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    Iran helicopter crash: Mohammad Mokhber becomes acting president

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    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and the country’s foreign minister were found dead Monday hours after their helicopter crashed in fog, leaving the Islamic Republic without two key leaders as extraordinary tensions grip the wider Middle East.

    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say in the Shiite theocracy, quickly named a little-known vice president as caretaker and insisted the government was in control, but the deaths marked yet another blow to a country beset by pressures at home and abroad.

    Iran has offered no cause for the crash nor suggested sabotage brought down the helicopter, which fell in mountainous terrain in a sudden, intense fog.

    In Tehran, Iran’s capital, businesses were open and children attended school Monday. However, there was a noticeable presence of both uniformed and plainclothes security forces.

    Later in the day, hundreds of mourners crowded into downtown Vali-e-Asr square holding posters of Raisi and waving Palestinian flags. Some men clutched prayer beads and were visibly crying. Women wearing black chadors gathered together holding photos of the dead leader.

    In this photo provided by Moj News Agency, rescue teams are seen near the site of the incident of the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in Varzaghan in northwestern Iran, Sunday, May 19, 2024. (Azin Haghighi, Moj News Agency via AP)

    In this photo provided by Islamic Republic News Agency, IRNA, the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi takes off at the Iranian border with Azerbaijan after President Raisi and his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev inaugurated dam of Qiz Qalasi, or Castel of Girl in Azeri, Iran, Sunday, May 19, 2024. (Ali Hamed Haghdoust/IRNA via AP)

    In this photo provided by Islamic Republic News Agency, IRNA, the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi takes off at the Iranian border with Azerbaijan after President Raisi and his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev inaugurated dam of Qiz Qalasi, or Castel of Girl in Azeri, Iran, Sunday, May 19, 2024. (Ali Hamed Haghdoust/IRNA via AP)

    “We were shocked that we lost such a character, a character that made Iran proud, and humiliated the enemies,” said Mohammad Beheshti, 36.

    The crash comes as the Israel-Hamas war roils the region. Iran-backed Hamas led the attack that started the conflict, and Hezbollah, also supported by Tehran, has fired rockets at Israel. Last month, Iran launched its own unprecedented drone-and-missile attack on Israel.

    A hard-liner who formerly led the country’s judiciary, Raisi, 63, was viewed as a protege of Khamenei. During his tenure, relations continued to deteriorate with the West as Iran enriched uranium closer than ever to weapons-grade levels and supplied bomb-carrying drones to Russia for its war in Ukraine.

    His government has also faced years of mass protests over the ailing economy and women’s rights — making the moment that much more sensitive.

    The crash killed all eight people aboard a Bell 212 helicopter that Iran purchased in the early 2000s, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. Among the dead were Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, the governor of Iran’s East Azerbaijan province, a senior cleric from Tabriz, a Revolutionary Guard official and three crew members, IRNA said.

    Iran has flown Bell helicopters extensively since the shah’s era. But aircraft in Iran face a shortage of parts because of Western sanctions, and often fly without safety checks. Against that backdrop, former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif sought to blame the United States for the crash.

    “One of the main culprits of yesterday’s tragedy is the United States, which … embargoed the sale of aircraft and aviation parts to Iran and does not allow the people of Iran to enjoy good aviation facilities,” Zarif told The Associated Press.

    Ali Vaez, Iran project director with the International Crisis Group, said that while U.S. sanctions have deprived Iran of the ability to renew and repair its fleet for decades, “one can’t overlook human error and the weather’s role in this particular accident.’’

    Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst and consultant, said Iran likely is tapping the black market for parts to maintain the fleet, but questioned whether Iran has the maintenance skills to keep older helicopters flying safely.

    “Black-market parts and whatever local maintenance capabilities they’ve got — that’s not a good combination,” he said.

    There are 15 Bell 212 helicopters with an average age of 35 years currently registered in Iran that could be in active use or in storage, according to aviation data firm Cirium.

    State TV gave no immediate cause for the crash in Iran’s East Azerbaijan province. Footage released by IRNA showed the crash site, across a steep valley in a green mountain range.

    U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the U.S. continues to monitor the situation surrounding the “very unfortunate helicopter crash” but has no insight into the cause. “I don’t necessarily see any broader regional security impacts at this point in time,” he said.

    White House national security spokesman John Kirby said Monday the death of Raisi and Amirabdollahian is not expected to have any substantive impact on difficult U.S.-Iran relations.

    He added the U.S. expected the change in leadership would not change Iran’s support of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Yemen-based Houthi rebels.

    “We have to assume that the supreme leader is the one who makes these decisions and the supreme leader, as he as he did in the last so-called election, made sure to stack the deck with only candidates that met his mandates,” Kirby said.

    For now, Khamenei has named the first vice president, Mohammad Mokhber, as caretaker, in line with the constitution. The election for a successor was to be held on June 28, IRNA said. Raisi’s funeral was to take place in Mashhad, the city where he was born, on Thursday, with other funerals to be held on Tuesday, state TV said.

    Ali Bagheri Kani, a nuclear negotiator for Iran, will serve as the country’s acting foreign minister, state TV said.

    Condolences poured in from neighbors and allies after Iran confirmed there were no survivors. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a post on the social media platform X that his country “stands with Iran in this time of sorrow.” Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a statement released by the Kremlin, described Raisi “as a true friend of Russia.”

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, China’s Xi Jinping and Syrian President Bashar Assad also offered condolences. Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, said he and his government were “deeply shocked.” Raisi was returning Sunday from Iran’s border with Azerbaijan, where he had inaugurated a dam with Aliyev, when the crash happened.

    The death also stunned Iranians, and Khamenei declared five days of public mourning. But many have been ground down by the collapse of the country’s rial currency and worries about regional conflicts spinning out of control with Israel or even with Pakistan, which Iran exchanged fire with this year.

    “He tried to carry out his duties well, but I don’t think he was as successful as he should have been,” said Mahrooz Mohammadi Zadeh, 53, a resident of Tehran.

    Khamenei stressed the business of Iran’s government would continue no matter what — but Raisi’s death raised the specter of what will happen after the 85-year-old supreme leader either resigns or dies. The final say in all matters of state rests with his office and only two men have held the position since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

    Raisi had been discussed as a contender. The only other person suggested has been Khamenei’s 55-year-old son, Mojtaba. However, concerns have been raised over the position going to a family member, particularly after the revolution overthrew the hereditary Pahlavi monarchy of the shah.

