tv DW News Deutsche Welle July 1, 2023 10:00am-10:16am CEST
10:00 am
about visions and the people behind the verb and catastrophe. climate change starts july 13th on dw the . this is dw news. why? from berlin? a 4th night of writing in france. the own risk escalades after the fatal shooting of a teenager police arrest a 1000 people and deployed $45000.00 officers to stem the protest taking place across the country. also coming up, getting to grips with dark matter,
10:01 am
the european space agency proves space for answers on the evolution of the universe with its new euclid emission. the unlike look, it's nice and heavy with its violence in looting. hit cities across france in a 4th night of riots triggered by the fatal police shooting of a teenager. the interior ministry says nearly 1000 people were arrested nationwide with pockets of tension in new york, and more se, in particular, france deployed 45000 officers back by army and vehicles to qual, violence over the death of know you who were shot at point blank range during a traffic stop in paris over on tuesday, the 17 year old whose last name was not made public, will be buried on saturday in the parish suburb of non temp,
10:02 am
where he lived and was killed. how violent was the 4th night of protest in paris compared to previous nights? i put that question to earlier to freelance journalist, linda gift tosh, who joined us from parents to the bottom to certainly change the change in terms of where the, the incidents are happening in paris regions. it was quiet or comparatively job. a nice people came out of cocktails for example, and paris reason um, but it's being picked up by police in my side as far down to the south, a southern city working class communities, we saw a lot more highlands. there was including this time in, in stores. so it is the incidence of change locations change the best in terms of where some of the. busy the, the classes are happening in the lease and, but again, the, as you described, it was turned down that said, there were 45000 police deployed across the country as well to,
10:03 am
to contain the situation. 45000 police overall. how did security officials respond directly? we hear that children as young as 13, have been detained, is indeed the origin. it'd be called before. you know, the, the evening to, to the parents, to ask them to, you know, help option you get and convince their edition from, say, home, teenagers to stay home, to, to not participate in some of the options. and that said, you know, we're still seeing these classes, i have the security and, and greece and this country has a, is there a certain way of. busy actions when it comes to judge and not like a rest. and they're still following their mandates and trying to keep the peace obviously. and they, they, they tell us the cause, how they do that. and as we've seen that, you know, there's a significant amount of damage, cars, damage buses, there was a,
10:04 am
it occurred to you on the bus and try and transportation around the country to try and make. yeah, you know, reduce the number of vehicles on the road. protecting safety, obviously, uh passengers and, and drivers and stuff. um, but you know, removing those um variables from, from being targets. french officials, including the president himself, has appealed for com. i'm curious about your take on this. why aren't the protesters listening? so there's a lot of anger. i think this comes on the heels of months approach as related to the changes in pension reform extras. and as you've used seen, i, you know, we saw very similar scenes of violence when it came to a anger over the raising of. busy the age of retirement just a few months ago. and so there is a certain and there was at the time a lot of anger over how the piece delta the sides. that's how um, you know, they do. there is an excessive use of force that was trying to raise the question
10:05 am
by the public. and i think that feeling is still there. and that's interesting. i've spoken to you to young men because question as an people here over the question of, of racism and feeling targeted. and i think there is maybe in due course in need of a national conversation about how you know who the police target choose questions more often. and because i've had young people say, and particularly young people from non white to sense, say that, you know, indeed they, they, they feel a little more targeted than their, their white counterparts. and i think that's the angry that we're same is the incident it's, it's a reflection of the need to have a more open conversation. investable, that's racism, society here, or some other headlines were scanning now from around the world. the us supreme court has ruled that certain businesses can review services,
10:06 am
same sex couples on religious grounds. president joe biden criticize the verdict saying he was concerned, it could quote, invite more discrimination against americans eligibility to community results. top electoral court has voted to bar former present, enjoy your both scenario from public office until 2030. the court concluded that he had abused his power ahead of last year's elections. judges found that both now had used the official government channels to boost his own campaign. and spread unfounded doubts about brazil's electronic voting system. at least 48 people have been killed in a road accident in western kenya. police in the town of long d, on a said, a truck caring a shipping container, viewed off the road and plowed into several vehicles. another 30 people were seriously injured in the crash and had been taken to hospital. the un security
10:07 am
council has voted unanimously to end its peacekeeping operation in molly, as demanded by the west african countries military, who into the decades long international mission, had been helping fight as womic and surgeons. molly's military rulers had brought in mercenaries from russia's wagner group instead, despite the western warnings of the security situation, could worship was shining a light on the dark side of the universe. that's the task of a new mission, by the european space agency that set to launch on saturday. euclid aims to find out more about tube. the universe is greatest mysteries, dark energy, and dark now or mark the euclid admission aims to investigate the most mysterious forces of our universe, dark matter and dark energy. unlocking the secrets of these invisible forces will greatly increase our understanding of space. visible matter,
10:08 am
