Experimental Investigations of Changes in beta-decay rate of Co-60 and Cs-137
Yu.A.Baurov, A.A.Konradov, V.F.Kushniruk, E.A.Kuznetsov, Yu.V.Ryabov,, A.P.Senkevich, Yu.G.Sobolev, S.V.Zadorozsny

TL;DR
This study reports simultaneous measurements of beta-decay rates of Co-60 and Cs-137, observing regular deviations and directional patterns that suggest a possible new anisotropic interaction linked to a cosmological vectorial potential.
Contribution
The paper presents experimental evidence of decay rate deviations correlated with Earth's orientation, proposing a new fundamental anisotropic interaction based on a cosmological vectorial potential.
Findings
Detected regular count rate deviations of 0.7% and 0.2%.
Observed directional patterns in extremum deviations consistent across laboratories.
Proposed a hypothesis involving a new anisotropic interaction related to a cosmological vectorial potential.
Abstract
Results of simultaneous measurements of beta-decay rate with the aid of Ge(Li)-detectors performed at two laboratories 140km apart (INR RAS, Troitsk, Co-60, and JINR, Dubna, Cs-137) during a period from 15.03.2000 till 10.04.2000, are presented. Regular deviations of the count rate of gamma-quanta following the beta-decay of 0.7% (INR RAS, Co-60) and 0.2% (JINR, Cs-137) from the statistical average, are observed. The analysis of extremum deviations of gamma-quanta count rate shows that the set of directions of tangents to the Earth's parallels of latitude at the extremum points of trajectories of motion in the space of each laboratory clearly forms three separate compact subsets of directions which agree, for two laboratories, to an accuracy of . This phenomenon is shown not to be explained on the basis of traditional notion. A possible explanation is…
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