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Heavy Hawaii rains breach dam, force evacuations

The entire state of Hawaii was under a flash flood watch Tuesday morning after heavy rainfall overflowed a dam and forced people to evacuate their homes for fear of fast-rising waters and landslides.

“Deep moisture will remain over the state through tonight,” the National Weather Service based in Honolulu warned early Tuesday morning.

The grounds were already saturated from heavy rainfall Monday that caused the Kaupakalua Dam on the island of Maui to overflow. The Weather Service said Tuesday that the dam could potentially fail.

Maui officials on Monday thought the dam had failed but later said it had not suffered structural damage. Still, those in Haiku in the vicinity of the Kaupakalua Dam and Kaupakalua Road were ordered to evacuate, according to Facebook posts on the County of Maui page.

Water levels were above normal, about 3 feet below the top of the dam, a post on the County of Maui page said at about 8:30 a.m. local time Tuesday.

The dam can hold 68 million gallons of water, according to NBC affiliate KHNL.

Nearby residents were told not to return. “People near heavily flowing streams also should evacuate or seek higher ground,” the County of Maui posts said. “Even if it appears that there is less rainfall and conditions are improving, people should not return to the area until there is an ‘all clear’ announcement.”

One evacuation shelter remained open as of Tuesday morning.

Officials said flood waters destroyed Peahi Bridge and heavily damaged the Kaupakalua Bridge in Haiku. At least six homes were heavily damaged or destroyed.

The Maui Fire Department reported responding to more than a dozen calls from residents who were trapped by rising waters.

“This has been unprecedented flooding, and we will be making damage assessments today,” Maui County Mayor Michael Victorino said. “I ask everyone to stay vigilant and be safe.”

A flooded road Monday near the breached Kaupakalua Dam on the island of Maui, Hawaii.Maggie T Sutrov / via Reuters

While some roadways that had been closed Monday have reopened, others remain shuttered, according to the Maui Police Department. And an early morning power outage affected more than 1,300 customers.

A bridge off Peahi Road is overcome by floodwaters above the Kaupakalua Reservoir and Dam after heavy rainfall in Haiku, Maui, Hawaii, on March 8, 2021.Kehaulani Cerizo / The Maui News via AP

“This is a real flooding situation we have not seen in a long time,” Victorino said Monday during a live address on Facebook. “Some of the residents have told me this is the worst they’ve seen in over 25 years.”

“If you have family and friends and you can get out of the area, that is probably preferable. But be careful if you see high water, turn around and go back,” Victorino said. “Do not try to cross it at this time.”

He also urged tourists to stay in their hotel rooms or other lodging and not go out Monday evening.

The Weather Service cautioned residents to expect mudslides in steep terrains.

A dam failure turned fatal in Hawaii in 2006, when seven people were killed after the Ka Loko dam on the island of Kauai collapsed.

But East Maui residents say they haven’t seen rains like Monday’s downpours in years.

“I have lived here for 30 years and I think this is the first time that I have seen so much rain,” Makawao resident Lydia Toccafondi Panzik told KHNL. “I’ve seen hurricane times, I’ve seen floodings, but this was really a bad one.”

The Associated Press contributed.



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Meteor seen over New England, Canada explodes with force of 440 lbs of TNT

A fireball flashed through the night sky in New England on Sunday, releasing the energy of around 440 pounds of TNT. 

NASA Meteor Watch reported on Monday that as residents witnessed the meteor streaking over Vermont and Massachusetts, the space rock “fragmented violently, producing a pressure wave that rattled buildings and generated the sound heard by those near the trajectory.”

UK DOORBELL CAMERAS AND DASHCAMS CAPTURE METEOR ON VIDEO

Although the agency had initially believed the meteor — which was likely a fragment of an asteroid — to have been moving at a rate of 47,000 miles per hour when it appeared at around 5:38 p.m. ET, further analysis slowed that rate down to 42,000 miles per hour. 

NASA Meteor Watch had first reported that the meteor was visible at a height of 52 miles above the Green Mountain State’s Mount Mansfield State Forest and moving northeast as it traversed 33 miles through the upper atmosphere until it burned up 33 miles above Beach Hill.