    An emergency meeting of Iran’s Cabinet issued a statement pledging it would follow Raisi’s path and that “with the help of God and the people, there will be no problem with management of the country.”

    Raisi won Iran’s 2021 presidential election, in a vote that saw the lowest turnout in the Islamic Republic’s history. He was sanctioned by the U.S. in part over his involvement in the execution of thousands of political prisoners in 1988 at the end of the bloody Iran-Iraq war.

    Under Raisi, Iran now enriches uranium at nearly weapons-grade levels and hampers international inspections. Iran has armed Russia in its war on Ukraine, as well as launched a massive drone-and-missile attack on Israel amid its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. It also has continued arming proxy groups in the Mideast, like Yemen’s Houthi rebels and Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

    Mass protests in the country have raged for years. The most recent involved the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, a woman detained over her allegedly loose headscarf, or hijab. The monthslong security crackdown that followed the demonstrations killed more than 500 people and saw over 22,000 detained.

    In March, a United Nations investigative panel found that Iran was responsible for the “physical violence” that led to Amini’s death.

    Raisi is the second Iranian president to die in office. In 1981, a bomb blast killed President Mohammad Ali Rajai in the chaotic days after the country’s Islamic Revolution.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran, Paul Wiseman and Lolita Baldor in Washington, and AP Airlines Writer David Koenig in Dallas contributed to this report.

    It’s not “Windows 12”: Microsoft keeps Windows 11 branding despite major changes

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    Enlarge / The new Arm-powered Surface Laptop. These Copilot+ PCs are all pictured with a refreshed version of Windows 11’s “Bloom” wallpaper.

    Microsoft

    Microsoft is announcing some fairly major changes for Windows and the Surface lineup as part of its Build developer conference this week, but there’s one thing that’s definitely not coming, at least not right now: a Windows 12 update.

    Speculation about the “Windows 12” update began propagating at some point last year in reports that suggested that Microsoft was shifting back to a three-year release cycle like the ones used for Windows Vista, 7, 8, and 10 in the late 2000s and early 2010s.

    And Microsoft may have intended to call this fall’s release “Windows 12” at some point, and it does come with substantial changes both above and under the hood to better support Arm systems and to emphasize Microsoft’s AI focus.

    “We really focused on modernizing this update of Windows 11,” said Microsoft Corporate Vice President of Windows and Devices Pavan Davuluri at a technical briefing on Microsoft’s campus in mid-April. “We engineered this update of Windows 11 with a real focus on AI inference and taking advantage of the Arm64 instruction set at every layer of the operating system stack. For us, what this meant really was building a new compiler in Windows. We built a new kernel in Windows on top of that compiler. We now have new schedulers in the operating system that take advantage of these new SoC architecture.”

    Microsoft didn’t say whether the updated system components would have user-noticeable benefits for users of current x86 systems, though these updates are likely the reason why the OS has gone from “unsupported” to “unbootable” on some systems with early 64-bit x86 processors.

    Even with these changes, at some point the company made the decision to stay the course with Windows 11’s user interface and branding rather than starting over from scratch and discarding whatever momentum Windows 11 had managed to achieve. By some metrics, Windows 11 usage has continued its slow but steady increase; by others, it has mostly stagnated this year. Leaked internal data suggests that Windows 11 currently has somewhere between 400–500 million active users, a slower pace of adoption than Windows 10 at this point in its lifecycle.

    Whatever Microsoft decides to call it, Windows’ versioning doesn’t have a ton to do with the underpinnings of the operating system. The first release of Windows 11 was essentially Windows 10 with a new user interface on top of it—at one point it was known as “Windows 10X,” and the Windows 11 branding came as a surprise when it was announced three years ago. Plenty of apps and games continue to identify it as a flavor of Windows 10.

    Microsoft did decide to impose stricter system requirements for Windows 11 than for Windows 10, but these are enforced by a handful of easily tweaked registry settings. Once you bypass requirements for Secure Boot or a TPM 2.0 module, early Windows 11 builds will install and run on practically any 64-bit PC that could run Windows 10, highlighting their shared foundation. Even with the newer processor requirement, unsupported installations will continue to work on basically any PC made in the last 12 or 13 years (the official system requirements remain unchanged).

    The Windows 11 24H2 update will hit most Windows 11 PCs when it’s officially released later this fall, though Windows Insiders in the Dev channel can get the work-in-progress version of the update now.

    Drake Bell’s Son Motivated Him to Open Up About Being Sexual Abused

    Drake & Josh star Drake Bell said in a new interview that his three-year-old son helped inspire him to vocalize the alleged sexual abuse he suffered as a child star. Bell has made headlines in recent months as the principal subject of the five-part docuseries Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, where Nickelodeon crew members, child actors, and parents detail a kids network rife with misconduct, discrimination, and abuse. In an interview that aired on Today Monday, he decided to come forward once his mental health took a dive.

    “I had just been going through so much and things were spiraling out of control personally and mentally,” Bell said. “And I finally found myself saying, ‘There’s two roads you can take here.’ I’d just had a son. And what’s the story that he’s going to get? Or is somebody else going to tell him my story, or am I going to be around to tell him and share my story? So I knew something had to change.”

    In Quiet on Set, Bell alleged that former dialogue coach Brian Peck began “sexually assaulting” him at age 15, and described feeling “trapped” as Bell could not drive to and from the Nickelodeon set. Bell, who shares his three-year-old son with ex-wife Janet Von Schmeling, said becoming a father helped drive his decision to come forward.

    “As he grows, he’s going to hear things, and people are going to have opinions,” Bell said. “But my hope is that he’ll be able to say, ‘Yeah, my dad did go through that. Yeah, that did happen to my dad. Yeah, my dad did do that. But the man I’ve known my whole life and the man that I know today is a hero to me. And the fact that he’s been able to get through those things has helped me be able to face the world and not let it tear me down.’”

    In August 2003, Los Angeles police arrested Peck on several charges including lewd acts with a child. By 2004, Peck pleaded no contest to two charges of child sexual abuse, was sentenced to 16 months in jail, and ordered to register as a sex offender. After Bell was identified as the plaintiff in the 2004 case, a Nickelodeon spokesperson previously told Rolling Stone, “We are dismayed and saddened to learn of the trauma he has endured, and we commend and support the strength required to come forward.”

