’ (SHN). The nuclear shell model reveals that these nuclei should be located in a region with closed shells for the protons at Z = 114, 120 or 126 and for the neutrons at N = 184. The outstanding aim of experimental investigations is the exploration of this region of spherical SHN. Systematic studies of heavy ion reactions for the synthesis of SHN revealed production cross-sections which reached values down to one picobarn and even below for the heaviest species. The systematics of measured cross-sections can be understood only on the basis of relatively high fission barriers as predicted for nuclei in and around the island of SHN. A key role in answering some of the open questions plays the synthesis of isotopes of element 120. Attempts aiming for synthesizing this element at the velocity filter SHIP will be reported.


2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (04) ◽  
pp. 514-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
FEDIR IVANYUK ◽  
KRZYSZTOF POMORSKI

We have calculated the liquid drop fission barriers of medium and heavy nuclei within the Lublin-Strasbourg-Drop model. Exploiting in addition the topographical theorem by Myers and Światecki we propose a simple but quite accurate approximation of the fission barrier heights. When comparing the r.m.s. deviation of approximated versus experimental values of fission barrier heights for known nuclei with Z > 70 a value 1.1 MeV is obtained which is comparable with the experimental uncertainties. The Strutinsky optimal shape method is generalized to the left-right asymmetric shapes of nuclei in order to investigate the influence of this degree of freedom on the barrier heights.


2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (05) ◽  
pp. 1250051 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. V. NHAN HAO ◽  
J. LE BLOAS ◽  
MENG-HOCK KOH ◽  
L. BONNEAU ◽  
P. QUENTIN

Two systematic sources of error in most current microscopic evaluations of fission-barrier heights are studied. They are concerned with an approximate treatment of the Coulomb exchange terms (known as the Slater approximation) in the self-consistent mean-fields and the projection on good parity states (e.g., of positive parity for the spontaneous fission of an even–even nucleus) of left–right reflection asymmetric intrinsic solutions (e.g., around the second barrier). Approximate or unprojected solutions are shown to lead each to an underestimation of the barrier heights by a few hundred keV.


Author(s):  
L. BONNEAU ◽  
T. L. HA ◽  
D. SAMSŒN ◽  
P. QUENTIN ◽  
N. PILLET

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