“As the object … penetrated deeper into the atmosphere, pressure built up on its front while a partial vacuum formed behind it. About 30 miles up, the pressure difference between front and back exceeded its structural strength,” NASA Meteor Watch wrote.

Furthermore, the pressure wave experienced after its fragmentation could cause minor tremors and be detected by infrasound stations.

THE MOON HAS A TAIL THAT SENDS BEAMS ACROSS EARTH, RESEARCHERS SAY

“In the case of last night, we were obtained infrasound measurements from three nearby stations — the amplitudes and durations of the signals put the energy of the fireball fragmentation at 440 pounds (200 kilograms) of TNT,” the government organization wrote. “We can combine this energy with the speed to get a mass and size of the object — 10 pounds (4.5 kilograms) and 6 inches (15 centimeters) in diameter.”

More than 100 reports were made to the American Meteor Society from New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts and Canada, according to WMUR.

In a video of the incident posted by Twitter user Jeremy LaClair, the fireball was captured on a webcam at Burlington International Airport, with other witnesses chiming in with their own accounts. 

Even more people commented on NASA’s post on Facebook and user Shannon Lemley-Willis wrote she had heard the “boom” in Johnson, Vermont. 

“Kids were playing outside and described it as ‘big trucks crashing,'” she wrote.

“I didn’t get a video, but I definitely saw it in Watertown, MA. It was dusk, so the sky was fading to a deeper blue, and I saw a bright red, orange and yellow streak to the north of me,” wrote Dan Nystedt. “I thought it must have been something much bigger than a standard ‘shooting star’ to be so visible when not totally dark yet.”

A fireball is a meteor with a magnitude of brightness that’ greater than -4, or the brightness of the planet Venus in the morning or night sky, according to the American Meteor Society.

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Whereas, a meteor is the streak of light seen when an asteroid or meteoroid enter’s the Earth’s atmosphere, according to NASA. If an asteroid or meteoroid does not burn up before impact, it is called a meteorite.

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Air Force veteran, Persian Gulf War POW Dale Storr speaks out on 30th anniversary of release

Air Force veteran Dale Storr, who was held and tortured by Iraqi forces for a month during the Persian Gulf War, said Saturday that he never lost hope of returning home.

“It was difficult. It was always hard trying to think about the future because it was so uncertain. It was a lot easier thinking about the past,” Storr told “Fox & Friends” on the 30th anniversary of his release.

The 1990-91 war against Iraq was fought by a coalition of forces from 35 nations led by the United States. The coalition formed in response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait due to a dispute over oil prices and production.

“It’s one thing we all truly believed in … that our country was going to get us home and that President Bush was not going to leave us there in that prison. I knew he would find a way to get us home somehow,” he said.

1991 GULF WAR LOOMS LARGE OVER BUSH’S MIDEAST LEGACY

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Storr said the war “brought the country together” and also “gave the military a lot of confidence in the capabilities they had.”

“I think it really united the country behind a common cause,” the veteran said.

“Not everybody will agree with the war, but I think they were really behind the military, unlike Vietnam … My father served in Vietnam. But it was really nice to see the country come together and focus on the military and on the service members.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Teachers expected to move into Phase 1A of COVID-19 vaccine plan, Pa. task force member says

