Monday, November 29, 2021

Budapest

I love BP! Yesterday, Sunday, I took the train up from Kaposvár for doctor's appointments and to check out the Christmas markets…after a bite to eat, I'll take a walk over to Vörösmarty Square, where the largest of the Christmas markets are held…from reports online, it is a shell of its normal self, which is to be expected when just next door, so to speak, Austria shut down all their markets…there's also a market in the square in front of the Basilica, called an Advent market, although I do not know the difference.

Today, Monday, was damp & cold with a blustery breeze that made it feel colder than the hi-40's temp projected…most pedestrians were going about their busy, business day well bundled against the wind…the Airbnb I'm renting is in the 9th District, Ferencvaros or Frank Town…I left the apartment an hour ahead of my appointments, so started walking, knowing that I could jump on any tram or bus, should the time grow short…this is because the first thing I did when arriving at Keleti Station was to buy a 72-hour transit pass…I may not use it all that much, but it's good to know I can step on any form of transit, on both sides of the Danube, without the hassle of a single ticket and verifying it…it turned out that I had plenty of time and arrived at the medical center with 15 minutes to spare.

Exaggerating I may be, but it sure seemed to me that I could hear English being spoken in every block on my walk…not like the small, rural Kaposvár…mostly, I heard English with a British accent, although I did hear a lilting Irish brogue, for sure…not to be missed…one of my projects that I've been planning since I arrived here in Hungary, is to visit the British Isles…with an emphasis on the Emerald Isle…maybe next Spring.

To all my peeps in the States: now that Turkeyday is past, I can wish you a "Merry Xmas."

D as in David

I love these graphics that appear to be old. Even if the grammar is ‘off.’ This graphic reminds me of a box hanging at the entrance to Andrea’s house here: it is printed with the words, “Keys & Mails.” I used this as a lesson, mentioning to Alex & Cam that the plural of mail is mail, not mails. “You’ve got mail!” That you would say of a single piece of mail, “A letter.” Right? You could say, “He mails the letter.” But that is an action, not a gross of letters. And so it goes.


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Friday, November 26, 2021

Midnight, and one a.m. & two…

The column, below, from Garrison Keillor, that's how I felt last night…I should have gotten out of bed and read for a while…the last numbers I remember seeing were '4:28 a.m.,' and the next were '9:43 a.m.'…a good 5 hours? But it was dark and cold and damp at 10 a.m. this morning, winter having arrived, for sure…I had a birthmark removed on Tuesday; it went well, 15 minutes in the dermatologist's office…still hurts, but not as much…it will be 2-3 weeks before the histology tests are back, see that it's benign…I'll be traveling to Budapest on Sunday, for doctor's visits and the Christmas markets…even with the new wave of Covid cases, the markets will be open…you need a vaccine card, which I have, and wear a mask to enter the plaza of the main market on Vörösmarty tér Square…also, a visit to IKEA is in order…back by Wednesday…more later.

Our Universe Is Finely Tuned For Life, And There's an Explanation For Why That Is So

Our Universe Is Finely Tuned For Life, And There's an Explanation For Why That Is So

Our Universe Is Finely Tuned For Life, And There's an Explanation For Why That Is So

Physically speaking, our Universe seems uncannily perfect. It stands to reason that if it wasn't, life as we know it – and planets, atoms, everything else really – wouldn't exist.

Now, three physicists from the US, France, and Korea have put forward a new explanation for why life, the Universe, and everything in it has had such a prime opportunity to exist at all.

For some reason, the amount of energy – or more precisely, the mass it equates – and the Universe's accelerating expansion are so neatly balanced, there's been ample opportunity for a few interesting things to unfold over the past 13 billion years or so.

A few magnitudes either way, and the overwhelming gravity would have glued the expansion of spacetime together better than a mouthful of taffy... or been so weak, the rapidly expanding Universe would have left little of interest in its wake.   

Such an apparent near-perfect balance might be a consequence of something called fine-tuning, a process in physics where the features of a system necessarily match or cancel out with such precision. If it didn't, the system just wouldn't look the way it does.

