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Family of American woman killed in Israeli-occupied West Bank says U.S. response “even more heartbreaking”

Greater than two months after American activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi was killed within the Israeli-occupied West Financial institution, allegedly by a member of Israel’s safety forces, her household tells CBS Information their religion in the US has been shattered as a result of lack of any impartial legal investigation.
Eygi’s husband Hamid Ali mentioned he was appalled by the response of the Biden administration.
“I might hope that the U.S. authorities is ready to implement its own law on this case and withhold, on the very least, funding from its personal taxpayers that went to this unit or this soldier that killed certainly one of its personal residents,” he instructed CBS Information.
Household handout
Neither the Biden administration nor any U.S. regulation enforcement company has introduced an investigation into Eygi’s killing. The State Division instructed CBS Information it continues pushing to see the outcomes of a “full, clear” Israeli probe.
Eygi’s sister, Özden Bennett, mentioned the Biden administration’s response had made the grieving course of “much more heartbreaking and painful.”
“No household ought to should expertise this,” she instructed CBS Information, with tears in her eyes.
Bennett mentioned that rising up within the U.S., she had developed an idealistic imaginative and prescient of the nation and its values however her sister’s loss of life “shattered” these concepts.
“It appears like they do not care about all U.S. residents the identical manner,” she mentioned. “The U.S. authorities, or the Biden administration notably, not opening an investigation makes us query why it isn’t being equally handled.”
Witnesses, her household, and the group Eygi had joined at a protest have said the U.S.-Turkish twin nationwide was shot within the head by an Israeli sniper as she stood underneath a tree within the West Financial institution metropolis of Nablus.
She was shot not lengthy after becoming a member of a protest organized by the Worldwide Solidarity Motion, at which the Israel Protection Forces mentioned some demonstrators had thrown projectiles at troops. Witnesses mentioned she was shot after the protest, and away from the place it had taken place.
The IDF said an initial inquiry discovered it was “extremely seemingly that she was hit not directly and unintentionally” by a member of the Israeli safety forces. The IDF instructed CBS Information on Thursday that it was unable to offer any additional element on its ongoing investigation.
A State Division spokesperson instructed CBS Information final week that the U.S. has continued to press Israel for “a full, clear, and fast investigation.”
“We’re wanting to see the findings as quickly as attainable, together with any acceptable accountability measures that will probably be taken,” the spokesperson added.
Requested whether or not the U.S. authorities supposed to launch its personal legal investigation into Eygi’s killing, the White Home referred CBS Information again to President Biden’s statement from September, wherein he mentioned Israel had “acknowledged its accountability for Aysenur’s loss of life,” and that the U.S. had “full entry to Israel’s preliminary investigation, and expects continued entry because the investigation continues, in order that we will trust within the consequence.”
However Eygi’s father, Mehmet Suat Eygi, mentioned it appeared to have grow to be the norm for the U.S. authorities to downplay the killing of People by Israeli forces. He mentioned his daughter’s loss of life reminded him of the deaths of different U.S. nationals within the Palestinian territories, notably Rachel Corrie and Shireen Abu Akleh.
OZAN KOSE/AFP/Getty
“It is past disappointment,” the bereaved father instructed CBS Information. “The response of the U.S. authorities solely asserts that Israel might kill anybody and there could be no penalties.”
He emigrated to the Seattle space in 1999, when his daughter was 10 months previous, and was naturalized in 2005. Aysenur Eygi grew up within the Pacific Northwest and graduated from the College of Washington within the spring of 2024. She had deliberate to begin a PhD program after taking a niche 12 months off.
“The security of Americans shouldn’t be tied to their ideological assist to Israel,” Eygi’s father instructed CBS Information.
Samah Park Imtiaz was a detailed buddy of Eygi. Sobbing quietly, she recalled to CBS Information their final telephone name, when Eygi instructed her how a lot she missed her cat.
“I’m nonetheless in a dream state after I take into consideration what occurred,” Imtiaz mentioned. “[Biden] mentioned whoever harm People would face penalties. We’re People and we deserve solutions.”