ANOTHER REOPENING PLAN. AS WE MOVE INTO THE FINAL FEW MONTHS OF THE SCHOOL YEAR, SOME STUDENTS MAY FINALLY BE BACK IN THE CLASSROOMS. PITTSBURGH PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT LEADERS DIVIDED ALL STUDENTS INTO FOUR CATEGORIES. CATEGORY 4 INCLUDES ALL PRE-K AND KINDERGARTEN STUDENT PLUS AN ADDITIONAL 4800 STUDENTS WHO ARE NOT DEMONSTRATING PROGRESS WITH VIRTUAL LEARNING. THIS CATEGORY WILL BE BACK IN SCHOOLS APRIL 6. STUDENTS SHOWING SOME PROGRESS IN E-LEARNING WILL BE IN CATEGORY 3 RETURNING APRIL 26. THAT INCLUDES ROUGHLY 5200 STUDENTS. THE REMAINING 10,200 STUDENTS FALL INTO CATEGORIES 2 AND 1 THIS MEANS THE CHILD IS DEMONSTRATING PROGRESS AND THE DISTRICT HAS NOT IDENTIFIED A RETURN TO IN-PERSON DAY FOR THESE STUDENTS. SUPERINTENDENT DOCTOR ANTHONY HAMLET SAYS THESE CATEGORIES ARE BASED OFF OF A SEMESTER’S WORTH OF DATA. THE POINTS ANALYZED FOR EACH STUDENT INCLUDE ATTENDANCE, PERFORMANCE DATA IN MATH AND ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS, AND OTHER FACTORS. PARENTS CHIMED IN DURING LAST NIGHTS SCHOOL BOARD MEETING, EXPRESSING CONCERN. >> OUR CHILDREN IN PPS ARE BEING LEFT BEHIND. THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP IS WIDENING. WE ARE LOSING FAMILIES DAILY TO CHARTER SCHOOLS, PAROCHIAL SCHOOLS, AND OTHER DISTRICTS. WE ARE FAILING OUR CHILDREN. ELENA: THE DISTRICT WILL SEND A LETTER OUT TO PARENTS THIS WEEK TO GET FEEDBACK ABOUT THE NEW PLAN. AND PARENTS, THE DISTRICT SAYS YOU’LL KNOW WHICH CATEGORY YOUR CHILD OR CHILDREN FIT INTO BY EARLY NEXT MONTH. IN THE MEANTIME, WE ARE ST

Teachers expected to move into Phase 1A of COVID-19 vaccine plan, Pa. task force member says

The governor is expected to move teachers into Phase 1A of Pennsylvania’s COVID-19 vaccine plan, according to an email obtained by Pittsburgh’s Action News 4.The email also said that Pennsylvania is expected to get 94,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine this week. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Saturday issued an emergency use authorization for J&J’s single-dose vaccine.The email was sent to Pennsylvania House Republicans by state Rep. Tim O’Neal, of Washington County. O’Neal is a member of the bipartisan COVID-19 vaccine task force in Pennsylvania.In the letter, O’Neal said that he and Sen. Ryan Aument, a Lancaster County Republican and fellow task force member, stressed that getting teachers to 1A “must come with a requirement for in-person instruction.”O’Neal’s letter also said that the Pennsylvania Department of Education will issue more guidance for schools and safe opening.Neither Gov. Tom Wolf’s office nor state Democrats have made any comment regarding a possible update to Phase 1A of the vaccine plan.Last month, a coalition of education groups asked Wolf to prioritize school staff for the COVID-19 vaccine, calling it an “absolutely essential” step toward reopening schools and keeping them open.In response to questions about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Allegheny Health Network told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4, “At this point we do not know when we might receive the J&J vaccine, but we hope to have it soon to further support our vaccination efforts,” while UPMC said, “Based on national and state distribution models, we do not anticipate having J&J vaccine available before mid-March.”

The governor is expected to move teachers into Phase 1A of Pennsylvania’s COVID-19 vaccine plan, according to an email obtained by Pittsburgh’s Action News 4.

The email also said that Pennsylvania is expected to get 94,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine this week. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Saturday issued an emergency use authorization for J&J’s single-dose vaccine.

The email was sent to Pennsylvania House Republicans by state Rep. Tim O’Neal, of Washington County. O’Neal is a member of the bipartisan COVID-19 vaccine task force in Pennsylvania.

In the letter, O’Neal said that he and Sen. Ryan Aument, a Lancaster County Republican and fellow task force member, stressed that getting teachers to 1A “must come with a requirement for in-person instruction.”

O’Neal’s letter also said that the Pennsylvania Department of Education will issue more guidance for schools and safe opening.

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Neither Gov. Tom Wolf’s office nor state Democrats have made any comment regarding a possible update to Phase 1A of the vaccine plan.

Last month, a coalition of education groups asked Wolf to prioritize school staff for the COVID-19 vaccine, calling it an “absolutely essential” step toward reopening schools and keeping them open.

In response to questions about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Allegheny Health Network told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4, “At this point we do not know when we might receive the J&J vaccine, but we hope to have it soon to further support our vaccination efforts,” while UPMC said, “Based on national and state distribution models, we do not anticipate having J&J vaccine available before mid-March.”