    Following the release of Quiet on Set in March, former Nickelodeon employees have shared nightmarish stories of working on the kids network. On March 18, former Schneider assistant and Jack Ryan producer Amy Berg alleged in an X post that Nickelodeon showrunner Dan Schneider brought on her “panic attacks” and led her to develop a “significant heart arrhythmia,” or irregular heartbeat. And on May 14, Nickelodeon’s All That star Lori Beth Denberg accused Schneider of showing her pornography, lashing out on her, and initiating phone sex during her four seasons on the show. (Schneider filed a defamation lawsuit over the claims made in Quiet on Set May 1.)

    Trending

    Just last month at a Los Angeles Emmys event, Bell said he’s still “reeling from the idea of bearing my soul to the world,” adding that beyond the glamour of Hollywood lies a “dark cesspool of disgusting waste.”

    During his Today interview, Bell said he is ready to see change. “This isn’t me — this is something that happened to me. Me moving forward, the decisions that I made in my past … these were my decisions, I made my mistakes. I did that, but that isn’t my soul,” he said. “That isn’t me — something happened to me. And now I get to see all of that in a clear picture.”

    Daily Taurus Horoscope Today, May 21, 2024: Lifestyle will remain good!

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    New Delhi,UPDATED: May 21, 2024 00:00 IST

    What will your day look like in terms of health, romance, finance and fortune? Read everything here.

    Taurus Money Horoscope Today

    Results will match expectations. Maintain clarity in transactions. There will be an increase in diligence. Increase vigilance in transactions.

    Taurus Career Horoscope Today

    You will strengthen management. There will be progress in work-related matters. Emphasize professionalism. Move forward together with everyone. Efficiency will be enhanced. You will establish positions through hard work and dedication. Business matters will be sorted out. Goals will be achieved. Work will be done on time. Avoid tasks involving risks. Caution will remain.

    Taurus Love Horoscope Today

    You will enhance harmony in relationships. Maintain a sense of cooperation. Pleasant outcomes will be achieved. You will progress naturally in matters of the heart. Increase support for loved ones. Close ones will remain supportive. Memorable moments will be created. Relationships will remain strong. Comfort and happiness will prevail in relationships.

    Taurus Health Horoscope Today

    You will continue necessary efforts. Manage communication well. Your personality will be attractive. Pay attention to health. Past issues may resurface. Lifestyle will remain good.

    Lucky numbers: 3,6,7,9

    Lucky colour: Maroon

    Published On:

    May 21, 2024

    2024 NHL playoff preview: New York Rangers vs. Florida Panthers

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    By Shayna Goldman, Dom Luszczsyszyn and Sean Gentille

    The Presidents’ Trophy-winning New York Rangers finished first in the Metropolitan Divisions, while the Florida Panthers won the Atlantic.

    That makes this upcoming series, which opens Wednesday in New York, a true test of the best in the Eastern Conference.

    New York has already made it further than it did last year. But now comes the challenge of besting their 2022 season, in which they reached the Eastern Conference final after ousting the Hurricanes in Round 2.

    The Panthers know what’s waiting for them if they can muster four more wins: a chance at redemption after last year’s Stanley Cup Final loss.

    So who will become the final Eastern Conference team standing?


    The odds

    A 114-point Rangers team triumphed against an opponent — the Carolina Hurricanes — that always fumbles in the middle of the playoffs, proving they should’ve been more respected by math in the first place. Sorry!

    What did we learn from that experience? Apparently nothing, giving the Rangers a 35 percent chance against the Panthers.

    That has less to do with any hatred toward the Rangers and more to do with their opponents. They would’ve been favored against anyone else in the East — just not Carolina or Florida, two teams the model simply holds in higher esteem.

    We saw how that played out in Round 2, but 35 percent is no guarantee — or an indication of a particularly lopsided series, for that matter. The margins on a game-to-game basis are much slimmer than the series odds may appear: nearly 50-50 odds for the Rangers on home ice, and a bit below 40-60 on the road. In terms of expected goal margin, we’re talking 2.9-3.0 at home and 2.7-3.4 on the road.

    Those margins are enough to give Florida a significant chance at prevailing in a seven-game series — but it’s hard not to believe destiny could be on New York’s side.


    The numbers

    Just two goals separate the Rangers and Panthers defensively.

    Defense has been a strength for Florida all season, thanks to their steady blue line and some strong two-way skaters up front at even strength and on the penalty kill. Tampa Bay challenged that in Round 1. The Panthers allowed more shots and scoring chances than usual to open the postseason, and were a bit leakier on the kill.

    Florida tightened up against the Bruins, conceding almost 13 attempts and 0.21 expected goals fewer per 60 between rounds at five-on-five. Boston only mustered one goal in almost 26 minutes of power-play time against the Panthers’ penalty kill through six games.

    The Rangers came into the playoffs as a pretty solid defensive team and carried that into Round 1. They weren’t tested as much against the Washington Capitals, but the Hurricanes were a different animal. For all the shot volume Carolina created, New York did its best to limit higher-danger shots, especially through the first half of the series. That extended to the penalty kill. The Rangers now have broken even in short-handed goals, with four for and four against.

    Offense is where Florida has the real edge. The Panthers create more shots and quality chances than New York. In the regular season, the Rangers had better finishing to show for it at five-on-five. Both teams lean on a lot of high-danger passing and puck movement, and Florida is a better team at defending off the rush, which will present a challenge for the Rangers. New York, however, has a knack for making more out of less.

    Through two rounds of the playoffs, the Panthers are converting on their chances and scoring more than expected. That just hasn’t trickled to the power play, where the Rangers thrive.


    The big question

    Can the Rangers keep up their knack for winning close games?

    Just win, baby. At the end of the day, that’s all that matters.

    No team has embodied that more than the Rangers. In 92 regular-season and playoff games, they have 63 wins and a .684 win percentage that’s unmatched. So why aren’t their chances of advancing higher?

    The answer is simple: goal differential. New York’s plus-53 ranks seventh. That’s a lot closer to where oddsmakers had the team’s Cup chances to start the postseason (sixth) as well as our own odds (fifth).

    Some may scoff at that notion, but if they’re looking for answers as to why the Presidents’ Trophy winners are again entering a series as underdogs, that’s basically it. It may feel like unfair treatment for the team with the best record, but the unusual part is a team earning the best record with the seventh-best goal differential.

    Not only has that never happened before (in a league with at least 20 teams), but the last time a Presidents’ Trophy winner was even outside the top three was in 1979.

