- #1
CMTacoTophat
- 3
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- TL;DR Summary
- I'm having issues determining the exact details/mechanisms of the reaction, and online resources appear scarce.
Hello All,
Firstly, I'd like to apologize if any of this comes across as wrong or off-putting, as I am a completely new user. However, this question has been troubling me for months.
I'm trying to work out an experiment involving the reaction where Li-7 absorbs an incoming neutron, transforms into Be-8, and subsequently splitting into 2 alpha particles. However, working with it has been difficult, as I am not sure of several things witht he reaction:
1. Does the reaction go to Be-8 first, or essentially straight to the 2 alpha particles? I had read that Beryllium-8 is an "unbound" nucleus, which I believe means something to the order of it's inability to exist as a meaningful intermediate step in the reaction
2. For researching, how is it refferred to as? Continuing the above, would it simply be Li-7(n, a)a? or would it be something like Li-7(n, a)He-4, or even as the two separate Li-7(n, B-)Be-8 and Be-8 --> 2a?
3. Although I may be able to figure this out given the first two, if the answer is more complicated than Beryllium-8 existing as a complete intermediate or not at all (e. g., somewhere in the middle as one that impacts the following), how would I be able to calculate the energies of the resultant alpha particles?
Again, I am still relatively new to this deep of a level of nuclear/particle physics, so any additional info is welcome and appreciated.
Also, if it is worth anything, I can try simulating this using EMPIRE, which I downloaded for something like this. Unfortunately, I am not too well versed in using that software, so if the solutions to the posted questions have to be answered analytically, I can try doing that, but it may be somewhat of a struggle, so it's not really the preferential option for me.
Thanks in advance for any answers you all might have!
Firstly, I'd like to apologize if any of this comes across as wrong or off-putting, as I am a completely new user. However, this question has been troubling me for months.
I'm trying to work out an experiment involving the reaction where Li-7 absorbs an incoming neutron, transforms into Be-8, and subsequently splitting into 2 alpha particles. However, working with it has been difficult, as I am not sure of several things witht he reaction:
1. Does the reaction go to Be-8 first, or essentially straight to the 2 alpha particles? I had read that Beryllium-8 is an "unbound" nucleus, which I believe means something to the order of it's inability to exist as a meaningful intermediate step in the reaction
2. For researching, how is it refferred to as? Continuing the above, would it simply be Li-7(n, a)a? or would it be something like Li-7(n, a)He-4, or even as the two separate Li-7(n, B-)Be-8 and Be-8 --> 2a?
3. Although I may be able to figure this out given the first two, if the answer is more complicated than Beryllium-8 existing as a complete intermediate or not at all (e. g., somewhere in the middle as one that impacts the following), how would I be able to calculate the energies of the resultant alpha particles?
Again, I am still relatively new to this deep of a level of nuclear/particle physics, so any additional info is welcome and appreciated.
Also, if it is worth anything, I can try simulating this using EMPIRE, which I downloaded for something like this. Unfortunately, I am not too well versed in using that software, so if the solutions to the posted questions have to be answered analytically, I can try doing that, but it may be somewhat of a struggle, so it's not really the preferential option for me.
Thanks in advance for any answers you all might have!
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