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Synthesis of elements 119 and 120 with beams heavier than 48Ca

11/12 2024 Seminar
  • Title Synthesis of elements 119 and 120 with beams heavier than 48Ca
  • Speaker Tomasz Cap (National Centre for Nuclear Research)
  • Date 11:00 Nov. 12, 2024
  • Venue 202
  • Abstract

    The heaviest known element, oganesson, with an atomic number Z=118, was synthesized in a fusion reaction of a 48Ca projectile with a 249Cf target. Californium is currently the heaviest actinide that can be produced in the quantity necessary for superheavy nuclei synthesis reactions. For this reason, the synthesis of new elements must rely on the use of projectiles made from elements heavier than calcium. Currently, various laboratories around the world are developing or have already developed beams of  50Ti, 51V, and 54Cr. These beams can also be used in reactions with lighter actinides to synthesize new isotopes of known elements.

    The results and future prospects of selected experiments, particularly the latest efforts aimed at producing elements with atomic numbers 119 and 120, will be presented. Reactions using 50Ti, 51V, and 54Cr beams, which are considered to have the highest probability of success, will be discussed in detail. Calculations of cross sections, performed within the framework of the Fusion-by-Diffusion (FBD) model, will be presented. The FBD model considers the production cross section as the product of three factors: the cross section for the projectile to overcome the entrance channel barrier (capture cross section), the probability that the resulting system fuses and reaches the compound nucleus configuration, and the probability that the excited compound nucleus survives fission during de-excitation.

    Biography

    Dr. Tomasz Cap obtained his PhD at the University of Warsaw, Poland, under the supervision of Prof. Krystyna Siwek-Wilczyńska. His thesis was dedicated to experimental research on 197Au+197Au collisions at an energy of 23A MeV, with an emphasis on projectile and target-like fragment divisions, reaction dynamics, time scales, and neck fragmentation. The experiments were conducted at INFN LNS in Catania, Italy.

    Since 2016, Dr. Tomasz Cap is working at the National Centre for Nuclear Research, Poland, in the theory group established by Prof. Adam Sobiczewski, currently led by Dr. hab. Michał Kowal. The group focuses on the properties and production methods of heavy and superheavy nuclei.

    Inviter

    Shan-Gui Zhou