Abstract

Recent progress in the production of laser accelerated high flux proton beams opens new possibilities for the study of fission in unique environments. To this end, we are currently pursuing the development of a platform for the swift gas transport, collection, and identification of fission products. Fission is induced in targets fixed inside a sealed chamber through which a carrier gas flows, transporting fission products to a carbon filter for collection and online spectroscopy. This has been recently demonstrated using target normal sheath accelerated protons at the PHELIX laser facility. There were large discrepancies between measured rates and those expected based on established fission yields and measured beam parameters. These discrepancies prompted a large number of tests at the Idaho Accelerator Center (IAC), where fission in uranium is induced by bremsstrahlung photons generated by 21 MeV electrons from a linear electron accelerator. The results are compared to a series of models that account for the slowing of energetic fission fragments in the carrier gas and the fluid dynamics of the gas flow that transports fission products to the collection filter. Characterization of the apparatus reveals a few mechanisms that together account for a portion of the previously observed discrepancies at the PHELIX laser facility. However, additional research is necessary before high-accuracy experiments can be performed with the apparatus. Work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by LLNL under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.

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