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arxiv: nucl-ex/0611041 · v2 · submitted 2006-11-29 · ⚛️ nucl-ex

On the absence of appreciable half-life changes in alpha emitters cooled in metals to 1 Kelvin and below

classification ⚛️ nucl-ex
keywords alphachangesdecaykelvinltnobeenbelowcooled
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The recent suggestion that dramatic changes may occur in the lifetime of alpha and beta decay when the activity, in a pure metal host, is cooled to a few Kelvin, is examined in the light of published low temperature nuclear orientation (LTNO) experiments, with emphasis here on alpha decay. In LTNO observations are made of the anisotropy of radioactive emissions with respect to an axis of orientation. Correction of data for decay of metallic samples held at temperatures at and below 1 Kelvin for periods of days and longer has been a routine element of LTNO experiments for many years. No evidence for any change of half life on cooling, with an upper level of less than 1%, has been found, in striking contrast to the predicted changes, for alpha decay, of several orders of magnitude. The proposal that such dramatic changes might alleviate problems of disposal of long-lived radioactive waste is shown to be unrealistic.

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