Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 departed from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on 8 March 2014, but It disappeared from radar screens 38 minutes after take-off with 227 passengers and 12 crew members on board. Researchers from many countries searched for the plane in the southern Indian Ocean at great expense, but its wreckage has not yet been found. The latest possible solution to the mystery is a Navy member filling in the remains that washed ashore Shells The analysis was considered.
According to Royal Aeronautical Society expert Jean-Luc Marchand and his fellow pilot Patrick Blilly, based on the new information, the scope of the MH370 crash site can be narrowed, and the new, smaller target area can be combed in 10 days. .
We've done our homework and have a suggestion… It's a small area that would take 10 days to explore with our current capabilities
Marchand said.
That will be fast. Until we find the wreckage of MH370, no one will know what happened. But here we are talking about a very likely flight path
– added the expert who will use Ocean Infinity's new marine research robots in the new research. Ocean Infinity itself is so keen to try out the new technology that it previously offered a reward just if the plane was found.
According to Marchand, the plane was hijacked by an experienced pilot who depressurized the cockpit and made a soft landing to reduce the amount of debris thrown into the sea.
No one saw the plane except the army. The man knew that a rescue operation had begun and that they would be searching along the flight path.
pointed out.
According to experts, the plane deviated from its course and deviated from its course somewhere on the border of Thai, Indonesian, Indian and Malaysian airspace. Regarding the latter, Marchand expressed his opinion that the aircraft also performed this maneuver consciously, at the edge of the radar range, in no man's land.