Lattice gas model for fragmentation: From argon on scandium to gold on gold
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 53 (3) , 1319-1324
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.53.1319
Abstract
The recent fragmentation data for central collisions of gold on gold are even qualitatively different from those for central collisions of argon on scandium. The latter can be fitted with a lattice gas model calculation. Effort is made to understand why the model fails for gold on gold. The calculation suggests that the large Coulomb interaction which is operative for the larger system is responsible for this discrepancy. This is demonstrated by mapping the lattice gas model to a molecular dynamics calculation for disassembly. This mapping is quite faithful for argon on scandium but deviates strongly for gold on gold. The molecular dynamics calculation for disassembly reproduces the characteristics of the fragmentation data for both gold on gold and argon on scandium. © 1996 The American Physical Society.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multifragmentation inMeV Collisions: Evidence for a Coulomb Driven Breakup?Physical Review Letters, 1995
- Critical evolution of a finite systemPhysical Review C, 1995
- Unified description for the nuclear equation of state and fragmentation in heavy-ion collisionsPhysical Review C, 1995
- A schematic model for fragmentation and phase transition in nuclear collisionsPhysics Letters B, 1995
- Mass dependence of critical behavior in nucleus-nucleus collisionsPhysical Review C, 1994
- Percolation with bubbles and toroidsPhysics Letters B, 1993
- Intermediate mass fragment production in central collisions of intermediate energy heavy ionsPhysical Review Letters, 1993
- Extraction of signals of a phase transition from nuclear multifragmentationPhysical Review C, 1988
- Signals of a phase transition in nuclear multifragmentationPhysics Letters B, 1988
- Nuclear Fragment Mass Yields from High-Energy Proton-Nucleus InteractionsPhysical Review Letters, 1982