Our prediction that the more massive DAMA/LIBRA detector would detect a
smaller number of events per unit of mass and time than the DAMA/NaI system has
got confirmation. This is easy to understand, because DM objects are by far not
the WIMPs of the Galactic halo that interact only weakly with matter but are
apparently instead electrically charged Planckian objects, i.e., daemons which
fall from Earth-crossing orbits with V = 30-50 km/s and undergo multiple
interaction with condensed matter already in its outer layers, on a path of a
few tens of cm. Therefore, one should use not compact massive detectors but
rather systems with a large surface area, as we did to detect daemons with thin
ZnS(Ag) scintillators. There are grounds to believe that correct use of the
single-hit criterion in LIBRA should reveal DM particles with V = 30-50 km/s,
and subsequently, with V = 10-15 km/s as well.Comment: 8 page