Physicists had assumed that radioactive decay of any particular isotope occurs with a constant half-life that is unaffected by outside influences. But while searching for a good source of random numbers, researchers at Purdue found that decay rates vary. Further investigations found that they vary seasonally with Earth's elliptical orbit around the sun, and more research found a 33-day periodic variation, linked to what is thought to be the rotation rate of the sun's core.
Nobody yet knows what's responsible for the effect, but just knowing about it may prove beneficial. There was a drop in decay rates a day and a half prior to the eruption of a solar flare, so it could provide an early warning system for astronauts on deep-space missions.
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Anyway, I suspect the effect is due to midichlorian interactions (the thingies that bind all things together, as revealed in The Phantom Menace.
Nobody yet knows what's responsible for the effect, but just knowing about it may prove beneficial. There was a drop in decay rates a day and a half prior to the eruption of a solar flare, so it could provide an early warning system for astronauts on deep-space missions.
full story
Anyway, I suspect the effect is due to midichlorian interactions (the thingies that bind all things together, as revealed in The Phantom Menace.