Abstract

Measurements have been performed at Los Alamos Neutron Science Center to acquire neutron fission spectra of ${}^{235}$U in the energy range between 0.5 and 10 MeV. These new data complement the currently available experimental data, which are not well known in the energy range below 1 and above 5 MeV. Organic liquid scintillation detectors (EJ-309s) were used together with a digital data-acquisition system. The EJ-309 detectors show excellent pulse shape discrimination capabilities and this is vital for identifying only neutron pulses and rejecting $\ensuremath{\gamma}$-ray pulses. The measurement data show the dependence of average fission neutron energy as a function of the inducing neutron energy. The data agree well with previously published measurements and Watt spectra fits for energies up to tens of MeV. At high fission-inducing neutron energies the spectrum deviates from Watt-spectra fits. The increased energy deposited in higher energy neutron-induced fissions does not significantly increase emitted fission neutron energies for up to 10 MeV. A significant decrease in neutron energy around second-chance fission cannot be observed beyond the current measurement uncertainties.

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