In September, 103 members of the U.S. Congress signed a letter to Mr. Biden urging the administration to launch an impartial investigation into Eygi’s killing.
“To stroll away with out asking additional questions offers Israeli forces unacceptable license to behave with impunity,” the lawmakers mentioned.
Brad Parker, a member of the authorized workforce supporting Eygi’s household, known as the Biden administration’s response up to now “underwhelming,” and mentioned it was “regarding” that there had not been a “robust signal to pursue justice for Aysenur.”
“I feel it is the coverage at this level, which will be characterised as offering impunity to Israeli forces, even within the killing of Americans,” he instructed CBS Information. “The main focus has been on having the Israeli navy modify [its] guidelines of engagement, reasonably than justice and accountability for particular killings of Americans.”
Eygi’s husband, Ali, mentioned Israel’s shut alliance with the U.S. mustn’t make it resistant to penalties.
“Israel has a historical past of not being forthcoming with any type of investigation and, when they’re, it’s largely insufficient what they give you,” he mentioned.
His sister-in-law mentioned the Biden administration had but to handle the household’s ache, “except for condolences.”
“If the U.S. authorities doesn’t reply to instances like hers, which traditionally they haven’t, Israel has the inexperienced gentle to proceed appearing with impunity and killing different residents,” Bennett asserted.
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High-Mass Stars Are Fed By Elongated Streamers Of Gas

High-mass stars with eight or more solar masses are mysterious. Despite the fact that they’re more easily observed than their lower-mass counterparts, astrophysicists have struggled to explain how they become so massive. The problem is that while they accrete material and become more massive, they’re also shedding mass.
Stars form in clouds of predominantly hydrogen called giant molecular clouds. Thousands or even millions of stars can form in a single massive cloud. As a protostar forms, it gathers material from the cloud into a swirling accretion disk around itself. The young star accretes matter directly from this disk.
But at the same time that it’s accreting matter and growing, the young star is also getting rid of some of its mass through stellar winds and bipolar outflows called protostellar jets.
This artist’s illustration shows a young protostar inside a cloud of gas. A swirling accretion disk surrounds the star, and protostellar jets are emitted from each pole. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)
The powerful jets coming from young stars carry mass away from the stars and can also create cavities in the surrounding material. Both of these phenomenon can limit a star’s growth. Some theory shows that this should limit the mass of stars to between 20 to 40 solar masses, yet astronomers routinely observe stars much more massive than this. The list of the most massive stars contain many stars between 100 and 200 solar masses, and the single most massive star known, R136a1, is almost 300 solar masses.
This issue is one of the most active issues in astrophysics. How do massive stars become so massive? The question is made more challenging because observing high-mass stars while they’re forming is difficult. The process is hidden inside opaque clouds of gas and occurs very rapidly. Much of what astrophysicists know about high-mass stars comes from simulations and indirect evidence.
New research in Science Advances may have the answer. It’s titled “Massive extended streamers feed high-mass young stars,” and the lead author is Fernando Olguin. Olguin is from the Center for Gravitational Physics at Kyoto University.
Olguin and his colleagues used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to observe a high-mass star formation region named G336 ALMA1 about 10,100 light-years away. They found streamers feeding gas from the surrounding clouds directly onto a protostar without an accretion disk.
“Our work seems to show that these structures are being fed by streamers, which are flows of gas that bring matter from scales larger than a thousand astronomical units, essentially acting as massive gas highways,” said lead author Olguin.
The young star is being fed by one streamer, possibly by two. They’re like spiral arms that feed gas from the surrounding region into the region where the star is forming. One of the streamers is more directly connected to the central region where the star is forming. Measurements of the streamer suggest that it delivers so much gas to the still-growing star that it quenches the feedback effects that can otherwise limit the star’s mass accretion.