For example, our Universe happens to be neutrally charged. For some reason,  there happens to be a near-identical number of protons to cancel out each electron's charge; add a few more electrons and it would be negative, forcing clumps of matter to push itself apart. 

On the other hand, it could be a consequence of what's referred to as 'naturalness'. The Moon's near-perfect occlusion of the Sun during a solar eclipse, for example, isn't ordained by hard laws of astronomy. The size of the Moon, the Sun, and our perspective of both don't need any further explanations to make sense.

Physicists generally don't like appealing to vague coincidences when they observe the Universe. If two features of a system seem incredibly well matched, there's a strong desire to dig through the rulebook for a deeper explanation.

For electrons and protons, the solution could come with explanations of why there's an imbalance of matter over antimatter.

In the case of the Universe's incredible reflection of energy and expansion, there's no shortage of clever and creative ideas to chew on. Most tend to fall into two categories, however.

One centers on something called the anthropic principle, which says only a universe capable of generating thinking brains like ours can ask philosophical questions such as 'why am I here?'

This might imply there are other universes, though. Maybe an infinite number, most either collapsing the moment they're born or exploding in puffs of endless boredom. Ours just happens to be one of the good ones! Although fun to think about, without any way of establishing the existence of multiverses it isn't a proposition that could bear scientific fruit.

As for the second category, there is the possibility that we're missing some crucial piece of the physics puzzle, such as new fields or symmetries that could fail under specific conditions.

The fact that the resting mass of the Higgs boson – the particle representing a field that gives many fundamental particles their mass – turned out to be unexpectedly light might suggest there's a gap in our understanding of forces and particles.

It itself is the result of another fine-tuning conundrum, being the result of strangely-exact cancellations of other physics. For example, there seems to be some sort of mysterious fine-tuning between the mass of a Higgs boson and the cosmological constant – the density of energy in the vacuum of space.

This latest suggestion mashes together the idea of unknown physics behind the Higgs boson's shockingly itty-bitty mass with a kind of quantum multiverse effect, one that this time could feasibly be tested.

Their model puts the Higgs particle at the center of the fine-tuning explanation. By coupling the boson with other particles in such a way that its low mass would effectively 'trigger' events in physics we observe, it provides a link between forces and mass.

From there, the authors show how weakly interacting variables in a field might affect different kinds of empty space, specifically patches of nothingness with varying degrees of expansion. This potentially demonstrates the link between Higgs bosons and the cosmological constant.

It's a multiverse in a way, given the triggers occurring in different patches of infinite expanding space could plausibly give rise to a seemingly well balanced Universe like ours.

Their math suggests these triggers would be limited to a few possibilities, and even has room for explanations of dark matter. Better still, it also predicts the existence of multiple Higgs particles of varying masses, all smaller than the one we've already observed. That gives the hypothesis something that can be tested, at least.

Until then, it'll remain one of many neat ideas that could one day explain the eerily well-matched tug-of-war that has permitted a complex cosmos to unfold. A place we've come to love as our Universe.

This research was published in Physical Review D.

Fwd: Where I was last night and what I saw

Thursday, November 25, 2021

I Don’t Think I’ll Ever Get Over You

I drink good coffee every morning
It comes from a place that's far away
And when I'm done I feel like talking
Without you here there is less to say
Don't want you thinking I'm unhappy
What is closer to the truth
Is that if I lived till I was a hundred and two
I just don't think I'll ever get over you
I'm no longer moved to drink strong whiskey
I shook the hand of time and I knew
that if I lived till I could no longer climb my stairs
I just don't think I'll ever get over you
Your face it dances and it haunts me
your laughter is still ringing in my ears
I still find pieces of your presence here
even after all these years
I don't want you thinking that i don't get asked to dinner
cause I'm here to say that I sometimes do
and even though I may seem to feel a touch of love
I just don't think I'll ever get over you
if I live till I was a hundred and two
I just don't think I'll ever get over you

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Happy Thanksgiving!

