Source size scaling of fragment production in projectile breakup.
/ Authors
L. Beaulieu, D. Bowman, D. Fox, S. D. Gupta, J. Pan, G. Ball, B. Djerroud, D. Doré, A. Galindo-Uribarri, D. Guinet
and 8 more authors
E. Hagberg, D. Horn, R. Laforest, Y. Larochelle, P. Lautesse, M. Samri, Rita Roy, C. St-Pierre
/ Abstract
Fragment production has been studied as a function of the source mass and excitation energy in peripheral collisions of $^{35}$Cl+$^{197}$Au at 43 MeV/nucleon and $^{70}$Ge+$^{nat}$Ti at 35 MeV/nucleon. The results are compared to the Au+Au data at 600 MeV/nucleon obtained by the ALADIN collaboration. A mass scaling, by $A_{source} \sim$ 35 to 190, strongly correlated to excitation energy per nucleon, is presented, suggesting a thermal fragment production mechanism. Comparisons to a standard sequential decay model and the lattice-gas model are made. Fragment emission from a hot, rotating source is unable to reproduce the experimental source size scaling.
Journal: Physical review. C, Nuclear physics