Thursday, April 10, 2014

Malaysian jet: new signal detected, hunt area narrowed down

Malaysian jet: new signal detected, hunt area narrowed down

A fresh underwater acoustic signal
possibly from the crashed Malaysian jet was today detected,
fuelling hopes of an early breakthrough in the arduous hunt
for the plane as searchers zeroed in on a smaller area in the
Indian Ocean.
On the 33rd day of the search for the Malaysia Airlines
Flight MH370 - that vanished mysteriously on March 8 with 239
people on board - an Australian naval aircraft picked up an
underwater signal in the same area where searchers in ships
previously detected sounds consistent with a plane's black
box.
While conducting an acoustic search this afternoon, an
RAAF AP-3C Orion aircraft detected a possible signal in the
vicinity of the Australian Defence Vessel Ocean Shield, said
Angus Houston, head of the Perth-based Joint Agency
Coordination Centre (JACC) which is leading the search.
"The acoustic data will require further analysis
overnight but shows potential of being from a man-made
source," Houston said.
Finding the black box is crucial to know why the Beijing-
bound Boeing 777-200 with 239 people, including five Indians,
veered off from its route after taking off from Kuala Lumpur.
The batteries of the black box flight recorders have
a life of about 30 days, meaning they either might have been
or are on the verge of being drained out.
Stored in a plane's tail, they are designed to begin
sending off distinct, high-pitched pings or signals as soon as
they come in contact with water.
The Ocean Shield, bearing a special US Navy "towed pinger
locator", had picked up two fresh signals on Tuesday that
matched a pair of signals detected over the weekend consistent
with a plane's black box.
Today, Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA)
narrowed down drastically the search area to about 57,923 sq
km from yesterday's 75,000 sq km, the smallest yet in the
month-long hunt. The centre of the search area lies
approximately 2,280 km north west of Perth.
Up to 10 military aircraft, four civil aircraft and 13
ships were assist in today's search for the plane that
authorities believe crashed in the Indian Ocean.
The three vessels - the Ocean Shield to the north, and
the British HMS Echo and Chinese Haixun 01 to the south --
were focussing underwater.

No comments:

Post a Comment