Introduction
Heavy ion reactions (HIR) provide a femtoscopic laboratory for investigating the properties of the nuclear equation of state (nEoS), particularly the nuclear symmetry energy
The nuclear (fast)fission process is a large-amplitude collective motion mode happening in the HIRs. The low-density neutron rich neck region formed in the rupture of two fission fragments provides a good condition for studying
The emissions of light particles in coincidence with fission fragments is a natural idea for exploring the symmetry energy effect and (fast)fission properties in HIRs [40, 41]. Among the probes using the light charged particles (LCPs), the yield ratio of t/3He, written as R(t/3He), has been particularly identified to probe the enriched feature of isospin dynamics in HIRs. Transport model calculations demonstrate that the R(t/3He) at intermediate-energy HIRs depends on the stiffness of
Despite of the enormous progress of the studies on the triton (t) and 3He emission, some questions remain unclear and require further studies. For example, when considering the spectra of 3He, there is an anomalous phenomenon that the yield of high energy 3He is relatively larger, compared to that of triton [73-77] or 4He [73, 75-78]. This phenomenon has been called “3He-puzzle” [73, 74, 77]. While the energy spectra are suffering “3He-puzzle”, the yield ratio of triton and 3He is sensitive to the neutron-to-proton ratio (N/Z) of the emitting system [53, 70, 79, 80]. The excitation function of R(t/3He) measured by the FOPI collaboration [81] can not be reproduced with a single model [62]. More interestingly, the results of the INDRA experiment suggest that the triton and 3He isobars seem to dominate the neutron enrichment of the neck zone [54]. However, the existence of “3He-puzzle” in the coincidence events of LCPs and fission fragments is still an uncertain issue.
Due to the enriched but not-well-understood information carried by triton and 3He coupling to both the isospin transport and the neck emission during fission process in HIRs, we are motivated to explore the emission of these two isobars in coincidence with fission fragments by inspecting the energy spectra and the yield ratio R(t/3He) over wide angular range, and to bridge the ratio R(t/3He) and the feature of fission process, as well as to infer the slope parameter of
Experimental setup
The experiment was conducted at the Compact Spectrometer for Heavy IoN Experiment (CSHINE) [82, 83], built at the final focal plane of the Radioactive Ion Beam Line at Lanzhou (RIBLL-I) [84]. The 86Kr beam of 25 MeV/u was extracted from the cyclotron of the Heavy Ion Research Facility at Lanzhou (HIRFL) [85], bombarding a natural lead target installed in the scattering chamber with the radius

The LCPs from the reactions were measured by 4 SSDTs, covering the angular range from 10° to 60° in laboratory. Each SSDT consists of three layers, namely, one single-sided silicon-strip detector (SSSSD) for ΔE1 and one double-sided silicon strip detector (DSSSD) for ΔE2, backed by a 3× 3 CsI(Tl) crystal hodoscope with the length of 50 mm for the energy deposit E. The granularity of the SSDT is 4 mm× 4 mm, giving about 1° angular resolution. The energy resolution of the SSDT is better than 2%, and the isotopes up to Z=6 can be identified [36]. Multi hits and signal sharing are carefully treated in the track recognition, and the track recognition efficiency is about 90% [86]. Figure 2 shows the particle identification of light particles for this analysis. Panel (a) to (d) presents the scattering plot of ΔE2 - ECsI of the four SSDTs. The results show that

In order to explore the isospin properties of fission process, the fission fragments (FFs) were detected by 3 PPACs, each of which had a sensitive area of 240 mm × 280 mm [87, 88]. The perpendicular distance of the PPACs to the target is about 428 mm. The coverage of the PPACs ensures a high efficiency to measure the FFs in coincidence with the LCPs. And the trigger system is established to selected the fission events [89]. The working voltage of the PPACs can suppress the light charged particles significantly, although the specific values of mass and charge for FFs were not accurately determined. According to the previous source test results [82], the detection efficiency is almost 100% for FFs and negligibly low for light particles with the detector condition (HV=460 V) as adopted in the experiment. So, the PPACs can only be fired by heavy fragments, rather than LCPs or IMFs.
Referring to the energy loss calculations only, the projectile-like fragments (PLF) and target-like fragments (TLF) may fire the PPACs as well. However, the geometric coverage of the PPACs in the experiment suppresses the PLF and TLF. Otherwise because PLFs and TLFs are well separated in velocity (
Theoretical Model
A hybrid model by the improved quantum molecular dynamics model (ImQMD05) coupled with statistical decay afterburner (GEMINI) was used for theoretical simulation in this work. The ImQMD05 [90] was used to simulate the nucleon transport process in HIRs. And the GEMINI [91, 92] was appended to obtain the final state productions of the reactions. The ImQMD05 model is an improved version from the original quantum molecular dynamics code [93, 94], and is widely used to understand the dynamics of nuclear reactions induced by heavy ions or light nuclei at both low and intermediate energies [40, 41, 95-97]. The mean field part of the ImQMD05 model used here includes the symmetry potential energy part. And the local nuclear potential energy density functional in the ImQMD05 model is written as
| β (MeV) | ρ0 (fm-3) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -254 | 185 | 5/3 | 21.0 | -0.82 | 5.51 | 36.0 | 0.160 |
Results and Discussions
Characterizing the fission events
We start with the analysis of the orientation of the fission plane with respect to the beam direction. The fission plane is reconstructed by the velocity of two FFs, using

The characteristics of this rotating fissioning system was obtained using the experiment data and theoretic simulations. First, to estimate its charge and mass, the linear momentum transfer (LMT) should be estimated experimentally. Assuming a symmetric fission processes, the velocity of the fissioning system (FS) can be simply calculated by

