Abstract
The particle decay ensuing from the reactions 86.0 MeV O16 + Sm148 and 239.1 MeV Ni64 + Mo100 was studied. These reactions each form Yb164 compound nuclei excited to 54 MeV. Particle decay from compound nucleus producing reactions was selected by gating on the gamma-ray fold and the angular region of the particle emission. While there are no discernable differences in the dominant decay channels between the two reactions, there are fewer deuterons from the more symmetric system. This difference can be interpreted two ways: as a suppression of the emission of energetically expensive clusters during the time required for shape equilibration (which is predicted to be longer for the more symmetric entrance channel), or as an enhancement of the emission of energetically expensive clusters from the more asymmetric system at the very early stage of the collision when the initial energy deposited is only available to a reduced number of nucleons. The first explanation is identical to that used in recent high energy photon work while the second could be identified as the result of the emission of clusters on the multistep compound branch leading to the fusion of the low energy heavy ions. If the first explanation is adopted, the observed suppression is larger than predicted by a standard statistical decay model coupled to a dynamical fusion model, but consistent with work using high energy photons as a probe of fusion dynamics.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 3074-3080 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Journal | Physical Review C |
| Volume | 52 |
| Issue number | 6 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1995 |