Neutron-induced cross sections of short-lived nuclei via the surrogate reaction method

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Abstract

The measurement of neutron-induced cross sections of short-lived nuclei is extremely difficult due to the radioactivity of the samples. The surrogate reaction method is an indirect way of determining cross sections for nuclear reactions that proceed through a compound nucleus. This method presents the advantage that the target material can be stable or less radioactive than the material required for a neutron-induced measurement. We have successfully used the surrogate reaction method to extract neutron-induced fission cross sections of various short-lived actinides. In this work, we investigate whether this technique can be used to determine neutron-induced capture cross sections in the rare-earth region. © Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2012.

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Boutoux, G., Jurado, B., Méot, V., Roig, O., Aïche, M., Mathieu, L., … Gunsing, F. (2012). Neutron-induced cross sections of short-lived nuclei via the surrogate reaction method. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 21). https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20122101002

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