Phys. Rev. C 62, 034601 (2000) [19 pages]

Reaction mechanisms and multifragmentation processes in 64Zn+58Ni at 35A–79A MeV

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R. Wada et al. (The GANIL E-160 Collaboration)
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Received 4 February 2000; published 26 July 2000

Reaction mechanisms and multifragmentation processes have been studied for 64Zn+58Ni collisions at intermediate energies with the help of antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD-V) model calculations. Experimental energy spectra, angular distributions, charge distributions, and isotope distributions, classified by their associated charged particle multiplicities, are compared with the results of the AMD-V calculations. In general the experimental results are reasonably well reproduced by the calculations. The multifragmentation observed experimentally at all incident energies is also reproduced by the AMD-V calculations. A detailed study of AMD-V events reveals that, in nucleon transport, the reaction shows some transparency, whereas in energy transport the reaction is much less transparent at all incident energies studied here. The transparency in the nucleon transport indicates that, even for central collisions, about 75% of the projectile nucleons appear in the forward direction. In energy transport about 80% of the initial kinetic energy of the projectile in the center- of-mass frame is dissipated. The detailed study of AMD-V events also elucidates the dynamics of the multifragmentation process. The study suggests that, at 35A MeV, the semitransparency and thermal expansion are the dominant mechanisms for the multifragmentation process, whereas at 49A MeV and higher incident energies a nuclear compression occurs at an early stage of the reaction and plays an important role in the multifragmentation process in addition to that of the thermal expansion and the semitransparency.


©2000 The American Physical Society

URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevC.62.034601
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevC.62.034601
PACS: 25.70.Pq, 02.70.Ns, 24.10.Lx

* Permanent address: LPHNE-X, Ecole Polytechnique, 91128 Palaiseau Cedex, France.
Permanent address: Institut de Physique Nucléaire, IN2P3-CNRS, 91406 Orsay Cedex, France.
Permanent address: Instituto de Fisica, Universidade de São Paulo, CP 20516, 01498 São Paulo, Brazil.
§ Permanent address: IMP, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, People’s Republic of China.
** Present address: Institute of Nuclear Studies, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.

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