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Myanmar anti-coup protesters killed as police intensify use of force

The Associated Press
Published 8:29 a.m. ET Feb. 28, 2021 | Updated 2:24 p.m. ET Feb. 28, 2021

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Video from Yangon shows protesters fleeing as the sound of shots rings out.

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YANGON, Myanmar – Security forces fired on demonstrators and made mass arrests Sunday as they sought to break up protests against the military’s seizure of power. A U.N. human rights organization said it had “credible information” that 18 people were killed and 30 were wounded.

That would be the highest single-day death toll among protesters demanding that the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi be restored to power after being ousted in a coup Feb. 1.

“Deaths reportedly occurred as a result of live ammunition fired into crowds in Yangon, Dawei, Mandalay, Myeik, Bago and Pokokku,” the United Nations Human Rights Office said in a statement, referring to several cities. It said the forces also used tear gas, flash-bang grenades and stun grenades.

“We strongly condemn the escalating violence against protests in Myanmar and call on the military to immediately halt the use of force against peaceful protesters,” office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani said.

Thein Zaw, an Associated Press journalist, was taken into police custody Saturday morning while providing news coverage of the protests. 

The Democratic Voice of Burma reported that as of 5 p.m. in Myanmar, there had been 19 confirmed deaths in nine cities and 10 unconfirmed. The independent media company broadcasts on satellite and digital television, as well as online.

Social media and the coup: Why is Facebook banning Myanmar military pages? What you should know

DVB counted five deaths in Yangon and two in Mandalay, the largest and second-largest cities.

It reported five deaths in Dawei, a much smaller city in southeastern Myanmar that has seen tens of thousands of protesters nearly every day since the coup. Witnesses said Sunday’s march was also large, and people were determined not to be driven off the streets.

Confirming the deaths of protesters has been difficult amid the chaos and general lack of news from official sources, especially in areas outside Yangon, Mandalay and the capital of Naypyitaw. Photos and video showed killings and bodies.

Gunfire was reported during protests in Yangon, and police also fired tear gas and water cannons while trying to clear the streets. Photos of shell casings from live ammunition used in rifles were posted on social media.

In Dawei, media reported at least three people were killed during a protest march. Photos on social media showed one wounded man in the care of medical personnel.

Before Sunday, there had been eight confirmed reports of killings linked to the army’s takeover, according to the independent Assistance Association of Political Prisoners.

The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy after five decades of military rule. Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party would have been installed for a second five-year term in office, but the army blocked Parliament from convening and detained her and President Win Myint, as well as other top members of Suu Kyi’s government.

Sunday morning, medical students marched in Yangon near the Hledan Center intersection, which has become a gathering point for protesters who fan out to other parts of the city.

More: Anti-coup protesters in Myanmar defy junta’s orders, keep pressure on military regime

Protesters ran from police and set up makeshift roadblocks to slow the advance of authorities. Some protesters threw tear gas canisters back at police. Residents pleaded with police to release those they picked up from the street and shoved into trucks to be taken away. 

“The world is watching the actions of the Myanmar military junta and will hold them accountable,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for New York-based Human Rights Watch. “Live ammunition should not be used to control or disperse protests, and lethal force can only be used to protect life or prevent serious injury.”

Security forces began employing rougher tactics Saturday, taking preemptive actions to break up protests and making scores, if not hundreds, of arrests. Soldiers joined police. Many of those detained were taken to Insein Prison on Yangon’s northern outskirts, where political prisoners have been held.

According to the Assistance Association of Political Prisoners, as of Saturday, 854 people had been arrested, charged or sentenced in relation to the coup, and 771 were detained or sought for arrest. 

More: Biden says US will sanction Myanmar military leaders after coup, warns not to stop protests

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After Years in Government, Biden Has a New Perk: Air Force One

White House officials would not say when Mr. Biden would take his first domestic trip, but said that a typical presidential travel schedule was on hold because of the coronavirus pandemic. “Certainly, his preference would be to get on a plane and fly around the country, but that’s not the step we’re planning currently,” the White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said during a briefing last month.

Other senior administration officials insisted that Mr. Biden was not grounded and would travel domestically soon, pointing to the fact that he safely made two trips to Georgia during the transition to campaign for Democratic Senate candidates.

Presidential travel is expensive and time-consuming, but it is also essential to the job, former White House officials said.