responsible for stars nebula and galaxies makes up less than 5 percent of the universe. the remaining 95 percent is invisible. the series that dark matter works a bit like lou holding stars and galaxies together. dark energy on the other hand, drives the accelerating expansion of our universe. these mysterious forces are only identifiable by their effects to gain insight into them. euclid has to investigate as much of the universe as possible with nuclear. nice to do is to look at the very last part of the and he tested the mission as being optimized indiana to look at about a 35 percent of the old little sky verse was created during the so called big bang. all the structures that astronomers see today or formed from evenly distributed gas influenced by dark matter and dark energy. euclid will
10:09 am
operate roughly one and a half 1000000 kilometers from earth on our planet, dark side. this vantage point will grant it's telescope, a largely unobstructed look into deep space. euclid will collect data from billions of galaxies in various stages of evolution. and in the process, it will get a picture from 10000000000 years ago. that's how long light from the most distant clusters of stars takes to reach the telescope. the gather data will reveal how exactly dark matter is distributed in space and how the proportion of dark energy has changed over time. usually that is a mission which we produce at the a huge amount of information which was not the only cause monitors you by the way, but with, with the galactic style. the so was of,
10:10 am
i was sort of either the sciences thrown on a stormy signs. the euclid emission will run for around 6 years and is widely expected to transform our understanding of the universe. well for more on this show, i'm joined by mark mcclockey and senior advisor for science and exploration. at the european space agency mark a telescope to map invisible, dark energy and dark matter. i imagine many people hearing the words that just came out of my mouth can even begin to make sense of that. what in a nutshell will euclid be able to reveal about these mysteries of the universe? so we know that the universe is born about 13800000000 years ago, and it was much, much smaller when it was bone. the thing we call the big bang and it's been expanding ever since. and over that time, galaxies installs have been forming,
10:11 am
but they don't form in random locations in space. they form and clusters and filaments and bubbles and voids. and how those, those elements, those galaxies, and where they're located, how they are, how we see them today, actually tells us about the evolution of the universe. because those mysterious components doc, match and doc, and did you have a different influence on the way that galaxies form and how they move a part of the time. so usually it is going to actually, in a way, he's not going to discover a thing. we're not going to look out in space, find a pointed light and say we found it. we have to set up a billions of galaxies to do statistics on how those galaxies a moving through space, time, the way that the universe that we live in today. so take it based on what you just said, that it doesn't really matter. at least scientists don't think it matters as much as to where precisely those universes are galaxies or formats. while in fact, we looked at, the main thing we need to do is to look over as much of the sky as possible. so
10:12 am
we'd be looking at about a 3rd of the sky away from the arrow milky way which is blocks the light from distant galaxies. let me look out into space and as we look further and further away from us, we look further and further back in time because lights has taken time to travel to us. so is your p side will be looking about 10000000000 years into the past. and things will change to the galaxy is, would have moved to pots and shapes and the universe with a change. and how that happened gives us the clues as to how doc, match it and talk energy are affecting the evolution of the universe. so it'd be clear and maybe you've already answered this question, but just to clarify, why is it too critical to understand specifically dark matter and dark energy, a sort of embarrassing story, really. so a 100 years ago we saw it. we kind of had the universe figured out in some way, einstein and then other people that said, well, the universe is dominated by gravity and it's expanding, but then in the thirty's. and then later in the 19 ninety's we lost 95 percent of
10:13 am
the universe to this dark matter and dark energy. so, you know, i think anybody who walked into the house and said, well, hold on, 95 percent of my house has gone missing a bit to go look for it. i think at least you know, security from carry ups that you would like to find out with what those things are and understand that properties that you cleaned, the project manager has called it a cosmic embarrassment. that 95 percent of the universe remains unknown to humanity . how much can this telescope contribute to changing that? well, that's the key thing about dark energy. it actually stems back to einstein a 100 years ago. he postulated a force that was constant in space. so that is what the universe expands. you get more and more of this force, but if we with you could, would be able to measure its effects precisely enough even to say einstein was right. well actually, maybe there's a different force that the varying over time, but it's not constant. so you, kate, is designed to nail down that fundamental question. and that affects many other
10:14 am
things about the way the universe not only has evolved, but how it will change into the future. but we universe actually fly apart and what some people called the big rich. or will it just cruise on in a most or being way you can should answer those questions. thank you for answering those questions in such an understandable way. there is a mark mccrae and from the european space agency again. many thanks. my pleasure. thank you. to germany. as long as pedestrian suspension bridge will open to the public on saturday, offering a new hanging out for trackers over 600 meters long enough to a 100 meters high. the narrow structure called skywalk is not for the faint hearted and offer spectacular views over the surrounding countryside in western germany. the design and construction took 6 years of back and forth between swish and german engineers who used 3 d modeling to create a bridge that can withstand all types of extreme weather. and
10:15 am
here's a reminder of our top story at this hour. france deployed 45000 police to contain young ras that has spread across the country. a 4th night of riots saw hundreds of people arrested and continued protest against the police shooting of a teenager earlier this week. the watching dw news from berlin, and that brings you up to date with what's happening around the world. we have talk film up for you. next, a mike, look who from me and the rest of the team here in berlin. thanks for watching and bye for now. the, it's all just practice at the mention of a simple clock with a wait 7 months before rush hour attack your crane a film team to documents daily life in the town. how are the people from the club?
18 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on