«Україна та Китай, як і абсолютна більшість світу, однаково зацікавлені в міцності суверенітету націй і територіальної цілісності»
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У Вашингтоні в середу відбулася зустріч президентів США Джо Байдена та Південної Кореї Юн Сук Йоля щодо перспектив співпраці у передусім протистоянні можливій ядерній загрозі з боку Північної Кореї. Як передають західні агенції, зокрема Reuters та Associated Press, сторони висловили стурбованість, що останніми місяцями КНДР пожвавила випробування нової зброї, включаючи ядерну. За результатами зустрічі США та Південна Корея представили спільний план дій.
США пообіцяли Південній Кореї підтримку. Американські підводні човни, зокрема ядерні ракетоносці, швартуватимуться у доках Південної Кореї – вперше за останні 40 років, проте розміщувати свої ядерні боєголовки на півострові США не планують.
Країни будуть проводити спільні навчання військових та ділитимуться стратегічною інформацією. У разі ядерного удару КНДР по Південній Кореї Вашингтон виступить «з негайною та рішучою відповіддю на всю силу альянсу, включаючи ядерні озброєння США», заявив Юн Сук Йоль.
«Водночас ми продовжуємо прагнути дипломатичних методів врегулювання напруженості щодо КНДР», – сказав Джо Байден. Він зазначив, що можливий ядерний удар США по КНДР призвів би до знищення правлячого в Пхеньяні режиму.
Крім того, країни домовилися розширювати економічне та торгове партнерство. Воно стосуватиметься в першу чергу технологій – виробництва електромобілів, мікрочіпів та батарей.
Сеул не має власної ядерної програми. Південна Корея та США стали союзниками 70 років тому після закінчення Корейської війни. Наразі на території Південної Кореї розміщено близько 28500 американських військовослужбовців.
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British antitrust regulators on Wednesday blocked Microsoft’s $69 billion purchase of video game maker Activision Blizzard, thwarting the biggest tech deal in history over worries that it would stifle competition for popular titles like Call of Duty in the fast-growing cloud gaming market.
The Competition and Markets Authority said in its final report that “the only effective remedy” to the substantial loss of competition “is to prohibit the Merger.” The companies have vowed to appeal.
The all-cash deal faced stiff opposition from rival Sony, which makes the PlayStation gaming system, and also was being scrutinized by regulators in the U.S. and Europe over fears that it would give Microsoft and its Xbox console control of hit franchises like Call of Duty and World of Warcraft.
The U.K. watchdog’s concerns centered on how the deal would affect cloud gaming, which streams to tablets, phones and other devices and frees players from buying expensive consoles and gaming computers. Gamers can keep playing major Activision titles, including mobile games like Candy Crush, on the platforms they typically use.
Cloud gaming has the potential to change the industry by giving people more choice over how and where they play, said Martin Colman, chair of the Competition and Markets Authority’s independent expert panel investigating the deal.
“This means that it is vital that we protect competition in this emerging and exciting market,” he said.
The decision underscores Europe’s reputation as the global leader in efforts to rein in the power of Big Tech companies. A day earlier, the U.K. government unveiled draft legislation that would give regulators more power to protect consumers from online scams and fake reviews and boost digital competition.
The U.K. decision further dashes Microsoft’s hopes that a favorable outcome could help it resolve a lawsuit brought by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. A trial before FTC’s in-house judge is set to begin Aug. 2. The European Union’s decision, meanwhile, is due May 22.
Activision lashed out, portraying the watchdog’s decision as a bad signal to international investors in the United Kingdom at a time when the British economy faces severe challenges.
The game maker said it would “work aggressively” with Microsoft to appeal, asserting that the move “contradicts the ambitions of the U.K.” to be an attractive place for tech companies.
“We will reassess our growth plans for the U.K. Global innovators large and small will take note that — despite all its rhetoric — the U.K. is clearly closed for business,” Activision said.
Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft also signaled it wasn’t ready to give up.
“We remain fully committed to this acquisition and will appeal,” President Brad Smith said in a statement. The decision “rejects a pragmatic path to address competition concerns” and discourages tech innovation and investment in Britain, he said.
