Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 could be solved soon. It may bring to an end what is regarded as one of the most perplexing aviation mysteries of all time. It all began on March 8, 2014, when the Malaysia Airlines passenger jet with 227 passengers and 12 crew members onboard vanished. It was a normal flight from the Malaysian city of Kuala Lumpur to the Chinese capital Beijing. The flight was commanded by senior pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah, and first officer, Fariq Hamid and everything seemed perfect for the first 40 minutes of Flight MH370. But the flight lost contact and went out of radar all of a sudden.
The search for the plane has been revived. Talking to the Royal Aeronautical Society in London in September, aerospace expert Jean-Luc Marchand and pilot Patrick Blelly called for a fresh search. They said the plane could be found with a 10-day effort. They said, «We have done our homework. We have a proposal...the area is small and considering new capabilities it will take 10 days.»
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According to the 'Daily Star', they also urged the Australian Transport Safety Authority, the Malaysian government, and exploration company Ocean Infinity to begin a new search. Marchand said, «We think, and the study that we've done has shown us, that the hijacking was probably performed by an experienced pilot.» He added that the cabin was depressurized and it was a soft control ditching to produce minimal debris.
Researchers Richard Godfrey, Dr Hannes Coetzee and Professor Simon Maskell used Weak Signal Propagation Reporter, or WSPR to track the Boeing 777's flight path for six hours after contact was lost. Now
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