Abstract

Background: Recent observation of mass-asymmetric fission in neutron-deficient Hg and Pt nuclei has reignited interest in fission fragment mass distributions close to Pb. Investigations at energies close to the fission barrier, where mass-asymmetric fission is expected to be most obvious and the sensitivity to shell effects is maximized, are limited in this mass region.Purpose: To measure fission mass distributions for $^{205,207,209}\mathrm{Bi}$ nuclei at the lowest possible excitation energies to determine how the mass distributions change with excitation energy and the neutron number of the compound nucleus.Method: Proton beams bombarding targets of $^{204,206,208}\mathrm{Pb}$ were used to study the fission of $^{205,207,209}\mathrm{Bi}$ at energies from just above to 10 MeV above their fission barriers. Fission fragments were measured using the CUBE fission spectrometer. Fission fragment mass distributions were determined using a newly developed time difference analysis method. Mass distributions were characterized by triple-Gaussian fits to determine the systematic trends across each isotope with excitation energy.Results: Measured mass distributions of all three Bi isotopes exhibit a component of mass-asymmetric fission at all energies studied. The probability of mass-asymmetric fission decreases significantly with increasing excitation energy, from $\ensuremath{\approx}70$ to $\ensuremath{\approx}40%$ over a 10-MeV range. Comparisons between the three Bi isotopes hint at an increase in the mass-symmetric fission yield with increasing neutron number, which could be due to a decrease in the difference between the symmetric and asymmetric fission barriers. The centroids of the mass-asymmetric peaks suggest that several deformed shell gaps in the fission fragments could be contributing to the presence of the mass-asymmetric fission mode with ${Z}_{\mathrm{light}}\ensuremath{\simeq}38$, ${Z}_{\mathrm{heavy}}\ensuremath{\simeq}45$, and ${N}_{\mathrm{light}}\ensuremath{\simeq}56$ all present in the fission fragments.Conclusions: Measurements of fission mass distributions at the lowest possible excitation energies above the fission barrier provide an excellent platform to investigate the origins of the mass-asymmetric fission mode. Further systematic measurements at these energies offer an opportunity to rigorously test new models of fission in this mass region.

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