-lee il. . UCRL-3087 DisCUSSION OF RESULTS The data (Figs. 1 and 2 and Tables ] and Il) show jeatures reported by previous author et 2, 3-13 As the pomoarding energy increases, modes oi fission that a.:e¢ extremely improbable in iow-energy-induced tission pecome increasingly in.portant. This results in an increase oi fission yield lor species tori.ed by syn.metric fission and tor extremely asymn:etiic fission, as well as increased d.icect iormation of species near or even.on the light mass side al the peta-stabdility region. In Grawing smooth curves through the observed iission yield values, an interesting phenou.enon we.s observed. Below 50-Mev psroton or deuteron enerpy the curves are symmetrical in all respects. they are very delinitely not syn.n.etrical, Above 50 Mev, however, Rerlection of the heavy rare-earth cross sections through the "apparent center oi the tission yield curve" as estimated i:om: higher-yieid products gives points that fall well below the oose-ved values on the iow-n.ate-number wing oi the curve. hand, ‘On the othe: reiiect.on oc: the low-n.ass-number cross sections through the same “apparent center"! earth vaiues. mass A gives poiits that cali above the observed rare- The higher the enerpy ol the bombarding particle, the more pronounced the eftect. Tne cross sections ot Cae! and Ni” + with 340-Mev protons, ior example, must be adjusted downwarc oy at least an order oi Magnituae, os those oi Eu! °° and E,)?? adjusted upward by factors ol fron. three to seven, in order to tall on a curve symmetric about a single A. . lob 27 ; eu. Duplicate runs oi Eu and Eu cross sections showed agreen.ent within . five percent while the cross sections of dent investigations. . 67 e and 66 Ni . ; were from indepen- The eriect zs certainly outside of experimental error. The phenon-enon desciiped above might conceivably come about ira t €b81005 f Cu Major portion oi the independent yields o1 the rare-earth nuclides arose from: disect forn.ation either as stable 1s0topes o: on the neutron-deticient side of stapvility. lL the primary tission products of mass 126, for instance, were distr:buted so that 72-80". of the mass yield jay in the region R. where W. Spence and G. P. Ford, Ann. Rev. Nuclear Sei. 2, 399 (1953). 10 kK. H. Goeckern.ann and 1. Perin.an, i P. R. ©'Conno: anc G, 1. Seaborg, he R. L. Folger, P. C. Stevenson, Phys. Rev. 726, 628 (1949), Phys. Kev. Z7$, and G. E » M. Douthett and D. H. Tempietonu, = — 1184 (19458). . T. Seavory, Phys. Rev. 94, Phys. Rev. 98, 107(1J 2). 128 (1954).

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