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Concerning the time dependence of the decay rate of 137Cs.

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It is found that the PTB measurements of the decay rate of (137)Cs show no evidence of an annual oscillation, in agreement with the recent report by Bellotti et al., and is consistent with the finding that different nuclides have different sensitivities to whatever external influences are responsible for the observed periodic variations.
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This article is published in Applied Radiation and Isotopes.The article was published on 2013-04-01 and is currently open access. It has received 26 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Nuclide.

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Comparative study of beta-decay data for eight nuclides measured at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt

TL;DR: In this article, the results of time-series analyses of data, kindly provided by the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, concerning the beta-decays of Ag108, Ba133, Cs137, Eu152 and Eu154, Kr85, Ra226, and Sr90 were presented.
References
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Realization of discrete states during fluctuations in macroscopic processes

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that due to fluctuations, a sequence of discrete values is generated by successive measurement events, regardless of the type of the process measured, and that the corresponding histograms have much the same shape at any given time and for processes of a different nature and are very likely to change shape simultaneously for various processes and in widely distant laboratories.
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Nuclear Data Sheets for A = 133

TL;DR: In this article, the experimental data for all nuclei within the A=133 mass chain are evaluated and best values for level and gamma-ray energies, quantum numbers, lifetimes, gamma ray intensities, and other nuclear properties are recommended.
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Analysis of environmental influences in nuclear half-life measurements exhibiting time-dependent decay rates

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed analysis of the responses of the detectors actually used in the BNL and PTB experiments, and show that sensitivities to seasonal variations in the respective detectors are likely too small to produce the observed fluctuations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Possible effect of solar tides on radon signals.

TL;DR: A compound association occurs among the amplitudes and phases of the diurnal and seasonal periodicities of the daily (222)Rn signal, linking the periodic phenomena to the rotation of earth around its axis and around the sun.
Journal ArticleDOI

EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF CHANGES IN β-DECAY RATE OF 60Co AND 137Cs

TL;DR: In this article, simultaneous measurements of β-decay rate with the aid of Ge(Li)-detectors performed at two laboratories 140 km apart (INR RAS, Troitsk, 60Co, and JINR, Dubna, 137Cs) from 15 March 2000 to 10 April 2000 are presented.
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Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What are the contributions in "Concerning the time dependence of the decay rate of 137 cs" ?

In this paper, the authors present new data for 133Ba and 137Cs, which were measured on the same detector system for the same time period, for which no annual oscillatory behavior was observed. 

This result, in addition to the results of decay experiments listed in Table 1, indicates that the failure to observe the annual ( or other ) periodicity in one isotope does not exclude that possibility in others. In light of Table 1, the authors can state in general that their studies to date suggest the following: ( a ) not all nuclides exhibit variability in decay constants ; ( b ) among nuclides that do exhibit this variability, the patterns of variability ( e. g., amplitude and phase of any oscillation ) are not all the same ; and ( c ) for nuclides that do exhibit variability, the patterns themselves may vary over time. 

The authors have also analyzed the PTB measurements in terms of ‘‘phasegrams,’’ which are analogous to spectrograms, displaying the power as a function of time and phase for an assumed annual oscillation. 

One of the significant factors leading to the selection of ionization chambers in these types of measurements is their inherent stability with respect to systematic and environmental effects. 

The rod was placed in the neutron irradiator for 5 min, activated, and then was placed in the counting bed and counted for fifteen minutes. 

The 137Cs standard set referenced above, which was used to determine system stability and calibration, consisted of nineindividual sources of 0:5 mCi each. 

Over a six month period of initial set-up and calibration, as reported in Cohn et al. (1969), the standard deviation of the 137Cs counts was 0.54%, implying good stability, and the background over the same period was 2:32 10470:56% counts/min over a 2:5 MeV spectrum window. 

Based on the care and thorough effort in the design, construction and calibration of the counting system in the Ellis experiment, aimed at reducing possible background and systematic variations, it seems probable that the observed differences in the fluctuations in the measured decay rates are intrinsic to the 56Mn and 137Cs decays themselves. 

This counting system was utilized in conjunction with a broad beam neutron irradiator (Cohn et al., 1972), for the in vivo NAA experiments described in Ellis (1990), as mentioned above.