CBN BRASIL

Thursday, December 18, 2014

MH370: Malaysia Airlines plane search continues amid signals mystery

The Royal Malaysian Navy corvette KD Terengganu and a U.S. Navy MH-60R Sea Hawk helicopter from the US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Pinckney conduct a coordinated air and sea search for a missing Malaysian Airlines jet in the Gulf of Thailand March 12, 2014

AP is reporting that Vietnam has “downgraded but not stopped” its search effort for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane, which disappeared on Saturday morning local time just outside Vietnamese airspace. A Vietnamese spokesman, Lt. Col. Nguyen Ngoc Son, said the status of the hunt has switched from “emergency to regular”.
It goes on to say that Vietnam has been asked by Malaysian authorities to send planes and ships to the Straits of Malacca, suggesting the focus of the search is shifting west.
Updated 
 This section of the live blog was removed on 14 March 2014 because it included content that was inconsistent with Guardian editorial guidelines.
Updated 
This doesn’t appear to have been widely reported, but NBC reports US satellites did not pick up any sign of an explosion around the time the plane lost contact. The U.S. Space Based Infrared (SBIR) satellite system can detect heat signatures in real time, and an anonymous US intelligence official told NBC news the SBIR didn’t detect anything “to corroborate or indicate a midair explosion.”

Recent pictures

This handout photo taken on March 13, 2014 by the Royal Malaysian Navy and received on March 14, 2014 shows the Royal Malaysian Navy's offshore patrol vessel KD Selangor lowering a boat for observing objects more closely during a search and rescue operation for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane in the Straits of Malacca off the Malaysian coast.
 The Royal Malaysian Navy's offshore patrol vessel KD Selangor lowering a boat for observing objects more closely during a search and rescue operation for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane in the Straits of Malacca off the Malaysian coast. Photograph: ROYAL MALAYSIAN NAVY/AFP/Getty Images
A friend of a passenger onboard the missing flight MH370 cries as he waits for news from Malaysia Airlines at the lobby of a hotel in Beijing, March 14, 2014.
 A friend of a passenger onboard the missing flight MH370 cries as he waits for news from Malaysia Airlines at the lobby of a hotel in Beijing, March 14, 2014. Photograph: KIM KYUNG-HOON/REUTERS
Vietnamese fishermen who have joined in the search of the missing Malaysian flight MH370 rest at a habour in Phu Quoc island on March 13, 2014.
 Vietnamese fishermen who have joined in the search of the missing Malaysian flight MH370 rest at a habour in Phu Quoc island on March 13, 2014. Photograph: Lui Siu Wai/Xinhua Press/Corbis
My Guardian colleague Warren Murray has filed the following explainer on transponders. A lot of the focus today is on various tracking technology on board the aircraft after reports in the last 24 hours that the plane was sending data for hours after it lost contact, and more recently that two communication systems shut down 14 minutes apart - suggesting possible deliberate action.
This from Warren:
There seem to be some potentially flawed assumptions being made about the plane’s transponder, and the idea that if it was operating normally, it should have been bleeping out the 777’s location right until the moment it crashed, unless the pilot had switched it off.
In fact that’s not the case - it seems very likely the transponder would have been set up so that it would only send out a signal if prompted by a receiving station on the ground.
Planes are tracked by two kinds of radar - primary and secondary. The primary kind is what most of us understand: a beam of radio waves being sent out from a ground station, bouncing off anything in its path, with that reflection picked up by the ground station and used to work out the location of the plane or other target. It is a passive system that doesn’t require the plane to do anything to be “seen”.
But transponders work on secondary radar, which involves the ground station not just spraying out radio waves but instead sending out a sort of query or “interrogation” asking for a reply from transponders.
If the Malaysia Airlines 777 was not being interrogated by a secondary radar system – for example, it was out of range – the transponder would just sit there, doing nothing. It wouldn’t have to be switched off to stop transmitting – in fact it is designed generally only to transmit when it receives an “are you there” from a secondary radar system. It is not a simple beacon that transmits all the time regardless of whether anyone is listening.
Also, a plane may need to be assigned a “squawk” code by air traffic controllers, which the pilot is given over the radio and has to dial into the transponder, so that the local secondary radar system knows what “address”, if you like, to use when identifying the plane and its transponder.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Biden announces $9 billion in student loan relief President Biden on Wednesday announced another $9 billion in student debt relief. About 12...