These figures show some of the ALMA observations of G336 ALMA1. The left panel shows the 1.3 mm continuum that reveals the movement of cold gas and dust. The blue and red lines represent the blue-shifted and red-shifted streamers respectively. The right panel shows the emission from hot methanol. It shows a clear connection between the blue-shifted streamer and the young star ALMA1. Image Credit: Olguin et al. 2025. SciAdv
Previous observations showed these streamers, but they weren’t high enough resolution to observe the central region clearly. Those observations suggested that the streamers were feeding a disk. But these newer ALMA observations show there’s no disk, or perhaps only an extremely limited one.
“We found streamers feeding what at that time was thought to be a disk, but to our surprise, there is either no disk or it is extremely small,” says Olguin.
This schematic from the research shows the different kinematic components and flow scenarios for the protostar ALMA1. Green arrows represent outflows, the blue and red represent the streamers of gas, and the red to blue arrow shows rotation. Image Credit: Olguin et al. 2025. SciAdv
If young stars can gather mass from streamers without the need for an intermediating disk, then that can explain how stars become so massive. They essentially bypass limitation to their growth.
“The case of G336 ALMA1 shows that streamers can play an important role in feeding high-mass protostars,” the researchers explain in their paper. “To continue accreting gas, the density around the source has to be high enough to quench the feedback from the young star or the momentum carried by the streamers has to be high enough to overcome the feedback in the absence of a disk.”
Researchers have detected streamers feeding stars before, but only low-mass stars. A 2022 paper found a streamer feeding into the disk surrounding a young star. “The streamer is delivering more than enough mass to sustain its protostellar accretion rate,” those researchers wrote.
But these streamers are much more massive, as is the star ALMA1.
“We estimate masses between 0.3 and 0.6 solar masses for each inner streamer,” the authors write. “These masses and the resulting infall rates are an order of magnitude or higher than those found in streamers feeding low-mass stars.”
There could still be a small accretion disk around the star, and it could be the last link in the chain of matter that feeds the star. But the disk’s mass, if it’s there, is comparable or lower than the mass of the streamers.
“It is thus the large mass of the reservoir, at large scales, and the streamers, at small scales, that have allowed the formation and continuous feeding of the young high-mass star at the center of ALMA1,” the researchers conclude.
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Delta dumped jet fuel on schoolkids, agrees to $79-million settlement

Delta Air Lines has agreed to pay $79 million for dumping 15,000 gallons of jet fuel onto a community in southeastern Los Angeles County five years ago, drenching children playing at a school, to settle a federal lawsuit by local residents.
On Jan. 20, 2020, Delta Flight 89 took off from Los Angeles International Airport en route to Shanghai with 149 passengers for what is typically a 13-hour nonstop flight.
That voyage, however, lasted only 25 minutes due to a plane malfunction, forcing the pilot to turn the aircraft around over the Santa Monica Bay and head back toward the airport.
In the lawsuit settlement, Delta said the plane lost thrust shortly after takeoff. The plane couldn’t land, however, because it was already over the maximum landing weight of 160,000 pounds. Flights landing at LAX typically approach the airport from an inland route and take off over the ocean.
En route back to the airport, the plane’s pilots dumped thousands of gallons of jet fuel over Cudahy and multiple schools.
Dozens of children, and 40 people overall, from Park Avenue Elementary School in Cudahy were hit by the fuel and treated by medical personnel.
Other schools, including Pioneer High School in Whittier, also claimed students were hit with the jet fuel.
Delta noted in court documents that it agreed to the settlement “without any admission of liability” to avoid the uncertainty and expenses of a trial and “to eliminate the distraction and other burdens this litigation has caused to Delta’s business.”
The lawsuit was filed by two Cudahy couples and homeowners, Frankie Lomas and Roxanda Yancor, and Jose and Maria Alvarado.
The settlement totals $78.8 million, which translates into $50.6 million for victims after attorneys’ fees and other court costs. The fund will be sliced into thirds, with two-thirds, or about $33.9 million, set aside for property owners, and one-third, or about $16.7 million, for residents.
At bare minimum, a property owner will receive $888.82 per claim, while a resident will receive $104.34, according to court documents.
The estimated numbers of those who were affected are listed in the lawsuit as 160,000 residents and 38,000 properties.
Calls to the plaintiff’s attorney and Delta Air Lines were not immediately returned.
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