    Pres. Trophy goal diff. since ’79

    Rank Instances

    First

    29

    Second

    9

    Third

    4

    Fourth

    1

    Fifth

    0

    Six

    0

    Seventh

    1

    When it comes to figuring out team strength, margin of victory plays a big role. Modeling player value to figure that out goes down the same path. It all comes down to how a player affects goals for and goals against — not wins.

    That’s a key distinction, and it’s why there’s a disconnect when a team’s record doesn’t quite align with its ability to outscore opponents. The two are very highly correlated, but not perfectly so.

    The reason the Rangers won more games than their goal differential dictated is the same reason they aren’t more highly regarded here: their record in one-goal games. Generally speaking, that’s not something that can be counted on with consistency. Margin of victory speaks volumes about a team’s ability.

    Don’t get us wrong, the Rangers still had a very strong record in games not decided by one goal. They’re an elite team. But a 23-4-4 record in one-goal games did a lot of heavy lifting toward their finish as the league’s top team.

    All of that speaks to why the math is not on New York’s side in this series … just as it wasn’t in Round 2 against Carolina. What happened there? Three straight one-goal wins to open up the series, naturally.

    Some might call that good fortune with potential to regress at the cruelest time.

    But after a full season of winning that exact way, there’s plenty of room to believe the Rangers have the It Factor necessary to keep it up. Maybe they do just have an innate ability to win those close, tight games of attrition — the ones that Stanley Cup championships are built off of.

    It might even be the magic of Peter Laviolette, whose 2005-06 Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup with their own consistent ability to be one goal better. They went 28-5-8 in one-goal games during the regular season to lead the league, before winning 10 of their 16 playoff games by a single goal.

    That’s really all it takes: one more goal than the other guys.

    Our estimation might have the Panthers as the stronger team, but the Rangers’ ability to get that extra goal more than any other team can’t be ignored. When the expected margin in each game is under one goal, New York’s knack for getting it could very well be the difference.


    The X-factor

    Can Florida match New York’s special-teams mastery?

    For the Rangers, a big part of that knack comes from their power-play performance. In the regular season, they were third in percentage (26.4), fourth in goals (0.79 per game) and sixth in expected goals/60 (10.17). That mix of process and results has carried over into the playoffs, where they’re second only to Edmonton in goals per game (1.1) and percentage (31.4). They’ve won all six games in which they’ve scored a power-play goal, including the clincher against Carolina. On the other side of things, their penalty kill (89.5 percent) has been the most effective in the league.

    It’d be an edge over almost any other opponent — including the Panthers, who were a top-10 power-play team but have watched their production dip in the playoffs. They’ve scored eight times in 11 games, which is fine, but four of those came in Game 3 against Boston.

    The good news for the Panthers: They’re getting looks, and actually beating the Rangers in expected goals/60 (11.5 to 10.3). That fact, combined with their track record of power-play success and a penalty kill that has limited opportunities better than 14 other playoff teams, will give them a shot at neutralizing one of New York’s major advantages.


    The rosters

    A series between the Rangers and Panthers brings a ton of star power. Florida knows what its best can do on the biggest stage. The question is whether New York’s leading players can bring it consistently.

    That starts with Artemi Panarin. The Panarin line thrived in Games 1-3 of Round 2, with 74 percent of the expected goals share and a 4-3 edge in scoring. But Carolina exposed some of their defensive flaws in the second half of the series.

    While Panarin has delivered timely scoring throughout the playoffs, against the Panthers there may not be as much room for error in the defensive zone. The bright side is that Panarin’s linemates have brought it all postseason long, to give that line more than one threat. Alexis Lafrenière’s Net Rating has increased the most of any player in this series since the playoffs kicked off, with a plus-2.1 goals improvement. Vincent Trocheck has been leaned on heavily in all situations and has stirred the pot through two rounds, which should match up well with Matthew Tkachuk’s rat-king antics.

    New York needs more than one line to click, which puts pressure on the rest of the lineup. Chris Kreider rose to the occasion with a massive third period in Game 6 to get the Rangers here, but the bottom-six raises more questions.

    Kaapo Kakko, Alex Wennberg and Will Cuylle can wear down opponents and control play, but they don’t contribute much scoring. Filip Chytil is a potential spark to change that if he’s available. With him in the fold, the Rangers are a deeper, more flexible team. Without him, there isn’t a trusty 12th forward for the coaches to lean on, which has led to top-sixers getting double-shifted.

    The Rangers’ defense got dealt a much tougher workload in Round 2 against Carolina. And with more challenging competition came some adjustments. K’Andre Miller’s pair was shifted back into heavier matchups to lighten the load on the Adam FoxRyan Lindgren pairing.

    Fox alone brings a plus-17 Rating, which counters the Panthers’ entire top pair. Add Lindgren’s minus-3 Net Rating, and they slip below Florida; his value has declined more than any other player in this series. By redistributing some of that burden, the Rangers avoid burying their best defenseman.

    But what does that matchup pair look like in Round 3?

    Miller was rolling with Braden Schneider in the playoffs until Game 6 against Carolina, when he was reunited with Jacob Trouba. Miller-Schneider was far from perfect, but Trouba’s numbers at least improved in a more sheltered role. Adding to his workload now could be risky.

    The Rangers at least have a safety net in goalie Igor Shesterkin. He’s been excellent so far no matter the workload he’s faced, whether that means a low-event game, a ton of low-danger shots or more dynamic chances. Through 10 games, he’s given the Rangers eight quality starts.

    The Panthers differ from the Rangers on the back end. They have fine goaltending in Sergei Bobrovsky, though this isn’t the Playoff Bob of last year. Florida makes up for that with a much stronger blue line.

    That starts with Gustav Forsling, one of the best shutdown defensemen in the league. With Aaron Ekblad on the top pair, their Defensive Ratings have slipped a bit — but they’ve also faced a steady dose of elite talent, with matchups against the likes of Nikita Kucherov and David Pastrnak.

    That pair plays heavy minutes so that Brandon Montour can stick to his offensive strengths. With Niko Mikkola, the second pair has a plus-8 Net Rating, which crushes the Rangers’ second pair which sits at a minus-5.

    Montour and Forsling give the Panthers two defensemen with upward of a plus-10 Net Rating. Their forward group stacks another four on top of that, between Aleksander Barkov, Sam Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe and Matthew Tkachuk. That’s four playoff performers at the top of the lineup.

