Cold fission or cold nuclear fission is defined as involving fission events for which fission fragments have such low excitation energy that no neutrons or gammas are emitted.
Cold fission events have so low a probability of occurrence that it is necessary to use a high-flux nuclear reactor to study them.
The importance of cold fission phenomena lies in the fact that fragments reaching detectors have the same mass that they obtained at the "scission" configuration, just before the attractive but short-range nuclear force becomes null, and only Coulomb interaction acts between fragments. After this, Coulomb potential energy is converted into fragments of kinetic energies, which—added to pre-scission kinetic energies—is measured by detectors.
The fact that cold fission preserves nuclear mass until the fission fragments reach the detectors permits the experimenter to better determine the fission dynamics, especially the aspects related to Coulomb and shell effects in low energy fission[9][10] and nucleon pair breaking. Adopting several theoretical assumptions about scission configuration one can calculate the maximal value of kinetic energy as a function of charge and mass of fragments and compare them to experimental results.
^Dorin N Poenaru, M. Ivascu, Walter Greiner "Unified approach of alpha-decay, heavy ion emission and
cold fission", Chapter 7 of thed book Particle Emission from Nuclei, Vol. III: Fission and Beta-Delayed Decay Modes (CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida, 1989), pp. 203-235.
^Modesto Montoya, "Shell and coulomb effects in thermal neutron induced cold fission of U-233, U-235, and Pu-239", Radiation Effects and Defects in Solids, Volume 93, Issue 1–4 March 1986, pages 9 - 12