Abstract

Collisions of actinide nuclei form, during very short times of few zs ($10^{-21}$ s), the heaviest ensembles of interacting nucleons available on Earth. Such collisions are used to produce super-strong electric fields by the huge number of interacting protons to test spontaneous positron-electron pair emission (vacuum decay) predicted by the quantum electrodynamics (QED) theory. Multi-nucleon transfer in actinide collisions could also be used as an alternative way to fusion in order to produce neutron-rich heavy and superheavy elements thanks to inverse quasifission mechanisms. Actinide collisions are studied in a dynamical quantum microscopic approach. The three-dimensional time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) code {\textsc{tdhf3d}} is used with a full Skyrme energy density functional to investigate the time evolution of expectation values of one-body operators, such as fragment position and particle number. This code is also used to compute the dispersion of the particle numbers (e.g., widths of fragment mass and charge distributions) from TDHF transfer probabilities, on the one hand, and using the Balian-Veneroni variational principle, on the other hand. A first application to test QED is discussed. Collision times in $^{238}$U+$^{238}$U are computed to determine the optimum energy for the observation of the vacuum decay. It is shown that the initial orientation strongly affects the collision times and reaction mechanism. The highest collision times predicted by TDHF in this reaction are of the order of $\sim4$ zs at a center of mass energy of 1200 MeV. According to modern calculations based on the Dirac equation, the collision times at $E_{cm}>1$ GeV are sufficient to allow spontaneous electron-positron pair emission from QED vacuum decay, in case of bare uranium ion collision. A second application of actinide collisions to produce neutron-rich transfermiums is discussed. A new inverse quasifission mechanism associated to a specific orientation of the nuclei is proposed to produce transfermium nuclei ($Z>100$) in the collision of prolate deformed actinides such as $^{232}$Th+$^{250}$Cf. The collision of the tip of one nucleus with the side of the other results in a nucleon flux toward the latter. The probability distributions for transfermium production in such a collision are computed. The produced nuclei are more neutron-rich than those formed in fusion reactions, thus, leading to more stable isotopes closer to the predicted superheavy island of stability. In addition to mass and charge dispersion, the Balian-Veneroni variational principle is used to compute correlations between $Z$ and $N$ distributions, which are zero in standard TDHF calculations.

Highlights

  • Actinide collisions are important tools to test our understanding of the nuclear many-body problem

  • We focus on central collisions as they lead to the most dissipative reactions with the longest collision times

  • This lower energy limit should be taken into account in future experimental programs dedicated to the search of quantum electrodynamics (QED) vacuum decay

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Summary

Introduction

Actinide collisions are important tools to test our understanding of the nuclear many-body problem. The prediction of the outcome of such collisions is a great challenge for nuclear theorists Another application of actinide collision is to form neutronrich heavy and superheavy nuclei by multi-nucleon transfer [8,9,6]. Such reactions could be used to explore the. Dynamical microscopic calculations of 238U+238U were performed with spatial symmetries and simplif ed effective interactions [10, 11] This system has been studied within the Quantum Molecular Dynamics (QMD) model [12] in which nucleon wave functions are constrained to be Gaussian wave. Packets and with the time-dependent Hartree-Fock approach [13] which overcomes this limitation

Formalism
Fluctuations of one-body operators
Mean-field approximation
Formation of neutron-rich transfermium nuclei
Conclusions
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