    In Reinhart and Barkov, the Panthers have a pair of elite two-way threats who are heavily leaned upon in all situations. Reinhart’s scoring pace in the postseason may not match his unbelievable regular-season heights, but he continues to put up a ton of shots and scoring chances on a nightly basis. And at five-on-five alongside Barkov, he has some of the best two-way impact on Florida’s expected goal suppression and creation, relative to his teammates.

    Those two drive the top line, which allows Vladimir Tarasenko to more fittingly be the passenger who adds some scoring pop from the left wing.

    The Verhaeghe-Tkachuk combination on the second line is as clutch as it gets. Verhaeghe is a huge threat off the rush and raises his game whenever the playoffs roll around; his Net Rating has jumped by 0.5 so far this postseason, thanks to his two-way play.

    Tkachuk’s scoring may not match last postseason’s torrid pace, but he is still tied with Barkov as the most valuable forward in this series with a plus-22 Net Rating. He’s scoring at over a point-per-game pace, with 14 in 11 games, and has made a strong impact on the Panthers’ expected and actual goal generation at five-on-five. Florida has managed without Tkachuk being their MVP, but that game-breaking skill could always get unlocked this series — he showed just how much he thrives in these situations last year.

    A healthy Sam Bennett is back to skating between Tkachuck and Verhaeghe. While Bennett made his mark on the Bruins series, the wingers actually were stronger with Lundell between them — that line outscored opponents 5-1 while earning a 63 percent expected goals rate.

    Lundell emerged as a strong member of the supporting cast after having a relatively underwhelming regular season. Now he has to carry the success that he has had with Tkachuk and Verhaeghe to a third line that has struggled so far this postseason.


    The key matchup

    Mika Zibanejad vs. Aleksander Barkov

    We were close to not getting this matchup at all. Barkov blocked a shot with his hand down the stretch in Florida’s clincher against Boston. “I’m fine, I’m good,” Barkov told Sportsnet after the game. Assuming that’s the truth, he’ll have the opportunity to build on what may have been the signature playoff series of his career thus far. Barkov had eight points against the Bruins, and the Panthers outscored Boston 5-4 with him on the ice at five-on-five, also controlling more than 62 percent of the expected goal share. It was a dominant showing on both sides of the puck, and exactly the sort of series that puts players in the Conn Smythe Trophy discussion.

    Zibanejad, though, is significantly better than any of the centers Boston could throw at the Panthers. Like Barkov, he’s a do-everything, first-line stud, and he’s seen his point production tick upward in the playoffs. After a (relatively) down offensive season, he had points in each of New York’s first eight playoff games. New York’s top line of Zibanejad, Kreider and Jack Roslovic hasn’t quite controlled the run of play at five-on-five — they’re at about 45 percent expected goals — but they’ve outscored their issues. They may have to do the same against Barkov’s line. It’s a tall task, but not an impossible one.


    The bottom line

    A 65 percent chance is far from a lock — the Rangers already know that. They look destined for greatness.

    Still, the Panthers may be their toughest challenge yet, a team that skillfully blends suffocating structure with game-breaking star power.

    References

    How these projections work
    Understanding projection uncertainty 

    Resources

    Evolving Hockey
    Natural Stat Trick
    Hockey Reference
    NHL
    All Three Zones Tracking by Corey Sznajder

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    A model outlining the microscopic origin of black hole entropy

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    The quantum superposition of two black hole microstates is equivalent to a different microstate. Credit: Aruna Balasubramanian

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    The quantum superposition of two black hole microstates is equivalent to a different microstate. Credit: Aruna Balasubramanian

    Black holes are intriguing astronomical objects that have a gravitational pull so strong that it prevents any object and even light from escaping. While black holes have been the topic of numerous astrophysical studies, their origins and underlying physics remain largely a mystery.

    Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and the Centro Atómico Bariloche recently introduced a new model of black hole microstates regarding the origin of entropy (i.e., the degree of disorder) in black holes.

    This model, presented in a paper published in Physical Review Letters, provides an alternative perspective on black holes that could inform future astrophysics research.

    “The Bekenstein-Hawking entropy formula, which describes the thermodynamics of black holes, was discovered in the 1970s,” Vijay Balasubramanian, co-author of the paper, told Phys.org. “This formula suggests that black holes have an entropy proportional to the area of their horizons.

    “According to statistical physics, as developed by Boltzmann and Gibbs in the late 19th century, the entropy of a system is related to the number of microscopic configurations that have the same macroscopic description.

    “In a quantum mechanical world like ours, entropy arises from the quantum superpositions of ‘microstates,’ that is, microscopic constituents that yield the same observable traits at large scales.”

    Physicists have been trying to provide a credible account of black hole entropy for decades. In the 1990s, Andrew Strominger and Cumrun Vafa leveraged a hypothetical property known as “supersymmetry” to devise a method to count the microstates of a special class of black holes for which mass equals the electromagnetic charge, in universes with extra dimensions and multiple kinds of electric and magnetic fields.

    To explain the origin of entropy of black holes in universes like ours, Balasubramanian and his colleagues had to create a new theoretical framework.

    “Despite previous attempts, there has so far been no account that applies to the sorts of black holes that form from stellar collapse in our world,” Balasubramanian said. “Our goal was to provide such an account.”

    The primary contribution of this recent work was to introduce the new model of black hole microstates, which can be described in terms of collapsing dust shells inside the black hole. In addition, the researchers devised a technique to count the ways of superposing these microstates quantum mechanically.

    “The key insight of our work is that very different spacetime geometries corresponding to apparently distinct microstates can mix with each other because of the subtle effects of quantum mechanical ‘wormholes’ that link distant regions of space,” Balasubramanian said.

    “After accounting for the effects of these wormholes, our results showed that for any universe containing gravity and matter, a black hole’s entropy is directly proportional to the area of its event horizon, as Bekenstein and Hawking proposed.”

    The recent work by Balasubramanian and his colleagues introduces a new way of thinking about black hole microstates. Their model specifically describes them as quantum superpositions of simple objects that are well-described by classical physical theories of matter and spacetime geometry.

    “This is very surprising, because the community had expected that a microscopic explanation of the entropy of black holes would require the full apparatus of a quantum theory of gravity, such as string theory,” Balasubramanian said.

    “We also show that universes that differ from each other at macroscopic, even cosmic, scales can sometimes be understood as quantum superpositions of other, macroscopically different universes. This is a manifestation of quantum mechanics at the scale of the entire universe, which is surprising given that we typically associate quantum mechanics to small scale phenomena.”

