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24.—The Origin of the Short-range Alpha Particles of Fission*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 February 2012
Synopsis
The suggestion is made, and rendered plausible by detailed calculation, that the short-range α-particles of fission, identified by Kugler and Clarke [1], are emitted, in competition with ‘prompt’ γ-rays, from highly excited post-neutron-emission fragments of even neutron number N and, predominantly, of mass number A in the range 140 ≦ A ≧ 145. A similar process is energetically forbidden in relation to triton emission.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Section A: Mathematics , Volume 71 , Issue 4 , 1974 , pp. 285 - 292
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1974
References
References to Literature
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[7]Armbruster, P., Hossfeld, F., Labus, H. and Reichelt, K., 1969. Physics and Chemistry of Fission, 545–559. Vienna: International Atomic Energy Agency.Google Scholar
[9]Wahl, A. C., Norris, A. E., Rouse, R. A. and Williams, J. C., 1969. Physics and Chemistry of Fission, 813–843. Vienna: I.A.E.A.Google Scholar
[10]Zeldes, N., Grill, A. and Simievic, A., 1967. K. Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Skr. (Mat. Fys.), 3, (5) 1–163.Google Scholar
[12] See, for example, Feather, N., 1952. Nuclear Stability Rules, eqns. (2.7) and (2.8). C.U.P.Google Scholar