Monterey Canyon

The headline was dramatic: 'Scientists had an Indiana Jones mixed with Jurassic Park moment.' This was the result of the search for new deep-sea species off the coast of Monterey, CA. What they found, instead, was a mammoth tusk 3,000 feet beneath the ocean's surface. 'An unlikely find,' was how one research scientist put it. Preliminary estimates suggest that the mammoth may have died during the Lower Paleolithic Era, over 200,000 years ago, a poorly understood period of Earth's history. The accidental discovery suggests that the ocean floor could be covered in paleontological treasures that will add to our knowledge of the deep past.

This news story brought back memories for me, especially the part about Monterey, California. While living in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1970's, a friend & I decided to take scuba diving lessons. Our 'check-out' dives, which were necessary to be certified, took place in Monterey Bay, not far from where the mammoth tusk was discovered. But our certification dives were in kelp forests 60 feet down, nowhere near the 3,000 feet these scientist descended, in a sealed, underwater vessel, no doubt. Humans can't handle diving over 100 feet deep for long.

But when I say, not far, that's exactly the case. As our group was swimming out of the kelp forest, which was absolutely gorgeous and overwhelming, our instructor had us face him and then proceeded to point down. I can only speak for myself, but when I did look down, it took my breath away; no, truthfully, it scared the hell out of me. We were floating 60 feet above a totally black void. Inky-black, no light; like, never-getting-back-black.

After a minute of calming down, adjusting my breathing, and looking around, it was possible to see that 40 feet or so below us, there was a ledge where the seabed gave way to nothingness. I was to find out later, that this was the edge of the Monterey Canyon, and that it falls off more than a mile, straight down. I suppose it was the final test, that if you didn't panic and immediately swim to the surface, you were certified an open-water diver, quite an achievement.

If you google, Monterey Canyon, you'll see what I'm talkin' bout here: the lip of the canyon comes right to the beach at Moss Landing, CA. Here is a link to a video giving a computer-generated view of the canyon. And I was able to cut & paste an arial view of the canyon, below that. [You can see where the very edge of the canyon touches the coastline; that's Moss Landing.]

https://www.mbari.org/science/seafloor-processes/geological-changes/mapping-sections/


Click or tap on image for larger view

Monday, November 22, 2021

Garrison Keillor

When asked what he attributes the lack of obscenities in his work, GK said this (it includes one hell of a 'run-on' sentence, but I give him a pass, as he's making a point):

"My parents, of course. "Goodness gracious" was as close as my mother came to profanity. Late in life, I think she said, "Oh man." Now our daily life is studded with profanity and obscenity and the result is desensitization and immunity, it's no more shocking than dog barks, whereas the words "Goodness gracious" still has (for me) a bite to it, I can feel my mother's dismay and disbelief, which now I feel, seeing the forces of individual narcissism take arms against the idea of social responsibility and argue that the state has no right to tell you to get vaccinated or wear a mask or to drive at a safe speed or send your kids to school — those who hope to make a world in which children can be sent off to the factories to work a 16-hour day for 50 cents an hour and forget about measles shots or the purity of food and drugs. But you didn't ask me about that so forget that I said it."

Christmas is Coming!

Kaposvár Monday Nov 22 Hi: 7°C/45°F Lo: 2°C/35°F Rain


I slipped out after lunch, to get ahead of the rain expected later in the afternoon, although I will say I'm surprised that it isn't snow in the forecast, since the air temperature is in the 30's/low 40's. Isn't it supposed to snow when the temp is in the 30's? (What do I know.)


My apartment is on Main Street, but on the residential side; the other half is a pedestrian mall. So I took a left leaving the complex I live, heading for that car-free zone. Kaposvár is hilly and there is a slight incline down to this end of the mall, not much of an incline, but when I reach it, I'm looking over the heads of the walkers coming toward me. I can see down to the city center square and the lovely Christmas tree being erected, in anticipation of the market opening on the 29th of November. There are a lot of people out & about. I quickly notice that most are teenagers, no doubt leaving school for the day. But it tickles me no end, when I see the number of locals who love their town and enjoy walking around; there are quite a few groups stopped to visit amongst themselves. 