“We’re especially disappointed that after lengthy deliberations, this decision appears to reflect a flawed understanding of this market and the way the relevant cloud technology actually works,” Smith said.
It’s not the first time British regulators have flexed their antitrust muscles on a Big Tech deal. They previously blocked Facebook parent Meta’s purchase of Giphy over fears it would limit innovation and competition. The social media giant appealed the decision to a tribunal but lost and was forced to sell off the GIF sharing platform.
When it comes to gaming, Microsoft already has a strong position in the cloud computing market, and regulators concluded that if the deal went through, it would reinforce the company’s advantage by giving it control of key game titles.
In an attempt to ease concerns, Microsoft struck deals with Nintendo and some cloud gaming providers to license Activision titles like Call of Duty for 10 years — offering the same to Sony.
The watchdog said it reviewed Microsoft’s remedies “in considerable depth” but found they would require its oversight, whereas preventing the merger would allow cloud gaming to develop without intervention.
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Mars is Earth’s next-door neighbor in the solar system — two rocky worlds with differences down to their very core, literally.
A new study based on seismic data obtained by NASA’s robotic InSight lander is offering a fuller understanding of the Martian deep interior and fresh details about dissimilarities between Earth, the third planet from the sun, and Mars, the fourth.
The research, informed by the first detection of seismic waves traveling through the core of a planet other than Earth, showed that the innermost layer of Mars is slightly smaller and denser than previously known. It also provided the best assessment to date of the composition of the Martian core.
Both planets possess cores comprised primarily of liquid iron. But about 20% of the Martian core is made up of elements lighter than iron — mostly sulfur, but also oxygen, carbon and a dash of hydrogen, the study found. That is about double the percentage of such elements in Earth’s core, meaning the Martian core is considerably less dense than our planet’s core — though more dense than a 2021 estimate based on a different type of data from the now-retired InSight.
“The deepest regions of Earth and Mars have different compositions — likely a product both of the conditions and processes at work when the planets formed and of the material they are made from,” said seismologist Jessica Irving of the University of Bristol in England, lead author of the study published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study also refined the size of the Martian core, finding it has a diameter of about 2,212-2,249 miles (3,560-3,620 km), approximately 12-31 miles (20-50 km) smaller than previously estimated. The Martian core makes up a slightly smaller percentage of the planet’s diameter than does Earth’s core.
The nature of the core can play a role in governing whether a rocky planet or moon could harbor life. The core, for instance, is instrumental in generating Earth’s magnetic field that shields the planet from harmful solar and cosmic particle radiation.
“On planets and moons like Earth, there are silicate — rocky — outer layers and an iron-dominated metallic core. One of the most important ways a core can impact habitability is to generate a planetary dynamo,” Irving said.
“Earth’s core does this but Mars’ core does not — though it used to, billions of years ago. Mars’ core likely no longer has the energetic, turbulent motion which is needed to generate such a field,” Irving added.
Mars has a diameter of about 4,212 miles (6,779 km), compared to Earth’s diameter of about 7,918 miles (12,742 km), and Earth is almost seven times larger in total volume.
The behavior of seismic waves traveling through a planet can reveal details about its interior structure. The new findings stem from two seismic events that occurred on the opposite side of Mars from where the InSight lander — and specifically its seismometer device — sat on the planet’s surface.
The first was an August 2021 marsquake centered close to Valles Marineris, the solar system’s largest canyon. The second was a September 2021 meteorite impact that left a crater of about 425 feet (130 meters).
The U.S. space agency formally retired InSight in December after four years of operations, with an accumulation of dust preventing its solar-powered batteries from recharging.
“The InSight mission has been fantastically successful in helping us decipher the structure and conditions of the planet’s interior,” University of Maryland geophysicist and study co-author Vedran Lekic said. “Deploying a network of seismometers on Mars would lead to even more discoveries and help us understand the planet as a system, which we cannot do by just looking at its surface from orbit.”
