Skip to main content

MH370: Underwater drone to aid search for missing plane

 

First submarine mission to cover 40 square kilometres in attempt to detect black box pings, as authorities reveal oil slick found in search area.
Bluefin 21 autonomous sub
The Bluefin 21 autonomous sub being loaded on board the Royal Australian Navy Vessel Ocean Shield on April 1. Photograph: AP Photo/U.S. Navy, Specialist 1st Class Peter D. Blair Photograph: MC1 Peter D. Blair/AP
Authorities will deploy an underwater drone to conduct sonar searches for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane.
The joint agency co-ordination centre chief, Angus Houston, said on Monday that no pings had been detected since last Tuesday and it was now time for the next step in the search.
He has also revealed an oil slick had been detected in the search area.
A sample has been taken and will be tested when it arrives ashore.
The Australian Defence Force vessel Ocean Shield will cease searching with its towed pinger locator and deploy the autonomous underwater vehicle Bluefin 21 as soon as possible to search the seafloor using its side-scan sonar.
Each mission will take a minimum of 24 hours to complete, including the downloading of data.
In mission number one – to commence on Monday evening – it will cover an area of 40 square kilometres.
He says the sub cannot go any deeper than 4,500 metres and it is important to be realistic about its prospects.
"It may be very difficult to find something," he said.
Air Chief Marshal Houston said it would be "a number of days" until the two litres of oil collected could be conclusively tested.
"I stress the source of the oil is yet to be determined," he said.
Houston said the four signals, believed to have originated from the aircraft's black box flight data recorders, still constituted the most promising lead.
Analysis of these signals had allowed determination of a reduced and manageable search area.
(Australian Associated Press)
               

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Cameron welcomes new 50 million pound airside investment at Edinburgh Airpoort

Source: Edinburgh Airport Prime Minister David Cameron visited Edinburgh Airport this afternoon (22 January) as it announced a new £50m airside investment programme. Work begins this week on an extensive redevelopment of the airport’s immigration and baggage reclaim facilities, a move that will triple capacity for bigger long-haul aircraft. The Prime Minister was met by Chairman, Sir John Elvidge, and CEO Gordon Dewar, who took him on a tour of the airport’s new airside construction site which will be phased over the next four years. With long-haul traffic up almost 90% in 2014, thanks to new routes with Qatar Airways, United Airlines and US Airways, and increased services from Turkish Airlines, Edinburgh Airport is embarking on this ambitious development plan which will see a second immigration hall and baggage reclaim area created and extensive construction of new aircraft stands and air bridges. In 2013, the Board of Edinburgh Airport committed to investing £150m in Sc...

U.S. Aerospace Industry generates 1.2 million jobs...nets $118.5 billion export sales

  In 2012, the U.S. aerospace industry contributed $118.5 billion in export sales to the U.S. economy.  The industry’s positive trade balance of $70.5 billion is the largest trade surplus of any manufacturing industry and came from exporting 64.3 percent of all aerospace production. Foreign firms are attracted to the U.S. aerospace market because it is the largest in the world and has a skilled and hospitable workforce, extensive distribution systems, diverse offerings, and strong support at the local and national level for policy and promotion.  According to a recent study by the U.S. Department of Commerce, aerospace exports directly and indirectly support more jobs than the export of any other commodity.  The U.S. aerospace industry directly employs about 500,000 workers in scientific and technical jobs across the nation and supports more than 700,000 jobs in related fields.  Investment in the U.S. aerospace industry is facilitated by a large pool of...

NAMA NEWS UPDATE

ARAP STEERING COMMITTEE SUBMITS REPORT ...AS CHIDOKA LAUDS NAMA FOR CREATION OF PMO _THE steering committee of the Aviation Revenue Automation Project (ARAP), inaugurated for the purpose of driving the full automation of all activities in the aviation agencies on Monday submitted its report to the Honourable Minister, Chief Osita Chidoka in Lagos. Among the recommendations of the committee was the need to drive commitment and enforcement to ensure strict compliance by all stakeholders while chief executives of all agencies should be held responsible to ensure that all revenue lines are captured under ARAP platform; also that all agencies should be encouraged to establish the Project Management Office (PMO) as is the case with NAMA. Receiving the report, Chief Chidoka stated that “the power of automation especially in the dynamic world of aviation cannot be wished away as it would facilitate the one aviation vision and also set targets and measurable timelines”. While thanking member...