The town Christmas tree is fabulous. Regrettably, I neglected to take a photo  (I'll do that tomorrow, it's too late tonight). At the moment, the tree is surrounded by scaffolding, with civil workers scrambling to put up all of the holiday decorations. There are wooden huts being assembled by another group of city employees, which will be rented out to local merchants, to sell their holiday crafts. And mulled wine, draft beer & Palinka, the traditional liquour of Hungary. [I don't remember ever seeing any locals selling coffee drinks, just hot, mulled wine. Hard liquor may not be allowed, but I need to look into that. It might be a fun way to spend a few weeks of the winter doldrums by manning a booth selling Irish coffee, me speaking Hungarian with an Irish brogue(!). Who wants to join me, aye?]


Alexandra works part-time at a coffee shop off of the main square. Cameron & I had breakfast there yesterday, Sunday, but unfortunately, Alex could not join us; she is not feeling well, suffering from a sore throat. (She has decided against working full-time, so she can concentrate on her studies to become a personal trainer. Knowing how smart and determined she is, she'll be a wonderful fitness coach. Just you wait & see!) Cameron was in town for the weekend, but had to leave for Graz by 3 in the afternoon, as Austria was going into lockdown at 9pm Sunday night and Cam was worried about being detained if he arrived late. Fortunately, he reported, this morning, that the drive was speedy and uneventful. I had thought to join him, but we weren't sure the authorities would allow an American entry, what with the new restrictions in place for the next month, in an effort to curtail the Covid surge overwhelming Austria.


That's all I've got. More later.

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Price of Petrol

Last Friday, I traveled to Budapest with Alexandra and we noticed that the price of petrol was 545 forint. That makes the cost of an equivalent gallon of gasoline (4 liters) at $7.00 USD.
In an effort to help the average Joe, the government has capped the price of petrol at 480 forint.
The American Automobile Association posts the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline in the U.S. at $3.40. Enjoy.

1 liter = 545 forint = $1.75 USD
4 liters = 2180 forint = $7.00

Friday, November 19, 2021

The Writer’s Almanac

The following post, below, is from Garrison Keillor's daily email newsletter, The Writer's Almanac. It is one of the best emails I get, and I look forward to it every morning. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in writing, history and culture.

The email this morning contained the text to the Gettysburg Address; as everyone knows, it was written by Abraham Lincoln. Personally, every time I read it, I find myself getting emotional, it is that great. A masterpiece of oratory. I wish I could say, we, as a nation, deserve it, but I'm not so sure that we do.

The Gettysburg Address

On this date in 1863Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address at the dedication of the Soldiers' National Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. It was four and a half months after the devastating battle, and it was a foggy, cold morning. Lincoln arrived about 10 a.m. Around noon, the sun came out as the crowds gathered on a hill overlooking the battlefield. A military band played, a local preacher offered a long prayer, and the headlining orator, Edward Everett, spoke for more than two hours. Everett described the Battle of Gettysburg in great detail, and he brought the audience to tears more than once. When Everett finished, Lincoln spoke.

Now considered one of the greatest speeches in American history, the Gettysburg Address ran for just over two minutes, fewer than 300 words, and only 10 sentences. It was so brief, in fact, that many of the 15,000 people that attended the ceremony didn't even realize that the president had spoken, because a photographer setting up his camera had momentarily distracted them. The next day, Everett told Lincoln, "I wish that I could flatter myself that I had come as near to the central idea of the occasion in two hours as you did in two minutes."

There are several versions of the speech, and five different manuscript copies; they're all slightly different, so there's some argument about which is the "authentic" version. Lincoln gave copies to both of his private secretaries, and the other three versions were re-written by the president some time after he made the speech. The Bliss Copy, named for Colonel Alexander Bliss, is the only copy that was signed and dated by Lincoln, and it's generally accepted as the official version for that reason. The Bliss text, our poem today, is inscribed on the Lincoln Memorial:


Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate — we can not consecrate — we can not hallow — this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us — that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion — that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.


