The more time that passes, the wider the search area for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 becomes.
After
starting in the sea between Malaysia and Vietnam, the plane's last
confirmed location, efforts are now expanding west into the vastness of
the Indian Ocean.
"It's a completely new game now," Cmdr. William Marks of the U.S. 7th Fleet, which is helping in the search, told CNN, describing the situation. "We went from a chess board to a football field."
USS
Kidd, a destroyer from the U.S. Pacific Fleet, is being moved into the
Indian Ocean to begin searching that area at the request of the
Malaysian government, Marks said.
The broadening scale of the
search comes amid disclosures of information indicating that the missing
airplane could have flown for several hours after the last reading from
its transponder, a radio transmitter in the cockpit that communicates
with ground radar. That raises the possibility that the plane could have
ended up thousands of miles from its last confirmed contact over
Southeast Asia.
The disappearance of the jetliner and the 239
people on board nearly a week ago has turned into one of the biggest
mysteries in aviation history, befuddling industry experts and
government officials. Authorities still don't know where the plane is or
what caused it to vanish.
"I, like most of the world, really have never seen anything like this," Marks said of the scale of the search, which involves dozens of ships and planes from a range of countries. "It's pretty incredible."
On the seventh day of efforts to locate the missing Boeing 777-200, here are the latest main developments:
-- Was it hijacked?:
The plane may have been taken over or hijacked by someone with
knowledge of flying planes and was being taken toward the Andaman
Islands, according to a report by Reuters. The news agency bases its
information on military radar data -- but the article doesn't address
key facts such as which nation's military radar information they are
basing their deductions on. Also, the story is based on unidentified
sources.
The Malaysian government said Friday it can't confirm the report.
-- Another lead:
Chinese researchers say they recorded a "seafloor event" in waters
around Malaysia and Vietnam about an hour and a half after the missing
plane's last known contact. The event was recorded in a non-seismic
region situated 116 kilometers (72 miles) northeast of the plane's last
confirmed location, the University of Science and Technology of China
said.
"Judging from the time and location of the two events, the
seafloor event may have been caused by MH370 crashing into the sea,"
said a statement posted on the university's website.
-- Tracking the pings:
Malaysian authorities believe they have several "pings" from the
airliner's service data system, known as ACARS, transmitted to
satellites in the four to five hours after the last transponder signal,
suggesting the plane flew to the Indian Ocean, a senior U.S. official
told CNN.
That information combined with known radar data
and knowledge of fuel range leads officials to believe the plane may
have made as far as the Indian ocean, which is in the opposite direction
of the plane's original route, from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
-- Why Indian Ocean?:
Analysts from U.S. intelligence, the Federal Aviation Administration
and National Transportation Safety Board have been scouring satellite
feeds and, after ascertaining no other flights' transponder data
corresponded to the pings, came to the conclusion that they were likely
to have come from the missing Malaysian plane, the senior U.S. official
said.
"There is probably a significant likelihood" that the
aircraft is now on the bottom of the Indian Ocean, the official said,
citing information Malaysia has shared with the United States.
Indian
search teams are combing large areas of the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands, a remote archipelago in the northeast Indian Ocean. Two
aircraft are searching land and coastal areas of the island chain from
north to south, an Indian military spokesman said Friday, and two
coastguard ships have been diverted to search along the islands east
coast.
-- Malaysian response: In a statement
Friday, Malaysia's Ministry of Transport neither confirmed nor denied
the latest reports on the plane's possible path, saying that "the
investigation team will not publicly release information until it has
been properly verified and corroborated." The ministry said it was
continuing to "work closely with the U.S. team, whose officials have
been on the ground in Kuala Lumpur to help with the investigation since
Sunday.
U.S. experts are using satellite systems to try to
determine the possible location of the plane, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman,
director general of the Malaysian Department of Civil Aviation, said at a
news conference Friday.
On Thursday, Malaysia Airlines Chief
Executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said that Rolls-Royce, the maker of the
plane's engines, and Boeing had reported that they hadn't received any
data transmissions from the plane after 1:07 a.m. Saturday, 14 minutes
before the transponder stopped sending information. He was responding to
a Wall Street Journal report suggesting the missing plane's engines
continued to send data to the ground for hours after contact with the
transponder was lost.
The Wall Street Journal subsequently
changed its reporting to say that signals from the plane -- giving its
location, speed and altitude -- were picked up by communications
satellites for at least five hours after it disappeared. The last "ping"
came from over water, the newspaper reported, citing unidentified
people briefed on the investigation.

No comments:
Post a Comment