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Future of Nuclear Fission Theory

There has been much recent interest in nuclear fission, due in part to a new appreciation of its relevance to astrophysics, stability of superheavy elements, and fundamental theory of neutrino interactions. At the same time, there have been important developments on a conceptual and computational le...

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Published in:arXiv.org 2020-11
Main Authors: Bender, Michael, Bernard, Remi, Bertsch, George, Chiba, Satoshi, Dobaczewski, Jacek, Dubray, Noel, Giuliani, Samuel, Hagino, Kouichi, Lacroix, Denis, Li, Zhipan, Magierski, Piotr, Maruhn, Joachim, Nazarewicz, Witold, Pei, Junchen, Peru, Sophie, Pillet, Nathalie, Randrup, Jorgen, Regnier, David, Paul-Gerhard, Reinhard, Robledo, Luis, Ryssens, Wouter, Sadhukhan, Jhilam, Scamps, Guillaume, Schunck, Nicolas, Simenel, Cedric, Skalski, Janusz, Stetcu, Ionel, Stevenson, Paul, Sait Umar, Verriere, Marc, Vretenar, Dario, Warda, Michal, Aberg, Sven
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:There has been much recent interest in nuclear fission, due in part to a new appreciation of its relevance to astrophysics, stability of superheavy elements, and fundamental theory of neutrino interactions. At the same time, there have been important developments on a conceptual and computational level for the theory. The promising new theoretical avenues were the subject of a workshop held at the University of York in October 2019; this report summarises its findings and recommendations.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2005.10216