    The newly introduced theoretical framework could pave the way for other theoretical work aimed at explaining the thermodynamics of black holes. Meanwhile, the researchers plan to expand and enrich their description of black hole microstates.

    “We are now studying to what extent, and in what circumstances, an observer outside the event horizon can determine which microstate a black hole is in,” Balasubramanian added.

    More information:
    Vijay Balasubramanian et al, Microscopic Origin of the Entropy of Astrophysical Black Holes, Physical Review Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.141501

    Journal information:
    Physical Review Letters


    Why fed-up conservatives are pushing a ‘Move Oregon’s Border’ effort

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    An Oregon ballot initiative is the latest in a long line of secession efforts that speak to the nation’s sharp divide.

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    PRINEVILLE, Oregon ‒ Tens of thousands of rural, conservative eastern Oregon residents are so frustrated with their liberal urban neighbors they’ve decided they can no longer even share a ZIP code.

    The “Greater Idaho Movement” would shift the Oregon border 200 miles west, a secession effort aligning the conservative farming, ranching and logging communities of eastern Oregon with their like-minded neighbors to the east. A dozen counties in eastern Oregon have already approved the plan, and voters in Crook County and the county seat of Prineville are currently considering the non-binding measure with results due Tuesday.

    “I love Oregon but I just don’t love the people running it right now,” said Eric Smith, 48, who owns two retail shops on Prineville’s main street. “It doesn’t feel like they want to keep us anyway.”

    Across Crook County, pop. 26,325, even voters who oppose the measure say they’re tired of the dictates from liberal lawmakers in the state capital of Salem and the state’s population center of Portland, citing marijuana legalization, efforts to reduce fossil fuel use, gun-control measures and how the state handled the coronavirus pandemic.

    The sentiment in eastern Oregon reflects a broader national frustration and divide over the direction of the country that’s playing out in school districts, university campuses and big cities, all the way up to Congress.

    A 2023 study by a Colby College professor found that more than 25% of Americans support some sort of secession by states, and nearly 25% percent agreed it “makes sense to split the country up.”

    Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican, highlighted the division many Americans feel when she tweeted in February 2023 that “we need a national divorce. We need to separate by red states and blue states and shrink the federal government…”

    Ryan D. Griffiths, a political science professor at Syracuse University, said the Oregon ballot initiative is the latest in a long line of efforts, though most have never amounted to more than slogans and bumper stickers. Among them: the failed “State of Jefferson” proposal in Northern California, simmering secession movements in Vermont and Texas, and a short-lived effort to move a chunk of Northern Colorado into Wyoming.

    Griffiths said like other secession efforts, the Greater Idaho Movement lacks a significant groundswell of public support, and in most cases is more of a referendum on state-level governance.

    “It’s a pipe dream, in a way. What they’re doing is partly performative, for ideological purposes,” he said. “A lot of time, secessionist movements are really just bargaining efforts.”

    Griffiths said scholars who study secession efforts, like those of the former U.S.S.R., see U.S.-based movements as “pretty lightweight stuff.” But he also acknowledged secession efforts like Greater Idaho keep bubbling up.

    “It’s gaining a weird creeping momentum,” he said of proposed partisan divorces.

    “If you imagine a full-blown project to divide America into red and blue states, that would be incredibly dangerous because you’d have to partition people off,” he said. “You don’t actually have neatly sorted populations, despite what many people think.”

    Should neighbors share the same values?

    In Oregon, the measure’s backers say they’re using a peaceful, existing political process to reduce friction between people at opposite ends of the political spectrum who are already living separate lives within the state. Supporters say they don’t want to just sell their homes and move to another state because they like living where they are.

    “People have already sorted themselves into like-minded communities,” said Matt McCaw, a Greater Idaho movement spokesman. “People like to live around people who share the same values they do.”

    Smith, the shop owner, used to live in nearby Bend, part of the far more liberal Deschutes County, but left in frustration over its political direction.

    In the 2020 presidential election, Deschutes County voted 52% for Joe Biden, while Crook County, where he now lives, gave Trump 73% of its vote. The measure’s backers say they likely won’t seek support from Deschutes voters, even though the county is considered part of eastern Oregon.

    Smith said he’s not sure how he’ll vote on secession, but he understands why people support it.

    “Quit treating us like Portland,” he said, echoing the sentiment of many Crook County residents.

    Experts say the kind of self-segregation decisions people like Smith make are reflected in recent migrations nationally to states like Texas and Florida, but also in the “white flight” movement of the 1950s and 1960s, as white city-dwellers moved to the suburbs.

    The Greater Idaho movement would need approval from both Oregon and Idaho’s legislatures, along with Congress. Also undetermined would be how the Native American reservations in Eastern Oregon would be incorporated, as they span county and state borders.

    McCaw, a foster parent who lives north of Prineville, said he doesn’t want to be forced to accept that there are more than two genders, or that people can change genders, and is frustrated by liberals who reject the role of the Christian church in daily life.

    He said he and many of his neighbors are also still upset by how Oregon required businesses and churches to close during the coronavirus pandemic, compared to the looser restrictions in Idaho.

    “We were forced into things we didn’t want and it was all done under the threat of punishment from the western part of state,” he said. “That opened a lot of people’s eyes. It’s one thing to see the legislature pass policies you don’t agree with, and another to have your business closed, couldn’t go to church.”

    Workers and owners shop in the same stores

    Above all, Crook County residents say, is the idea they know their neighbors, from the farmers and ranchers to the tech support workers at the massive Facebook and Apple data centers, and the ladies behind the counter at the Sandwich Factory.

    Prineville shop worker Amanda Halcom, 30, said she’s still unsure how she’ll vote. She said the cost of housing is going up, and she worries drug abuse is increasing. She said she believes many of the laws passed by Oregon’s legislature will ultimately make Crook County more urban.

    She said knowing her neighbors, taking personal responsibility for her actions and solving local problems locally are important values.

    “We are supposed to be a small town. That’s whole point,” said Halcom, who worries about raising her kids in what she considers an increasingly liberal environment. “That’s the kind of stuff we move here for.”

    One concern: what would happen to Halcom’s pay if eastern Oregon joined Idaho. While minimum wage in Crook County is $13.20 per hour, it’s $7.25 an hour in Idaho.

    The nearest Walmart to Prineville is 30 miles away, and political concerns are usually more focused on whether a new dollar store fits into the community, and if nonprofit cleanup groups should get free access to the county dump.