“It’s critical for people to feel the presence and be aware of the fact that the president took the time to come to the place where they are,” Mr. Podesta said. “One of the things that underlies the deep divisions in the country is people feeling like, ‘You forgot about me.’ Showing up changes that dynamic.”

Mr. Podesta said it would be critical for Mr. Biden to travel after addressing a joint session of Congress this month, even if it meant taking on some health risks. “He’s going to lay down a lot of ideas of what needs to get built and he’s got to go to some places where those things will get built,” he said.

But given the pandemic and the politically fragile moment the country is in, Michael Beschloss, the presidential historian, said that staying in Washington more often may work better for Mr. Biden.

“After John Kennedy’s assassination, the country was so agitated that the new President, Lyndon Johnson, made a commitment not to travel abroad for a period of time,” he said. “Although for different reasons, Biden’s staying close to the White House has reminded me of that. I believe that right now, seeing Biden in the State Dining Room, announcing how he’s dealing with one supreme problem after another, is more reassuring than it would be to see him on the road, in the middle of a pandemic, trying to find a crowd to speak to.”

Mr. Biden, however, may not agree once he has been on the plane.

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Scientists Are Inching Closer to Figuring Out How Heavy Dark Matter Really Is

Scientists are finally figuring out how much dark matter – the almost imperceptible material said to tug on everything, yet emit no light – really weighs.

The new estimate helps pin down how heavy its particles could be – with implications for what the mysterious stuff actually is.

 

The research sharply narrows the potential mass of dark matter particles, from between an estimated 10^minus 24 electronvolts (eV) and 10^19 Gigaelectron volts (GeV) , to between 10^minus 3 eV and 10^7eV – a possible range of masses many trillions of trillions of times smaller than before.

The findings could help dark matter hunters focus their efforts on the indicated range of particle masses – or they might reveal a previously unknown force is at work in the universe, said Xavier Calmet, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom.

Related: The 11 biggest unanswered questions about dark matter

Calmet, along with doctoral student Folkert Kuipers, also of the University of Sussex, described their efforts in a new study to be published in the March issue of Physical Letters B.

What is dark matter?

By some estimates, dark matter makes up about 83 percent of all the matter in the universe. It’s thought only to interact with light and ordinary matter through gravity, which means it can only be seen by the way it curves light rays.

Astronomers found the first hints of dark matter when gazing at a galactic cluster in the 1930s, and theories that galaxies are threaded with and fringed by vast halos of dark matter became mainstream after the 1970s, when astronomers realized galaxies were whirling faster than they otherwise should, given how much visible matter they contained. 

 

Related: The 12 strangest objects in the universe

Possible candidates for dark matter particles include ghostly, tiny particles known as neutrinos, theoretical dark, cold particles known as axions, and proposed weakly-interacting massive particles, or WIMPs.

The new mass bounds could help eliminate some of these candidates, depending on the details of the specific dark matter model, Calmet said.

Quantum gravity

What scientists do know is that dark matter seems to interact with light and normal matter only through gravity, and not via any of the other fundamental forces; and so the researchers used gravitational theories to arrive at their estimated range for the masses of dark matter particles.

Importantly, they used concepts from theories of quantum gravity, which resulted in a much narrower range than the previous estimates, which used only Einstein’s theory of general relativity.

“Our idea was a very simple one,” Calmet told Live Science in an email. “It is amazing that people have not thought of this before.”

Einstein’s theory of general relativity is based on classical physics; it perfectly predicts how gravity works most of the time, but it breaks down in extreme circumstances where quantum mechanical effects become significant, such as at the center of a black hole.

 

Theories of quantum gravity, on the other hand, try to explain gravity through quantum mechanics, which can already describe the other three known fundamental forces – electromagnetic force, the strong force that holds most matter together, and the weak force that causes radioactive decay.

None of the quantum gravity theories, however, as yet have strong evidence to support them.

Calmet and Kuipers estimated the lower bound for the mass of a dark matter particle using values from general relativity, and estimated the upper bound from the lifetimes of dark matter particles predicted by quantum gravity theories.

The nature of the values from general relativity also defined the nature of the upper bound, so they were able to derive a prediction that was independent of any particular model of quantum gravity, Calmet said.

