Sunday, December 26, 2010

Sun flares affecting matter



Mysterious Sunparticles might be affecting Matter on Earth. Radioactive decay are no Longer constant but influenced by the sun. Can this change the Nature of matter and even Time and space?

Recently Researchers have found Unknown mysterious sunparticles hitting earth that it's affecting all matter.

Something impossible has happened
Radioactive decay are no longer constant but influenced by sun particles
this can change the nature of Matter itself maybe even Time and space

what if a well-known -- and apparently constant -- characteristic
of matter starts behaving mysteriously?

This is exactly what has been noticed in recent years; the decay rates
of radioactive elements are changing. This is especially mysterious as
we are talking about elements with "constant" decay rates -- these
valuesaren't supposed to change. School textbooks teach us this from
an early age.

This is the conclusion that researchers from Stanford and Purdue
University have arrived at
but the
only explanation they have is even weirder than the phenomenon itself:
The sun might be emitting a previously unknown particle that is
meddling with the decay rates of matter:

Many fields of science depend on measuring constant decay rates. For
example, to accurately date ancient artifacts, archaeologists measure
the quantity of carbon-14 found inside organic samples at dig sites.

researchers at Purdue first noticed something awry when
they were using radioactive samples for random number generation. Each
decay event occurs randomly (hence the white noise you'd hear from a
Geiger counter), so radioactive samples provide a non-biased random
number generator

However, when they compared their measurements with other scientists'
work, the values of the published decay rates were not the same. In
fact, after further research they found that not only were they not
constant, but they'd vary with the seasons. Decay rates would slightly
decrease during the summer and increase during the winter

Experimental error and environmental conditions have all been ruled
out -- the decay rates are changing throughout the year in a
predictable pattern. And there seems to be only one answer.

As the Earth is closer to the sun during the winter months in the
Northern Hemisphere (our planet's orbit is slightly eccentric, or
elongated), could the sun be influencing decay rates?

In another moment of weirdness, Purdue nuclear engineer Jere Jenkins
noticed an inexplicable drop in the decay rate of manganese-54 when he
was testing it one night in 2006. It so happened that this drop
occurred just over a day before a large flare erupted on the sun.

Sure enough, the researchers noticed the decay rates vary repeatedly every 33 days
a period of time that matches the rotational period of the core of the sun. The solar core is the source of solar neutrinos

It may all sound rather circumstantial, but these threads of evidence
appear to lead to a common source of the radioactive decay rate
variation. But there's a huge problem with speculation that solar
neutrinos could impact decay rates on Earth: neutrinos aren't supposed
to work like that.

If neutrinos are the culprits, it means we are falling terribly short
of understanding the true nature of these subatomic particles. But if
(and this is a big if) neutrinos aren't to blame, is the sun
generating an as-yet-to-be- discovered particle?

If either case is true, we'll have to go back and re-write those textbooks

Source:
Read more

It's a mystery that presented itself unexpectedly: The radioactive decay of some elements sitting quietly in laboratories on Earth seemed to be influenced by activities inside the sun, 93 million miles away

Is this possible?

Researchers from Stanford and Purdue University believe it is. But their explanation of how it happens opens the door to yet another mystery.

There is even an outside chance that this unexpected effect is brought about by a previously unknown particle emitted by the sun. "That would be truly remarkable," said Peter Sturrock, Stanford professor emeritus of applied physics and an expert on the inner workings of the sun.

Source Standford university news

So is Something Unknown and mysterious from the sun Affecting matter?
Radioactive decay which before was constant is now changing
Is Something from the sun interacting with matter?
Rate of decay seem to be speeding up
Can this Affect DNA and open the way for Humanity evolution?
Can this create Time dilation if it change the flow of time?
Can this change things in the universe?

Only Time will show

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