09 April 2014

Found within ‘a matter of days’


Charlie Campbell has a Time article about the still-missing (but hopefully not for long) jet:
Authorities attempting to locate Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, believed to have crashed in the Indian Ocean last month, say new pings may originate from the plane's black box, which officials worry is about to run out of battery life.
Two more underwater signals that may have emanated from the black boxes of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were heard Tuesday, prompting the Australian official in charge of the search to say the missing Boeing 777 may be discovered within 'a matter of days'. "I’m now optimistic that we will find the aircraft, or what is left of the aircraft, in the not-too-distant future,” Angus Houston, the head of a joint agency coordinating the search, said at a news conference in Perth, Australia. “Hopefully in a matter of days, we will be able to find something on the bottom that might confirm that this is the last resting place of MH370.”
The Australian vessel Ocean Shield originally picked up two signals over the weekend, and the new transmissions were now considerably weaker, said Houston, indicating that the beacons’ batteries may now be close to exhausted. Analysis showed “the transmission was not of natural origin and was likely sourced from specific electronic equipment”.
MH370 vanished soon after departing Kuala Lumpur for Bejing early on 8 March 2014, and investigators now believe the eleven-year-old aircraft crashed in the southern Indian Ocean some thousand miles northwest of Perth. All 239 passengers and crew are presumed dead.
Despite the growing body of evidence, Houston insists that no crash site can be confirmed before wreckage has been positively identified. The beacons’ batteries have already surpassed their thirty-day expected life, heaping pressure on search efforts.
Investigators currently have the pings pinned down to a twelve mile radius, but hope to narrow this further through trawling, as it generally takes six times as long to search with the Bluefin autonomous underwater vehicle than it does with towed pinger locators. If the noises can be narrowed down, an unmanned submarine may soon be deployed to locate wreckage from the missing Boeing 777.
Some eleven military aircraft (photo above is of RAAF P3 Orion captain Flight Lieutenant Benn Carroll, speaking to reporters at RAAF Base Pearce in Perth, Australia after returning from a search mission), four civil aircraft, and fourteen ships assisted in the search for debris across twenty-nine thousand square miles— an expanse slightly smaller than South Carolina— located about thirteen hundred miles northwest of Perth.
Rico says they gotta get this done...

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