Second, to estimate the angular momentum of the rotating fission system, one needs the most probable impact parameter, which can determined by the event weigh obtained from transport model simulations filtered by experimental conditions. Defining the fission event weight by
Figure 5 shows the distribution of

The distance between the transferred part of the projectile and the mass center of the fissioning system is defined as
The angular momentum is written as
Third, to estimate the excitation energy of the rotating fission system, the moment of inertia I of a spherical nucleus with the mass
Analysis of the energy spectra of t and 3He
We now present the analysis of the emission of triton and 3He in the (fast)fission events. The energy spectra of LCPs in coincidence with FFs contain thermal and dynamical information of the particles emitted from the fission events. Fig. 6 presents the energy spectra of triton (open circles) and 3He (open triangles) emitted from fission events in different angular ranges corresponding to SSDTs 2 to 4. To reduce the contamination of quasi-projectiles, the data of SSDT1 covering 10-20° in the laboratory is not counted here. It is shown that the spectrum of 3He is generally harder than that of triton, leading to a larger average kinetic energy of the former. The difference between triton and 3He is more pronounced at forward angles than at large angles. This observation of “3He-puzzle” is in accordance with the previous inclusive measurements at high beam energies [73, 75-77, 81, 101-104].

The “3He-puzzle” has been interpreted by two possible scenarios: sequential decay [74] and coalescence model [78]. In the sequential decay scenario, the difference between 3He and triton is influenced by the Coulomb barrier, for which 3He is emitted at an earlier stage with high temperature to overcome the Coulomb barrier higher than that of triton [74]. In coalescence scenario, which was applied to interpret the difference between 3He and α particles [78], the former is dominantly produced by the coalescence of preequilibrium nucleons, delivering larger mean kinetic energy. These two explanations are qualitatively in agreement, supporting that 3He is predominantly emitted at earlier stage. Our experimental results show that the “3He-puzzle” exists in the events tagged by fission. It suggests that the puzzle exists in both inclusive and fission events.
Out-of-plane emission and the effect of
Benefiting from the wide angular coverage of the SSDTs and PPACs in laboratory reference frame, the angular behavior of the particle emission can be analyzed. To compare the yields of particles with different energy spectrum behaviors and avoid the influence of the possible experimental distortion caused by the energy threshold in each SSDTs, a data adaptive energy spectrum peak cut scenario is applying. We focus on the descending part on the high energy side of the energy peak. The energy peak positions (Ep) are listed in Table 2. Meanwhile, using the energy condition
| SSDT2 | SSDT3 | SSDT4 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ep of triton (MeV) | 45 | 40 | 19 |
| Ep of 3He (MeV) | 62 | 58 | 38 |
The angular distribution of R(t/3He) as a function of the polar angle in laboratory θlab is generated with events of one LCP in coincidence with two FFs, as shown in Fig. 7. The same energy threshold, geometry and folding angle cuts are applied to both experimental and simulation results. It is shown that for the wide angular range, the distribution exhibits a rising trend. This feature is consistent with the moving source picture, where the neutron richness of particle emission increases from the projectile-like source to the medium velocity source corresponding to the neck, as predicted by various transport model simulations [40, 41, 46, 48, 49, 51, 105-109], and experimentally observed in a specific angular window [42, 45, 50, 54, 79, 110-112] or a parallel velocity window [45, 79, 80, 113-118].

In order to see the symmetry energy effect, a soft (γ = 0.5) and a stiff (γ = 1.0) symmetry energy are adopted in the ImQMD05 simulations. These two γ values correspond to slope parameter of
| p0 | p1 | |
|---|---|---|
| Experiment | 1.25±0.06 | 0.018±0.002 |
| γ=0.5 | 0.75±0.08 | 0.021±0.002 |
| γ=1.0 | 0.54±0.09 | 0.018±0.002 |
It is then motivated to go a further step to find a novel probe, of which the fission event topology is better controlled and the sensitivity on

Similarly, to describe the increasing trend of the angular distribution of
| p0 | p1 | |
|---|---|---|
| Experiment | 5.8±0.2 | 5.5±1.6 |
| γ=0.5 | 4.5±0.1 | 2.3±1.1 |
| γ=1.0 | 3.0±0.1 | 6.8±1.8 |
Figure 9 shows in addition the relationship between

Currently we do not attempt to make a fine tuning and constraint of γ parameter in the simulations, since the absolute value of R(t/3He) is not yet well reproduced, as indicated by Fig. 7 and 8. Further studies are required in transport model in order to elucidate the origin and the formation mechanism of light clusters including triton and 3He. Recently, the yield of light clusters is better reproduced by introducing Mott effect in transport model [120]. Meanwhile, the cooling process of the rotating fissioning system with similar E* and J is of high interest. We are going to make further calculations on particle emission from a rotating system with inclusion of deuteron, triton and 3He apart of neutron, proton and α particles, as done in [121]. The emission of other particles than A=3 isobars may bring significant effect to the featured distribution of the latter in the cooling process of the fissioning system.
Summary
The energy spectra and angular distributions of triton and 3He ranging from 20° to 60° in the laboratory in coincidence with fission fragments are analyzed in 25 MeV/u 86Kr +natPb reactions. It is shown that the energy spectra of 3He are generally harder than triton even in the fission events, and the effect is more pronounced at small angles. Applying a data driven energy spectrum peak cut scenario, the rising trend of angular distribution of R(t/3He) is observed in the coincident events of one LCP and two FFs, which is consistent with previous inclusive observations. The yield ratio R(t/3He) exhibits an enhancement as a function of
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. Nucl. Phys. A 679, 25-53 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0375-9474(00)00327-4Chun-Wang Ma and Hong-Wei Wang are editorial board members for Nuclear Science and Techniques and were not involved in the editorial review, or the decision to publish this article. All authors declare that there are no competing interests.

