Search for True Ternary Fission in Reaction 40Ar + 208Pb
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True ternary fission, the fission of a nucleus into three fragments of nearly equal mass, is an elusive and poorly known process influenced by shell effects. An increase in the probability of this process with respect to binary fission, which is very low in spontaneous and neutron-induced fission, has been envisaged. Heavy-ion-induced reactions are adopted due to the possibility of an increase in the fissility parameter and the excitation energy of the compound nuclei. Nuclei with mass number around A = 250, accessible in heavy-ion-induced reactions, are favorable and should be investigated. It is still debated if the process takes place in a single step, direct ternary fission, or in a two step, sequential ternary fission. The purpose of this work is to define experimental conditions and observables that allow the disentangling of the products from the direct and sequential ternary fission, as well as from the usual most probable binary fission. This step is essential for gaining insights into the ternary fission dynamics and the binary to ternary fission competition. The method proposed here is for simulating the kinematics of the ternary and binary fission processes to compute the energy distributions and angular correlations of direct and sequential ternary fission products, as well as those of binary fission. The reaction taken as a benchmark is 40Ar + 208Pb at 230 MeV and is supposed to form the 248Fm* compound nucleus. The simulation results have been filtered by considering the response function of a multi-coincidence detection system virtually constructed using the Geant4 simulation toolkit. The simulations support the possibility of separating the products of different multimodal fission decays with the proposed setup that consequently represents an effective tool to obtain insights into ternary fission from the observables selected.