What are Fission Recoil Fragments and How Are They Formed?

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Fission recoil fragments are particles produced when a nucleus undergoes fission, resulting from the recoil of the remaining nucleus after neutron absorption. These fragments differ from other ionizing particles primarily due to their recoil motion. Experiments indicate that the fission fragments from isotopes like U-236 and Pu-240 are similar, with variations in mass affecting their behavior in different materials, such as aluminum versus uranium dioxide. The discussion also highlights the concept of linear energy transfer and the bimodal distribution of fission yields based on atomic mass. Understanding these fragments is crucial for analyzing their interactions and energy transfer in various media.
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i know the key word is "recoil" but, I'm reading a nuclear fission book and it keeps bringing up "fission recoil fragments" "recoil particles" what exactly are these particls? how are they formed? are they different from other ionizing particles other than the fact that they recoil?

A scientist was using thin sheets of aluminum (.57mg/cm thcik) to reflect the particles of neutron bombarded uranium. by measuring the radioactivity in each sheet he obtained a rough absorption curve 2.2+/- .2
 
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Well alpha particles are reflected by foils, so I suspect fission fragments are recoiling from the Al plate. Some will travel into the plate.

Look at Ernest Rutherford's experiments on the scattering of alpha particles at high angles.
 
what's absorption curve? depending on the radioactive element can the particles ionize masses differently? does U-235 ionize mass differently than plutonium?
 
RADboy said:
what's absorption curve? depending on the radioactive element can the particles ionize masses differently? does U-235 ionize mass differently than plutonium?
They could be looking for Linear Energy Transfer rate or distance that a fission product travels in a medium.

The fission fragments of U-236* and Pu-240* (* = composite nucleus after neutron absorption) are about the same. The lower mass population shift upward by Z=1, A=2 somewhat. The complementary pairs are different.

In UO2 or MOX, the fission tracks are about 3-6 microns, while in Al, they should be greater because the Al atom is lighter.
 
RADboy said:
i know the key word is "recoil" but, I'm reading a nuclear fission book and it keeps bringing up "fission recoil fragments" "recoil particles" what exactly are these particls? how are they formed? are they different from other ionizing particles other than the fact that they recoil?

I think the recoil fragments are the pieces of the nucleus left over that recoil away from the emitted neutrons and alpha particles?
 
"The fission fragments of U-236* and Pu-240* (* = composite nucleus after neutron absorption) are about the same. The lower mass population shift upward by Z=1, A=2 somewhat. The complementary pairs are different."


what exactly do you mean by the lower mass populatin shift upward by Z=1, A=2?
 
RADboy said:
"The fission fragments of U-236* and Pu-240* (* = composite nucleus after neutron absorption) are about the same. The lower mass population shift upward by Z=1, A=2 somewhat. The complementary pairs are different."


what exactly do you mean by the lower mass populatin shift upward by Z=1, A=2?

When plotting yield vs atomic mass, one see a two hump/peak (bimodal) distribution, because the fissile nucleus splits into two nuclei.

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/u235cs.html#c1

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/u235chn.html

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/fisfrag.html
 
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