New way to search for MH370
The disappearance of MH370 is one of the greatest mysteries in modern aviation history. Photo: Netflix
According to the latest MH370 news from the Daily Free Press, resuming the search for MH370 will help solve a mystery that has been ignored for too long.
This news site said that, towards the search for MH370, all attention is now on Ocean Infinity - a US-based ocean robot company - which participated in the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane in 2018.
Ocean Infinity has agreed with the Malaysian government on a plan to resume the underwater search for MH370. If approved, the new search would begin in November 2024.
The Daily Free Press emphasized that this November, the whole world will be watching the new mission, if it takes place, to solve one of the biggest mysteries that has haunted the aviation industry for the past 10 years.
If successful, the new search for MH370 could bring much-needed closure to the relatives of the passengers on the ill-fated flight.
Now, a team of researchers has developed a new method to locate MH370, which involves dropping plane debris into the Indian Ocean, according to Interesting Engineering.
The project, called the "MH370 Search Initiative," was initiated with the specific goal of locating the wreckage of the Boeing 777 that went missing in March 2014.
To accomplish this goal, the project does not use sonar-equipped drones or conduct deep-sea searches like Ocean Infinity does.
Instead, the MH370 search team plans to drop debris from the Boeing 777 into the Indian Ocean and track its movements.
Jeff Wise, a science journalist and private pilot, initiated the project. He has written books about the disappearance of MH370, hosts podcasts, and has appeared in several documentaries discussing the disappearance of the Malaysia Airlines plane.
The first pieces of debris from MH370 were discovered on the shore of Saint-Denis, Reunion Island, in July 2015. In recent years, scientists have focused on studying the drift of these pieces of debris in order to trace their origin in the Indian Ocean. Previously, research teams dropped parts of the plane's wing into the sea for observation.
MH370 search expert Wise and his team believe that these experiments need to be conducted more widely. He aims to drop a sensor-equipped flaperon from a Boeing 777 into the Indian Ocean. The “MH370 Search Initiative” team will then spend 18 months analyzing the debris’ movements and tracking the growth of marine life on it to compare with MH370 debris that has washed ashore.
What happened to MH370?
The plane was scheduled to fly from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing, China. Air traffic control lost contact with the plane 60 minutes after it entered the airspace over the South China Sea. Military radar later last tracked MH370 over the Andaman Sea in the northeastern Indian Ocean.
Automatic satellite communications between the plane and the British Inmarsat telecommunications satellite later indicated that the plane had reached the southeastern Indian Ocean. This information was the basis for the Australian Air Transport Safety Bureau to determine the initial search areas.
To this day, we still don't know what caused the plane to change course and disappear.
Source: https://giadinh.suckhoedoisong.vn/tim-may-bay-mh370-mat-tich-bi-an-cach-thuc-moi-lieu-co-mang-lai-hy-vong-172241014084312742.htm
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