Abstract

The time delays in fission induced by bombardment of W with 180 MeV $^{32}\mathrm{S}$, $240\text{\ensuremath{-}}255$ MeV $^{48}\mathrm{Ti}$, $330\text{\ensuremath{-}}375$ MeV $^{58}\mathrm{Ni}$, and 390 MeV $^{74}\mathrm{Ge}$ have been measured by observation of crystal blocking. Nearly all results are consistent with exponential decay with lifetimes of order ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}18}$ s which depend weakly on the atomic number of the composite nucleus. This is inconsistent with the Bohr-Wheeler model of fission from a compound nucleus in statistical equilibrium at each stage in a neutron evaporation cascade and supports a picture of strongly damped quasifission. A simple diffusion model with one-body dissipation reproduces roughly the observed time scale and the exponential decay. It suggests that the outer fission barrier could play a significant role in the observed, very slow decays.

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