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On the recent claim of correlation between radioactive decay rates and space weather

S. Pommé, K. Pelczar

2020The European Physical Journal C25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In recent literature, several authors have challenged the validity of the exponential-decay law, based on observed variations in radioactive decay rate measurements beyond statistical accuracy. Tentative explanations have been sought in external interferences influencing the decay process, such as interactions of the nuclei with solar and cosmic neutrinos. Given the important implications of such statements on theoretical and practical level, one would expect that they are backed up with radionuclide metrology of the highest quality. In reality, they share the common traits of using poor metrology and incomplete uncertainty analysis with respect to the stability of the measurement technique. In this paper, new claims of correlations between decay rates and space weather are questioned.

Topics & Concepts

MetrologyRadioactive decayRadionuclideNeutrinoSpace weatherCOSMIC cancer databaseNuclear physicsSpace (punctuation)PhysicsStatistical physicsEnvironmental scienceStatisticsMeteorologyMathematicsComputer scienceAstrophysicsOperating systemRadioactive Decay and Measurement TechniquesRadioactivity and Radon MeasurementsScientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
On the recent claim of correlation between radioactive decay rates and space weather | Litcius