Tracking the phase-transition energy in disassembly of hot nuclei

Abstract

In efforts to determine phase transitions in the disintegration of highly excited heavy nuclei, a popular practice is to parametrise the yields of isotopes as a function of temperature in the form Y(z)=z-τf(zσ(T-T0)), where Y(z)'s are the measured yields and τ, σ and T0 are fitted to the yields. Here T0 would be interpreted as the phase transition temperature. For finite systems such as those obtained in nuclear collisions, this parametrisation is only approximate and hence allows for extraction of T0 in more than one way. In this work we look in detail at how values of T0 differ, depending on methods of extraction. It should be mentioned that for finite systems, this approximate parametrisation works not only at the critical point, but also for first order phase transitions (at least in some models). Thus the approximate fit is no guarantee that one is seeing a critical phenomenon. A different but more conventional search for the nuclear phase transition would look for a maximum in the specific heat as a function of temperature T2. In this case T2 is interpreted as the phase transition temperature. Ideally T0 and T2 would coincide. We invesigate this possibility, both in theory and from the ISiS data, performing both canonical (T) and microcanonical (e=E*/A) calculations. Although more than one value of T0 can be extracted from the approximate parmetrisation, the work here points to the best value from among the choices. Several interesting results, seen in theoretical calculations, are borne out in experiment.

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