Long term time variability of cosmic rays and possible relevance to the development of life on Earth
A.D.Erlykin, A.W.Wolfendale

TL;DR
This paper explores how long-term cosmic ray variability may have influenced Earth's climate, lightning activity, and biological evolution, suggesting cosmic rays played a role in life's development and atmospheric processes.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking cosmic ray fluctuations to lightning and chemical processes on Earth, proposing a connection to life's origins and evolution.
Findings
Cosmic ray intensity varied significantly over Earth's history.
Increased cosmic rays may have enhanced lightning frequency.
Variations could have influenced atmospheric chemistry and biological evolution.
Abstract
An analysis is made of the manner in which the cosmic ray intensity at Earth has varied over its existence and its possible relevance to both the origin and the evolution of life. Much of the analysis relates to the 'high energy' cosmic rays () and their variability due to the changing proximity of the solar system to supernova remnants which are generally believed to be responsible for most cosmic rays up to PeV energies. It is pointed out that, on a statistical basis, there will have been considerable variations in the likely 100 My between the Earth's biosphere reaching reasonable stability and the onset of very elementary life. Interestingly, there is the increasingly strong possibility that PeV cosmic rays are responsible for the initiation of terrestrial lightning strokes and the possibility arises of considerable increases in the frequency of lightnings and…
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