First, I see nuclear decay as alongside the Big Bang, the only event in the Universe that is not subject to the laws of cause and effect as to when it occurs. ie when a radioactive nucleus emits an alpha particle, a beta paricle or a gamma ray it gives no prior warning that it is going to do so, there is nothing occuring that can be said to be causing the event to occur at time a rather than time b, and there is nothing whatsoever that can predict when any given nuclei is going to decay [of course en masse they have theit half lives, but this is just coin-spinning]. So there is no cause-effect process going on here at all.
Second. This is another manifestation of 'uncertainty'. We have one kind of uncertainty with the uncollapsed/unobserved states of the quantum description of the Universe - but here we have another. The uncertainty of when the decay event will occur [liberated as it is from the usual chain of cause and effect that lends predictability to all non-nuclear decay events {exepting the Big Bang}].
Am I correct in my understandings here?
Sorry if I've asked these questions before guys - put it down to spongiform decay of the grey matter. But as an aside, a girl newly started at work yesterday who expresses an interest in physics, pulled the breath from my body by asserting that Einstein stole his relativity matereal from Tesla. In my ensueing apoplexy I was unable to find words fitting....
