Photofission
Photofission is a process in which a nucleus, after absorbing a gamma ray, undergoes nuclear fission (splits into two or more fragments).
Gamma radiation of modest energies, in the low tens of MeV, can induce fission in traditionally fissile elements such as the actinides uranium, plutonium, and neptunium.[1] Experiments have been conducted with much higher energy gamma rays, finding that the photofission cross section varies little within ranges in the low GeV range.[2]
Baldwin et al made measurements of the yields of photo-fission in uranium and thorium together with a search for photo-fission in other heavy elements, using continuous x-rays from a 100-Mev betatron. Fission was detected in the presence of an intense background of x-rays by a differential ionization chamber and linear amplifier, the substance investigated being coated on an electrode of one chamber. They deducted the maximum cross section being of the order of 5×10−26 cm2 for uranium and half that for thorium. In the other elements studied, the cross section must be below 10−29 cm2.[3]
Photodisintegration
Photodisintegration (also called phototransmutation) is a similar but different physical process, in which an extremely high energy gamma ray interacts with an atomic nucleus and causes it to enter an excited state, which immediately decays by emitting a subatomic particle.
References
- ↑ Delayed neutron yields and spectra from photofission of actinides with bremsstrahlung photons below 20 MeV. D Doré et al. 2006 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 41 241
- ↑ Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 5740–5743 (2000) Photofission of Heavy Nuclei at Energies up to 4 GeV
- ↑ Photo-Fission in Heavy Elements G. C. Baldwin and G. S. Klaiber. Phys. Rev. 71, 3 – Published 1 January 1947