Il paraitrait que le soleil nous bombarde de particules jusque là inconnues, qui changeraient la demi-vie des éléments radioactifs, et auraient un effet sur la matière en général.... le temps pourrait soit disant s'accélérer.
For months mounting fear has driven researchers to wring their hands over the approaching solar storms. Some have predicted devastating solar tsunamis that could wipe away our advanced technology, others voiced dire warnings that violent explosions on the surface of the sun could reach out to Earth, breach our magnetic field, and expose billions to high intensity X-rays and other deadly forms of cancer-causing radiation.
Now evidence has surfaced that something potentially more dangerous is happening deep within the hidden core of our life-giving star: never-before-seen particles—or some mysterious force—is being shot out from the sun and it's hitting Earth.
Whatever it is, the evidence suggests it's affecting all matter.
Strange and unknown
Alarmed physicists first became aware of this threat over the past several years. Initially dismissed as an anomaly, now frantic scientists are shooting e-mails back and forth to colleagues across the world attempting to grasp exactly what is happening to the sun.
Something impossible has happened. Yet the "impossible" has been proven to be true. Laboratories around the globe have confirmed that the rate of radioactive decay—once thought to be a constant and a bedrock of science—is no longer a constant. Something being emitted from the sun is interacting with matter in strange and unknown ways with the startling potential to dramatically change the nature of the very Earth itself.
Exactly what has scientists so on edge is the fact that the natural rate of decay of atomic particles has always been predictable. Indeed, using the decay rate of Carbon-14 has been a method to date archeological artifacts. The process, known as carbon dating, measures the quantity of Carbon-14 within organic objects. According to the numbers, Carbon-14 has a specific half-life of 5,730 years. Physicists have proven through exhaustive observation and experimentation over the course of a century that it takes 5,730 years for Carbon-14 atoms to decay into a stable Nitrogen-14.
The values don't change—or at least they never have in the past. With certain evidence that radioactive decay can be significantly affected by an unknown effect from the sun, much of science is turned on its head.
Rate of decay speeding up
Worst of all, if the decay rates of matter are being mutated then all matter on Earth is being affected including the matter that makes up life.
The mutation may go so far as to change the underlying reality of the quantum universe—and by extrapolation-the nature of life, the principles of physics, perhaps even the uniform flow of time.
In fact, some evidence of time dilation has been gleaned from close observation of the decay rate. If particles interacting with the matter are not the cause—and matter is being affected by a new force of nature-then time itself may be speeding up and there's no way to stop it.
Et encore quelques liens (en anglais, sorry) pour les amateurs de science-fiction et de vérité:
Are we headed for a solar doomsday in 2012?
NASA issues warning of solar superstorm 2012
Nasa Warns Of Super Solar Storm 2012
Scientists suggest spacetime has no time dimension
Did the Early Universe Have Just One Dimension?
Another Higgs rumor reminds us how science is correctly done
CERN - AMS teaser Live event - April 29th, 2011
Radiation and the UV Index
Measles outbreaks in Europe
Hospital hit by mystery illness
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Je ne comprends pas l'intérêt de bombarder du copier coller de news en provenance de sites English sans faire l'effort de le traduire! Heureusement qu'il n'y a pas d'amateurs de news chinoises dans l'équipe ;) ... ça me ferait bien chier de décrypter du mandarin!
RépondreSupprimeret encore, me suis retenue, j'ai pas mis les liens allemands et russes...
RépondreSupprimerSi qqun voit qqchose d'interessant et a envie de traduire ou de faire un résumé, faut pas qu'il se gène. Moi je n'ai pas le temps.
Cool si ça réduit la demi-vie des éléments radioactifs, ça va résoudre le problème de Fukishima.
RépondreSupprimerSi ça se trouve, ça va faire des mutations génétiques sur les humains, un peu comme dans le jeu Shadowrun.
RépondreSupprimerCa serait chouette, enfin sauf pour ceux qui se changent en orc.
Gencris tu as l'air plein de potentiel et de bonne volonté ! ouvre donc un blog et fait les traductions, ainsi maha pourras faire la maj et les recopier ; ))) l'union fait la force,
RépondreSupprimerAmicalement,