Abstract

Nuclear reaction data collection, evaluation and dissemination have been pioneered at the Brookhaven National Laboratory since the early 50s. These activities gained popularity worldwide, and around 1970 the experimental nuclear reaction data interchange or exchange format (EXFOR) was established. The originalEXFORcompilation scope consisted only of neutron reactions and spontaneous fission data, while many other nuclear data sets were ignored. Due to the high cost of new experiments, it is very important to find and recover the previously disregarded data using scientific publications, data evaluations and nuclear databases comparisons.Fission yields play a very important role in applied and fundamental physics, and such data are essential in many applications. The comparative analysis of Nuclear Science References (NSR) and Experimental Nuclear Reaction (EXFOR) databases shows a large number of unaccounted experiments and provides a guide for the recovery of fission cross sections, yields and covariance data sets. The dedicated fission yields data compilation effort is currently underway in the Nuclear Reaction Data Centers (NRDC) network, and includes identification, compilation, storage and Web dissemination of the recovered data sets.

Highlights

  • The early success of Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) reactor program which generated large volumes of new results showed a strong need for data preservation and dissemination

  • The geographical separation of compilation work has simplified interactions between researchers and data compilers. This joint effort resulted in a successful international collaboration and produced the only continuously-updated low- and intermediate-energy nuclear reaction exchange format (EXFOR) database, and these data are publicly available from the NDSIAEA or National Nuclear Data Center (NNDC) web sites

  • The overall situation with missing in EXFOR fission yields compilations has been analyzed at the NNDC using the Nuclear Science References (NSR) database that is based on the Donald Hughes book library [10]

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Summary

Introduction

The early success of Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) reactor program which generated large volumes of new results showed a strong need for data preservation and dissemination. The geographical separation of compilation work has simplified interactions between researchers and data compilers This joint effort resulted in a successful international collaboration and produced the only continuously-updated low- and intermediate-energy nuclear reaction EXFOR database, and these data are publicly available from the NDSIAEA (https://www-nds.iaea.org/exfor/) or NNDC (https://www.nndc.bnl.gov/exfor/) web sites. The graphic data show that the majority of complex measurements were performed in the USA and Europe, and NNDC (Area #1) and NEA-Databank (Area #2), NDS-IAEA (Area #3) provide the largest individual contribution to the library. These centers are closely followed by the data efforts in the Russian Federation and Japan

Missing Data
Analysis of Fission Yields
Conclusion
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