The study found that while quantum gravitational effects were generally almost insignificant, they became important when a hypothetical dark matter particle took an extremely long time to decay and when the universe was about as old as it is now (roughly 13.8 billion years), he said.

 

Physicists previously estimated that dark matter particles had to be lighter than the “Planck mass” – about 1.2 x 10^19 GeV, at least a 1,000 times heavier than the largest-known particles –  yet heavier than 10^minus 24 eV to fit with observations of the smallest galaxies known to contain dark matter, he said. 

But until now, few studies had attempted to narrow the range, even though great progress had been made in understanding quantum gravity over the last 30 years, he said. “People simply did not look at the effects of quantum gravity on dark matter before.”

Unknown force

Calmet said the new bounds for the masses of dark matter particles, could also be used to test whether gravity alone interacts with dark matter, which is widely assumed, or if dark matter is influenced by an unknown force of nature.

“If we found a dark matter particle with a mass outside the range discussed our paper, we would not only have discovered dark matter, but also very strong evidence that … there is some new force beyond gravity acting on dark matter,” he said.

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This article was originally published by Live Science. Read the original article here.

 

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In a World First, Physicists Narrow Down The Possible Mass of Dark Matter

We may not know what dark matter is, but scientists now have a better idea of what to look for.

Based on quantum gravity, physicists have worked out new, much more stringent upper and lower mass limits of dark matter particles. And they have found that the mass range is way tighter than previously thought.

 

This means that the dark matter candidates that are either extremely light or heavy are unlikely to be the answer, based on our current understanding of the Universe.

“This is the first time that anyone has thought to use what we know about quantum gravity as a way to calculate the mass range for dark matter. We were surprised when we realised no-one had done it before – as were the fellow scientists reviewing our paper,” said physicist and astronomer Xavier Calmet of the University of Sussex in the UK.

“What we’ve done shows that dark matter cannot be either ‘ultra-light’ or ‘super-heavy’ as some theorise – unless there is an as-yet unknown additional force acting on it. This piece of research helps physicists in two ways: it focuses the search area for dark matter, and it will potentially also help reveal whether or not there is a mysterious unknown additional force in the Universe.”

Dark matter is undeniably one of the biggest mysteries of the Universe as we know it. It’s the name we give to a mysterious mass responsible for gravitational effects that can’t be explained by the stuff we can detect by other means – the normal matter such as stars, dust, and galaxies.

 

For example, galaxies rotate much faster than they should if they were just being gravitationally influenced by the normal matter in them; gravitational lensing – the bending of spacetime around massive objects – is far stronger than it should be. Whatever is creating this additional gravity is beyond our ability to detect directly.

We know it only by the gravitational effect it has on other objects. Based on this effect, we know there is a lot of it out there. Roughly 80 percent of all matter in the Universe is dark matter. It’s called dark matter because, well, it’s dark. And also mysterious.

However, we do know that dark matter interacts with gravity, so Calmet and his colleague, physicist and astronomer Folkert Kuipers of the University of Sussex, turned to the qualities of quantum gravity to try and estimate the mass range of a hypothetical dark matter particle (whatever it may be).

Quantum gravity, they explain, places a number of bounds on whether dark matter particles of various masses can exist. While we don’t have a decent working theory that unites general relativity’s space-bending description of gravity with the discrete chunkiness of quantum physics, we know any melding of the two would reflect certain fundamentals of both. As such, dark matter particles would have to obey quantum gravitational rules on how particles break down or interact.

 

By carefully accounting for all these bounds, they were able to rule out mass ranges unlikely to exist under our current understanding of physics.

Based on the assumption that only gravity can interact with dark matter, they determined that the mass of the particle should fall between 10-3 electronvolts and 107 electronvolts, depending on the spins of the particles, and the nature of dark matter interactions.

That’s insanely smaller than the 10-24 electronvolt to 1019 gigaelectronvolt range traditionally ascribed, the researchers said. And that’s important, because it largely excludes some candidates, such as WIMPs (weakly interacting massive particles).

If such candidates do later turn out to be the culprit behind the dark matter mystery, according to Calmet and Kuipers, it would mean they are being influenced by some force we don’t yet know about.

That would be really cool, because it would point to new physics – a new tool for analysing and understanding our Universe.

Above all, the team’s constraints provide a new frame to consider in the search for dark matter, helping narrow down where and how to look.