    Generally, Crook County has more in common with Idaho than most of its own state: The county is overall less racially diverse than both Oregon as a whole and the entire United States, and people living there earn less money than Oregon’s average. Crook County’s median family income is about $75,000, while it’s about $70,000 in Idaho and almost $87,000 for Oregon statewide.

    “The mill owner and the mill worker have to go to the same restaurant, shop at the same grocery store. That keeps things in check,” said Seth Crawford, a Crook County commissioner.

    Crawford hasn’t taken a formal position on the proposal, but he understands why many of his neighbors support it. He said he shares their concerns with how things are decided by “The Valley” ‒ the western Willamette Valley that’s home to 70% of the state’s population in Portland, Eugene and Salem.

    Crawford has knocked on hundreds of his neighbors’ doors during his election campaigns and said he regularly hears the same concerns, from statewide marijuana legalization that Crook County opposed to complaints about how legislators want to regulate guns. People are also frustrated about paying higher taxes to fund government services they oppose, and want the freedom to raise their families as they see fit.

    And while he said he still believes Crook County can make its voice heard at the statehouse, he understands why his neighbors might be willing to take the drastic step of secession.

    “They want to be able to send a message to Salem: We’re not happy with the situation we’re in,” Crawford said.

    People are tired of arguing

    Competing signs across Prineville call to “Move Oregon’s Border” or urge voters to reject the effort with an “IdaNo!”

    Secession supporter Josh Derrick, 44, said he thinks things go further than disagreements over how to live. He said fundamental lifestyle differences indicate a lack of common ground.

    Derrick sells RVs, mostly the kind that require a large pickup to tow. But he keeps smaller ones on hand too, to sell to SUV-driving liberals who won’t buy trucks.

    “People are just tired of arguing,” he said. “I want to work, make money, play with my toys and go fishing.”

    Derrick said he never used to pay much attention to local politics, but got involved as the Greater Idaho movement came to his attention.

    “I love Oregon. The chances of (the initiative) going through are pretty slim. But it’s getting a lot more people involved in politics,” he said. “If this gets more people involved, I count that as a win.”

    Besides, he laughed, “I don’t hate liberals. I still need their money.”

    McCaw, the initiative spokesman, said even if the Crook County vote fails, the Greater Idaho Movement will persist.

    He said he believes Americans are just too divided, and that while people who disagree can live side-by-side, Oregon’s liberal politicians consistently force their values onto rural areas. He said if other states decide to follow suit, so be it ‒ there’s a process for changing boundaries for this exact reason.

    “I don’t think we can sustain the path we are on,” McCaw said said. “We need to be OK saying your values are yours, mine are mine, and you have to respect our ability to have different views.”

    Smith, the shop owner, said he might vote against the initiative because he favors keeping Oregon whole. Munching on a McDonald’s hash brown, Smith said he opened two shops because he’s confident Prineville and Crook County are good places to be.

    He just wishes, he said, that politicians in Salem would listen to eastern Oregon’s concerns so that this talk of secession would die down.

    Smith said he appreciates that Oregon has a wide diversity of thought and lifestyles, geography and employment: “That’s what made Oregon, Oregon. And I don’t want to let that go.”

    Interest rate cuts in summer possible, says Bank deputy

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    Image source, Getty Images

    The Bank of England has given its strongest hint yet that interest rates could be cut this summer.

    Bank deputy governor Ben Broadbent said in a speech that a rate cut at “some time” over the summer was “possible”.

    His comments come ahead of figures on Wednesday that are expected to show a sharp drop in inflation, which measures the rate at which prices are increasing.

    Earlier this month, the Bank indicated that rate cuts were likely to be actively considered in June and August, depending on how the economy performed.

    Mr Broadbent has one vote on the Bank’s nine-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) that decides interest rates.

    Earlier this month, two members of the panel voted for a cut, though rates were maintained at 5.25%. Mr Broadbent voted with the majority to keep borrowing costs at the current 16-year high.

    Next month’s meeting is Mr Broadbent’s last before he leaves the Bank in July.

    In a speech on Monday, he said that there was a range of views across the MPC about how much economic evidence was needed to reduce interest rates.

    “The experience of the last two or three years has made people wary. Equally, the behaviour of the economy over the last six months… is reassuring,” he said.

    He pointed to analysis that inflation may not be as persistent as originally feared.

    While the rate has been falling over the past year, it has remained higher than some economists had forecast and this has pushed back expectations of when the Bank will cut rates.

    The most recent inflation data showed that prices rose by 3.2% in the year to March, although the figure released this week is expected to see the rate drop close to the Bank’s target of 2%.

    When the Bank of England held rates earlier this month, its governor, Andrew Bailey, said it needed to “see more evidence” that price rises have slowed further before cutting interest rates.

    However, Mr Bailey added he was “optimistic that things are moving in the right direction”.

    Fixed mortgage rates fell sharply at the beginning of the year as financial markets forecast that the Bank could cut rates a number of times in 2024.

    Since then, mortgage rates have increased and remained volatile, as financial markets follow developments in the US where inflation has also not fallen as quickly as expected.

    Ways to make your mortgage more affordable

    • Make overpayments. If you still have some time on a low fixed-rate deal, you might be able to pay more now to save later.
    • Move to an interest-only mortgage. It can keep your monthly payments affordable although you won’t be paying off the debt accrued when purchasing your house.
    • Extend the life of your mortgage. The typical mortgage term is 25 years, but 30 and even 40-year terms are now available.

    Who died alongside Iran’s President Raisi in the helicopter crash? | Politics News

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    President Ebrahim Raisi, his foreign minister, and other senior officials are confirmed to have died in a helicopter crash after a long overnight search in dense fog and snow in the mountainous terrain of Iran’s rugged East Azerbaijan province.

    Their bodies were found on Monday morning, some hours after their chopper crashed, state media reported.

    The accident challenges the country’s senior leadership, with Iran in the midst of heightened regional and global tensions centred on the war in Gaza.

    Here’s a look at the officials who were killed:

    Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s president

    The 63-year-old Iranian leader was long viewed as the next-in-line to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s highest authority.

    Raisi was a hardline religious conservative with deep ties to Iran’s judiciary and religious elite.

    While in his early 20s, he was appointed prosecutor in several cities until he landed a post in the capital of Tehran to work as a deputy prosecutor in 1989.

    His first attempt at winning the presidency in 2017 failed, but he eventually succeeded in 2021.

