Critical fission energy question

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andybham
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I have a fission exam next week, can someone help me with this past paper question:

If you know the masses of two nuclei (A)Z and (A+1)Z, (say masses are (A) and (A+1)) and you know the 'critical fission energy' of (A+1)Z, how do you determine if (A)Z is fissile? if it is not fissile, at what neutron energy would you expect fission to be possible.
 
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How about comparing the binding energy of the compound nucleus (A+1)Z with the critical energy?
 
is this done by calculating the separation energy? E = m(n) + m(A) - m(A+1)
 
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/nucbin.html

E = (m(n) + m(A) - m(A+1)) c2
yes - it is the mass-energy difference between the reactants and product(s). The energy is released as prompt gamma or as the kinetic energy if there are two or more products.

Calculate the mass-energy difference between U235+n and U236.
 

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