Thursday, November 18, 2021

Simply Lit


by Malena Morling

Often toward evening,
after another day, after
another year of days,
in the half dark on the way home
I stop at the food store
and waiting in line I begin
to wonder about people—I wonder
if they also wonder about how
strange it is that we
are here on the earth.
And how in order to live
we all must sleep.
And how we have beds for this
(unless we are without)
and entire rooms where we go
at the end of the day to collapse.
And I think how even the most
lively people are desolate
when they are alone
because they too must sleep
and sooner or later die.
We are always looking to acquire
more food for more great meals.
We have to have great meals.
Isn't it enough to be a person buying
a carton of milk? A simple
package of butter and a loaf
of whole wheat bread?
Isn't it enough to stand here
while the sweet middle-aged cashier
rings up the purchases?
I look outside,
but I can't see much out there
because now it is dark except
for a single vermilion neon sign
floating above the gas station
like a miniature temple simply lit
against the night.

Malena Mörling, "Simply Lit" from Astoria: Poems. © 2006

The Young Hungarians Who Got Vaccinated With Sputnik And Sinopharm And Now Wish They Hadn't

The Young Hungarians Who Got Vaccinated With Sputnik And Sinopharm And Now Wish They Hadn't

The Young Hungarians Who Got Vaccinated With Sputnik And Sinopharm And Now Wish They Hadn't

A Hungarian medic administers the Russian Sputnik V vaccine to a young woman at a hospital in Nyiregyhaza.

BUDAPEST -- At the Ferenc Liszt International Airport, people wait in long lines to check in for their early morning flights. For Nora, a 22-year-old Hungarian university student, it's a big day.

Today is the first day she can travel without quarantine to many Europeans destinations, despite getting vaccinated against the coronavirus in the spring of 2021. Her earlier travel plans had been thwarted by the vaccine she had received: two doses of the Chinese-produced Sinopharm.

Nora is just one of thousands of Hungarians who were vaccinated early, often with Sinopharm or Russia's Sputnik V, but have since regretted their choice and have scrambled to get an EU-approved vaccine so they can travel.

Nora solved her problem in October, when she was able to walk into a Hungarian clinic to receive a single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

So far, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which is responsible for the evaluation and supervision of medicinal products within the EU, has approved only four vaccines: Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Johnson & Johnson. Citizens and residents of the EU who received those vaccines are mostly exempt from testing or quarantine when travelling to other EU countries.

While Sinopharm does not have EMA approval, it has been granted emergency use by the World Health Organization (WHO), meaning a handful of European countries, including Austria and Spain, will accept it. Sputnik has neither EMA nor WHO approval, which means that in the EU, for example, only Hungary, Slovakia, Cyprus, and Greece, will accept it as proof of immunization.

A nurse prepares a dose of the Sinopharm vaccine at an inoculation center in Budapest. (file photo)

A nurse prepares a dose of the Sinopharm vaccine at an inoculation center in Budapest. (file photo)

Another Hungarian, Daniel, 23, was in a similar situation. Now working in Germany, he received two doses of Sinopharm in Hungary in April, he told RFE/RL over the phone. Like other interviewees quoted in this article about their vaccination choices, he preferred to only give his first name for reasons of medical privacy.

"Back then, I accepted the Chinese vaccine so I could see my grandmother," he said. But after receiving Sinopharm, he could not travel back to Ireland where he attended university without a coronavirus test and going into quarantine. So he decided to get a third vaccine, a single-shot Johnson & Johnson, in Austria, where he was also registered for vaccination. "They just asked me if I had received any vaccines in the last four months and I told them no. Which was true," he said.

'Vaccine Tours'

Even Russians who have received Sputnik are travelling abroad to receive Western-approved vaccines. In recent weeks, hundreds of Russians have flocked to Serbia to get Pfizer shots, taking advantage of organized "vaccine tours" put on by companies in the capital, Belgrade.

At the start of 2021, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's vaccination strategy seemed bold and perhaps even forward-thinking, carried out with the cavalier populism that often defines his politics. Rather than waiting for EMA-approved vaccines, Hungary was the first EU country to buy Sputnik and Sinopharm, putting the country at the front of the vaccination pack.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban gets inoculated with the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine in February.

Bypassing the European Commission, Hungary has since stockpiled more than 5 million doses of the Chinese vaccine and 2 million doses of the Russian and also entered talks with Russia about launching its own Sputnik production operation.