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Президент Володимир Зеленський назвав актом репресії проти кримськотатарського народу затримання в окупованому Криму кримського громадського діяча, правозахисника Абдурешита Джеппарова.
«Сьогодні окупанти увірвалися в будинок Абдурешита Джеппарова. Він один із представників кримськотатарського національного руху, правозахисник, громадянин України. Де він зараз, що з ним – невідомо. Це ще один приклад російських репресій проти корінного народу Криму, проти всіх наших людей. Тисячі й тисячі таких прикладів за час агресії як у Криму, так і в інших наших регіонах, окупованих Росією», – сказав Зеленський у вечірньому відеозверненні.
25 квітня стало відомо, що російські силовики затримали кримського громадського діяча Абдурешита Джеппарова після обшуку в його будинку. Кримська правозахисна група у фейсбуці повідомила, що Джеппарова окупанти затримали нібито за непокору поліції. Його тримають у спецприймачі для адміністративно арештованих у Сімферополі.
16 березня російські силовики провели обшук у будинку правозахисника, ветерана кримськотатарського національного руху в Білогірську. До Джеппарова не допустили адвокатів. Після обшуку російські силовики відвезли чоловіка до райвідділу поліції.
Пізніше Білогірський районний суд, підконтрольний Росії, заарештував його на 15 діб за звинуваченням у «пропаганді нацистської атрибутики чи символіки» у соцмережах.
МЗС України і представництво президента України в АР Крим закликали звільнити Абдурешита Джеппарова.
31 березня він вийшов на свободу після 15 діб адміністративного арешту.
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A Japanese space start-up will attempt Tuesday to become the first private company to put a lander on the Moon.
If all goes to plan, ispace’s Hakuto-R Mission 1 lander will start its descent towards the lunar surface at around 15:40 GMT.
It will slow its orbit some 100 kilometers above the Moon, then adjust its speed and altitude to make a “soft landing” around an hour later.
Success is far from guaranteed. In April 2019, Israeli organization SpaceIL watched their lander crash into the Moon’s surface.
ispace has announced three alternative landing sites and could shift the lunar descent date to April 26, May 1 or May 3, depending on conditions.
“What we have accomplished so far is already a great achievement, and we are already applying lessons learned from this flight to our future missions,” ispace founder and CEO Takeshi Hakamada said earlier this month.
“The stage is set. I am looking forward to witnessing this historic day, marking the beginning of a new era of commercial lunar missions.”
The lander, standing just over two meters tall and weighing 340 kilograms, has been in lunar orbit since last month.
It was launched from Earth in December on one of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rockets after several delays.
So far only the United States, Russia and China have managed to put a robot on the lunar surface, all through government-sponsored programs.
However, Japan and the United States announced last year that they would cooperate on a plan to put a Japanese astronaut on the Moon by the end of the decade.
SEE ALSO: A related video by VOA’s Alexander Kruglyakov
The lander is carrying several lunar rovers, including a miniature Japanese model of just eight centimeters that was jointly developed by Japan’s space agency with toy manufacturer Takara Tomy.
The mission is also being closely watched by the United Arab Emirates, whose Rashid rover is aboard the lander as part of the nation’s expanding space program.
The Gulf country is a newcomer to the space race but sent a probe into Mars’ orbit in 2021. If its rover successfully lands, it will be the Arab world’s first Moon mission.
Hakuto means “white rabbit” in Japanese and references Japanese folklore that a white rabbit lives on the Moon.
The project was one of five finalists in Google’s Lunar X Prize competition to land a rover on the Moon before a 2018 deadline, which passed without a winner.
With just 200 employees, ispace has said it “aims to extend the sphere of human life into space and create a sustainable world by providing high-frequency, low-cost transportation services to the Moon.”
Hakamada has touted the mission as laying “the groundwork for unleashing the Moon’s potential and transforming it into a robust and vibrant economic system.”
The firm believes the Moon will support a population of 1,000 people by 2040, with 10,000 more visiting each year.
It plans a second mission, tentatively scheduled for next year, involving both a lunar landing and the deployment of its own rover.
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