1. Introduction
The measured fragments in heavy-ion collisions have a lower temperature than the primary fragments which are formed in the hot source. The Albergo isotopic thermometer has been used to extract the temperature based on the yields of protons, neutrons, and some light isotopes [1]. Also, the isotopic thermometer has been used to extract the temperature of larger isotopes, such as the carbon isotopes [2,3] and intermediate-mass fragments (IMFs) [4,5]. Other methods employed to study this temperature in heavy-ion collisions include the thermal energy method [6], excitation energy method [7], momentum fluctuation method [8], the correlation of two-particle relative moment [9], and kinetic energy spectra of light particles [4]. Recently, the isobaric ratio method has been proposed to extract temperature for IMFs [10].
In the thermodynamic models, temperature is one part of the probes and cannot be separated easily. In the isobaric yield ratio method, the symmetry energy coefficient is studied by using its ratio to the temperature (asym/T) for neutron-rich nucleus [11]. In this article, an improved thermometer is proposed to extract T of the IMFs which is based on the IYRs [12,13].
2. Methods
Here, the canonical ensemble theory is adopted. Based on the grand-canonical limitation, the cross section σ(A, I) of a fragment has the form of [14]
where C and τ are constants; T is temperature, I = N− Z is the neutron-excess; μn(μp) is the chemical potential of neutron (proton), and F(A, I) is the free energy of a fragment, which can be parameterized as the T-dependent mass formula[10,15-18].
The IYR is defined between the yield of isobars with I and I −2
where Δμ = μn−μp. Similarly, for isobars with I +2 and I, one has
Δμ/T for fragment changes very small, which has been shown in an isobaric ratio difference method[19-25], Thus Δμ/T can be canceled out in the difference between isobaric yield ratios,
The residual free energy is defined as ΔF ≡ 2 F(A, I) − F(A, I−2) − F(A, I+2). If ΔF is known, T can be obtained. It has been proven that within the finite temperature range ΔF between two isobars can be replaced by that of the binding energy for the fragments [13]. Following the assumption in Refs. [12, 13], the residual free energy ΔF can be replaced by the residual binding energy ΔB = 2 B(A, I) − B(A, I−2) − B(A, I+2). From Eq. (4), the improved method to extract T based on the difference between IYRs (labeled as TIB) is
where ΔlnR = lnR(A, I+2, I) − lnR (A, I, I−2) is defined for simplification. The binding energy in the AME12 will be adopted in the analysis [26].
3. Results and Discussion
The fragments in the 140A MeV 40, 48Ca + 9Be (181Ta) and 58, 64Ni + 9Be (181Ta) reaction are adopted to verify the TIB method. They were measured by Mocko et al. at the National Superconducting Cyclotron laboratory, Michigan State University [27].
ΔB and ΔlnR will be discussed separately, beginning with the distributions of ΔB for fragments in the 140A MeV 40, 48Ca + 9Be and 58, 64Ni + 9Be reactions (Fig.1). For the I =1 fragments, ΔB increases almost monotonically with A; while for fragments of I = 3,5,7, ΔB staggers on the relative small A side. The staggering in ΔB becomes smaller for the A>33 fragments. ΔB for the I=9 fragments shows a small staggering but the staggering is more evident for the A>47 fragments.
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-007/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-007-F001.jpg)
Secondly, ΔlnR for related isobars in the 140A MeV 40, 48Ca + 9Be (181Ta) and 58, 64Ni + 9Be (181Ta) reactions, as plotted in Fig. 2. For the I =1 fragments, ΔlnR almost keeps constant on the small A side, but increases with A at A >40, with some staggering at A >30. For the fragments of I =3, 5, 7, an obvious staggering appears in ΔlnR on the small A side, but it staggers little when A is relative large. The target (9Be and 181Ta) shows very little influence on ΔlnR. In general, the distribution of ΔB and ΔlnR is similar in shape.
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-007/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-007-F002.jpg)
Finally, we use ΔB and ΔlnR in 140A MeV 40, 48Ca+9Be (181Ta) and 58, 64Ni+9Be (181Ta) reactions to calculate TIB (Fig. 3). TIB for the I =1 fragments is almost constant at 1.5 MeV. TIB for I =3 staggers for small A fragments, but becomes small and constant at A>35. TIB for I =5 staggers, too, in a small manner though. But the staggering becomes larger again for I =7 and I= 9 fragments. For most of the I >3 fragments, the TIB values range from 0.6 MeV to 3.5 MeV, which agrees with the temperatures extracted by the IYR method [12,13]. Only for some fragments of very rich neutrons, the TIB values are large. This agrees with the results in the canonical ensemble theory to estimate the mass of neutron-rich copper isotopes at T = 2.2 MeV [14]. Great difference can be seen between the TIB values for the reactions using 9Be and 181Ta targets when I is large (I = 7 and 9), showing obvious target effect.
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-007/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-007-F003.jpg)
4. Summary
An improved isobaric ratio thermometer (TIB) for intermediate mass fragments has been proposed based on the difference between IYRs, in which the residual free energy is replaced by the residual binding energy among these isobars. In contrast to the IYR thermometer, TIB is directly obtained from the yields of fragments and avoids the fitting procedure, which serve as a direct probe of temperature. TIB of the odd
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