On April 26, the Hungarian authorities said that every Hungarian over the age of 18 could register for an appointment to get Sinopharm. By comparison, at the same time in the United Kingdom -- another vaccine early-starter when compared to their European neighbors -- only people over the age of 45 were able to register for their first dose.

Many young Hungarians heeded the call, eager to get a pass back to their social lives of pubs, nightclubs, and communal sports. They were less wary of the Russian and Chinese vaccines than their older compatriots, many of whom were skeptical about medical products coming from communist or former communist countries.

SEE ALSO: Hungary Becomes First EU State To Use Russian Vaccine

As of November 11, 60.6 percent of Hungary's total population had received at least one vaccine dose, and 58.5 percent of the total population had received two, according to data from the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control. More than 2 million of these shots were Chinese (17 percent) and 1.8 million were Russian (14 percent).

At 58.5 percent, the amount of Hungary's total population that is fully vaccinated is approximately 6 percent lower than the EU average, but a good deal higher than in neighboring countries, such as Romania (33.9 percent) or Slovakia (44.8 percent).

For those who want to travel, though, and who have received the Sputnik vaccine, a simple solution doesn't seem to be on the horizon. Despite starting a rolling review in March, the EMA will reportedly not make a decision on the approval of Sputnik before the first quarter of 2022. According to media reports, the approval process has been hindered by Russia repeatedly postponing inspections.

The situation is looking a little rosier for those vaccinated with Sinopharm. While the EMA has never started a review for the Chinese vaccine, the WHO's emergency approval for Sinopharm has opened up more options, including travel to the United States from November 8 and to the United Kingdom from November 22.

Increasingly Controversial Practice

For people vaccinated with Sputnik who want to travel, the best option available is trying to get a third shot with a different vaccine -- a practice that has become increasingly controversial in Hungary.

Oliver, a 26-year-old resident of Budapest, wanted to get a Johnson & Johnson shot after two doses of Sputnik but his doctor refused.

According to Hungary's Health Ministry, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine should not be given to patients who have already received shots of Sputnik or AstraZeneca. The ministry's recommendation states that the third shot could weaken preexisting protections, as Johnson & Johnson, Sputnik, and AstraZeneca are all vector vaccines, which inject a modified version of a virus into a person's body.

Some doctors are resolute about following the Health Ministry's advice. "Those who received Sputnik jabs will have to wait until the European Union and Russia settle the uncertainty around vaccination," Daniel Eorsi, a practicing doctor in Budapest, said.

"In line with the legislation in effect, the patient has the right to choose which vaccine they would like to get, as long as it does not contradict professional recommendations," Eorsi said. And the Health Ministry does not recommend mixing vaccinations, he added.

Hungary's Health Ministry did not respond to RFE/RL's questions for this article.

Hungarians vaccinated with Sputnik V or Sinopharm still cannot go to many European countries without being quarantined. (file photo)

But Oliver desperately wanted to go to Malta. So, despite the Health Ministry's guidelines, he found another vaccination center where he could receive a Johnson & Johnson shot. "Before inoculating me, the doctor informed me that the protection will become weaker," he said.

Even senior government officials are skirting the rules. HVG, a leading Hungarian economic and political weekly, reported that Gergely Gulyas, the head of the prime minister's office, consulted multiple doctors before deciding to get a Johnson & Johnson vaccine after receiving two doses of Sputnik.

The different application of medical practice on the ground in Hungary illustrates the much larger, global debate about the efficacy of third shots from different vaccine providers.

"In the absence of good quality clinical trials, the Hungarian recommendation for mixing [different] vaccinations cannot be verified or disproved," Szabolcs Dobson, an expert in the approval of medicines, told RFE/RL. He added that there is now some evidence that vector vaccines can be combined.

While some studies have shown that mixing vaccines can be effective and even, in the case of vector vaccines, boost a person's immune response, experts have said that there is still not enough conclusive data.

"I think I gained a lot of time," Daniel said, a few months after receiving his Johnson & Johnson vaccine in Austria. "I felt freer because I knew I was protected and my family knew I was protected. I wouldn't do it any other way."