Abstract

The impact of nuclear dissipation on the dynamics of nuclear fission at low excitation energy is studied with a three-dimensional Langevin approach in which the two-center shell model is adopted to describe the nuclear shape and the single-particle potential. With three types of formulas for the friction tensor, such as the wall formula, the wall-and-window formula with and without the term related to the mass asymmetry change, the fragment mass and the total kinetic energy (TKE) distributions in low-energy fission are calculated. The calculated fragment mass distributions are almost identical for both with the wall formula and with the wall-and-window model without the term related to the mass asymmetry change, and both the results are consistent with the evaluated mass yields and the calculated results with the GEF model. Our study found that the term related to the mass asymmetry change in the window formula leads to an unreasonable shift of the peak position of the mass distribution. The TKE values calculated with the wall model are slightly larger than those with the wall-and-window model due to the more compact configuration obtained with the pure wall model. Moreover, the influences of the strength of friction tensor on the fragment distribution, the scission configuration, and the fission time distribution are investigated. With the present model the fission fragment mass distributions of U, Np, Pu, and Am isotopes are well reproduced and the systematic dependence of the averaged TKE on the Coulomb parameter is also well reproduced.

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