“As a PhD student, it’s great to be able to work on research as exciting and impactful as this,” Kuipers said. “Our findings are very good news for experimentalists as it will help them to get closer to discovering the true nature of dark matter.”

The research has been published in Physics Letters B.

 

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JoJo Siwa Says Paparazzi Called Police to Force Her Outside for Photos After Coming Out

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Neil Patrick Harris Shares His Thoughts on Straight Actors Playing Gay Characters

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Caitlyn Jenner on Why She’s Closest to Daughter Kylie, ‘Too Controversial’ for Trans Community

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Argentina’s abortion law enters force under watchful eyes

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Argentina’s groundbreaking abortion law goes into force Sunday under the watchful eyes of women’s groups and government officials, who hope to ensure its full implementation despite opposition from some conservative and church groups.

Argentina became the largest nation in Latin America to legalize elective abortion after its Senate on Dec. 30 passed a law guaranteeing the procedure up to the 14th week of pregnancy and beyond that in cases of rape or when a woman’s health is at risk.

The vote was hailed as a triumph for the South American country’s feminist movement that could pave the way for similar actions across the socially conservative, heavily Roman Catholic region.

But Pope Francis had issued a last-minute appeal before the vote and church leaders have criticized the decision. Supporters of the law say they expect lawsuits from anti-abortion groups in Argentina’s conservative provinces and some private health clinics might refuse to carry out the procedure.

“Another huge task lies ahead of us,” said Argentina’s minister of women, gender and diversity, Elizabeth Gómez Alcorta, who has acknowledged there will be obstacles to the law’s full implementation across the country.

Gómez Alcorta said a telephone line will be set up “for those who cannot access abortion to communicate.”

The Argentine Catholic Church has repudiated the law and conservative doctors’ and lawyers’ groups have urged resistance. Doctors and health professionals can claim conscientious objection to performing abortions, but cannot invoke the right if a pregnant woman’s life or health is in danger.

A statement signed by the Consortium of Catholic Doctors, the Catholic Lawyers Corporation and other groups called on doctors and lawyers to “resist with nobility, firmness and courage the norm that legalizes the abominable crime of abortion.”

The anti-abortion group Unidad Provida also urged doctors, nurses and technicians to fight for their “freedom of conscience” and promised to “accompany them in all the trials that are necessary.”

Under the law, private health centers that do not have doctors willing to carry out abortions must refer women seeking abortions to clinics that will. Any public official or health authority who unjustifiably delays an abortion will be punished with imprisonment from three months to one year.

The National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe and Free Abortion, an umbrella group for organizations that for years fought for legal abortion, often wearing green scarves at protests, vowed to “continue monitoring compliance with the law.”

“We trust the feminist networks that we have built over decades,” said Laura Salomé, one of the movement’s members.

A previous abortion bill was voted down by Argentine lawmakers in 2018 by a narrow margin. But in the December vote it was backed by the center-left government, boosted by the so-called “piba” revolution, from the Argentine slang for “girls,” and opinion polls showing opposition had softened.

The law’s supporters expect backlash in Argentina’s conservative provinces. In the northern province of Salta, a federal judge this week rejected a measure filed by a former legislator calling for the law to be suspended because the legislative branch had exceeded its powers. Opponents of abortion cite international treaties signed by Argentina pledging to protect life from conception.

Gómez Alcorta said criminal charges currently pending against more than 1,500 women and doctors who performed abortions should be lifted. She said the number of women and doctors detained “was not that many,” but didn’t provide a number.

“The Ministry of Women is going to carry out its leadership” to end these cases, she said.

Tamara Grinberg, 32, who had a clandestine abortion in 2012, celebrated that from now on “a girl can go to a hospital to say ‘I want to have an abortion.’”

She said when she had her abortion, very few people helped her. “Today there are many more support networks … and the decision is respected. When I did it, no one respected my decision.”

While abortion is already allowed in some other parts of Latin America — such as in Uruguay, Cuba and Mexico City — its legalization in Argentina is expected to reverberate across the region, where dangerous clandestine procedures remain the norm a half century after a woman’s right to choose was guaranteed in the U.S.

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AP journalists Víctor Caivano and Yésica Brumec contributed to this report.

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