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Fission fragment angular anisotropy in neutron-induced fission of U235 measured with a time projection chamber

Authors :
Nathaniel Bowden
Fredrik Tovesson
J. A. Magee
V. Geppert-Kleinrath
Jonathan B. King
D. Hensle
H. Leeb
J. L. Klay
L. Snyder
Uwe Greife
L. D. Isenhower
D. L. Duke
A. C. Tate
R. S. Towell
Kyle Schmitt
J. Gearhart
Samuele Sangiorgio
N. Walsh
C. A. Hagmann
M. P. Mendenhall
D. Higgins
W. Loveland
J. Ruz
Walid Younes
D. Cebra
E. Guardincerri
Brett Manning
T. Classen
M. Heffner
Robert Casperson
S. Watson
L. Yao
M. Cunningham
J. S. Barrett
J. Bundgaard
B. Seilhan
Source :
Physical Review C. 99
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Physical Society (APS), 2019.

Abstract

Fission fragment angular distributions can provide an important constraint on fission theory, improving predictive fission codes, and are a prerequisite for a precise ratio cross section measurement. Available anisotropy data is sparse, especially at neutron energies above 5 MeV. For the first time, a three-dimensional tracking detector is employed to study fragment emission angles and provide a direct measurement of angular anisotropy. The Neutron Induced Fission Fragment Tracking Experiment (NIFFTE) collaboration has deployed the fission time projection chamber (fissionTPC) to measure nuclear data with unprecedented precision. The fission fragment anisotropy of $^{235}$U has been measured over a wide range of incident neutron energies from 180 keV to 200 MeV; a careful study of the systematic uncertainties complement the data.

Details

ISSN :
24699993 and 24699985
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review C
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6ece42d0413dcba8dac7f8fc0512e1a4