    Raisi had risen through the ranks over the years, in 2016 becoming chairman of the Astan Quds Razavi (AQR), the biggest religious endowment in Mashhad, which cemented his status in Iran’s establishment. The AQR is a colossal bonyad, or charitable trust, that has billions of dollars in assets and is the custodian of the shrine of Imam Reza, the eighth Shia imam.

    But the most recent Iranian president has faced controversy over the years.


    In 1988, he was part of a committee overseeing a series of executions of political prisoners. That made him unpopular among the Iranian opposition and led to the US imposing sanctions on him.

    More recently, he was angered by the US’s stance towards Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal – known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – and the inability of other signatories to save the pact. As a result, he announced that Iran was ramping up its nuclear programme, but also said Tehran was not interested in building a bomb.

    Raisi was also a staunch ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, supporting his government’s war against the Syrian opposition, which has left hundreds of thousands dead.

    He also led the country during the 2022 protests over the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of Iran’s morality police, a period during which the UN said Iran committed crimes against humanity in its crackdown.

    Most recently, Raisi led Iran through a standoff with Israel over its ongoing war in Gaza.

    Iran has been outspoken against the war, as have its regional allies in the so-called “axis of resistance” to Israel and its Western allies.

    Hossein Amirabdollahian, Iran’s foreign minister

    The top Iranian diplomat, who was with President Raisi in the helicopter that crashed, played a significant role in shifting Iran’s foreign policy from engagement with the West to improving relations with its regional neighbours.


    Amirabdollahian, 60, had served in several positions in the Iranian Foreign Ministry since 1997, including as ambassador to Bahrain and deputy foreign minister for Arab and African affairs.

    Raisi nominated him as foreign minister after he became president in 2021.

    Amirabdollahian helped restore Iran’s diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia as part of a Chinese-brokered agreement and visited the kingdom in 2023 in a major thaw of relations between the two countries.

    Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, Amirabdollahian has been travelling across the Middle East to coordinate with allies, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, and convey Iran’s positions to countries in the region.

    He had a PhD in international relations from the University of Tehran.

    Malik Rahmati, governor of Iran’s East Azerbaijan Province

    Malek Rahmati was recently appointed the East Azerbaijan province’s new governor by the Iranian cabinet.

    Prior to this, he had taken on a number of roles within Iran’s political system.

    He was previously appointed the head of Iran’s Privatization Organization, as well as deputy director of the AQR.

    Rahmati was also once head of the Razavi Economic Organization, which was established in the late 1990s to procure the financial resources of the AQR; and member of the board of directors, and deputy head of the Kowsar Economic Organization, an entity active in many economic sectors, including mining, agriculture and healthcare.


    Rahmati had also served in several other managerial positions in Iran’s Ministry of Interior.

    Ayatollah Mohammad Ali Al-Hashem, representative of the Iranian supreme leader to East Azerbaijan

    The supreme leader’s representative in East Azerbaijan province and an imam in the city of Tabriz, Mohammad Ali Ale-Hashem was also among those killed.

    Ale-Hashim was additionally a member of the Expediency Council’s provincial chamber and a provincial deputy in the Assembly of Experts.

    Who else was killed?

    Sardar Seyed Mehdi Mousavi, head of Raisi’s guard team, the helicopter’s pilot Colonel Seyed Taher Mostafavi, co-pilot Colonel Mohsen Daryanush, and flight technician Major Behrouz Ghadimi, also all perished in the crash.

    Aviation analyst Kyle Bailey told Al Jazeera the lack of communication from the helicopter pilot or another flight crew member likely means the crash was due to a “serious controllability issue”.

    If a helicopter has a serious technical issue mid-flight, the pilot’s first task is to “keep the plane flying, and then communications would be second”, he said.

    From left: Technician Behrouz Ghadimi, pilot Seyed Taher Mostafavi, and co-pilot Mohsen Daryanush, the crew of the helicopter that had Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi on board and crashed in Iran’s East Azerbaijan province on May 19, 2024 [Handout via Al Jazeera]

    Ethereum vs. Solana: Social buzz can result in a bull run for one token

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    • SOL and ETH saw social media buzz recently.
    • The SOL and ETH prices have crossed into new price zones this week.

    Social media platforms were buzzing with discussions about Ethereum [ETH] and Solana [SOL] recently, fueled by notable price movements as they entered new price zones.

    There has been a significant change in their Total Value Locked (TVL) over the last month, adding to the excitement surrounding these assets.

    Solana and Ethereum see positive social metrics

    According to data from Lunar Crush, Solana and Ethereum recently experienced similar and intriguing social media trends. Ethereum had a social dominance of 9.35%, while Solana had 8.85%.

    SOL garnered 42.4 million social interactions, whereas ETH recorded 45.18 million. Both assets also boasted positive sentiments, with an 85% positivity rate.

    However, an analysis of social dominance on Santiment revealed a shift. Solana’s social dominance decreased to around 4.7%, while Ethereum’s declined to 7% at the time of this writing.

    Source: Santiment

    SOL and ETH enter new price zones

    The analysis of Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) price trends explains the recent increase in social metrics. 

    A daily time frame chart for Ethereum showed that it recently re-entered the $3,000 price range. On the 18th of May, ETH added less than 1%, pushing its price into the $3,100 zone for the first time in weeks.

    At the time of this writing, ETH was trading at around $3,107, though it had declined by approximately 0.5%.

    Despite the slight decrease, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) indicated that ETH remained in a weak bull trend.

    Source: TradingView

    On the other hand, Solana has been experiencing consecutive uptrends over the past few days. The chart revealed that SOL’s price increased by about 20% from the 15th of May to press time.

    At the time of this writing, SOL was trading at around $172 with a less than 1% increase. The RSI showed that SOL remained in a strong bull trend.

    Source: TradingView

    Solana sees more TVL growth than Ethereum

    Analysis of the Total Value Locked (TVL) for Ethereum and Solana indicated that both have increased over the past seven days and one month. However, Solana has experienced a more significant rise. 


    Read Ethereum’s [ETH] Price Prediction 2024-25


    According to data from DefiLlama, Solana’s TVL increased by approximately 11.60% in the past seven days and about 23.8% in the last month.

    Ethereum’s TVL rose by around 4.6% over the past seven days and 6.2% in the last month. At the time of this writing, SOL’s TVL was $4.7 billion, while ETH’s TVL was around $55.2 billion.