Discovery of Delayed Nuclear Fission
Fissionable products with half-lives in the minute range were discovered for the first time in the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions in 1966 in the experiments on synthesis of neutron-deficient nuclei. Then nuclei were identified in the accelerated heavy ion beam reactions, and the conclusion was made that the ancestor nuclei of fissionable nuclides most probably experience the K-capture but produced daughter nuclei experience fission from the excited state. By analogy with delayed emission this kind of fission of neutron-deficient heavy nuclei far from β-stability line was called delayed fission.
Discovery of Delayed Nuclear Fission was registered in the USSR as Discovery N160 with priority from July 12, 1971. |
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