Underwater probes could help find MH370
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Probe of the ocean floor will move from ping locators to sonar
- The Bluefin-21 is equipped with side-scan sonar
- And once the debris field is found, investigators would turn to remotely operated vehicles
- An intact plane could complicate the search effort, CNN analyst says
Among them will be the
Bluefin-21,
a probe equipped with side-scan sonar -- an acoustic technology that creates pictures from the reflections of sound rather than light.
a probe equipped with side-scan sonar -- an acoustic technology that creates pictures from the reflections of sound rather than light.
"That is a piece of
equipment that does assist in locating where the wreckage may be," said
Sylvia Earle, an oceanographer from National Geographic who was chief
scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
A 'massive, massive task'
Though the discovery of
four pings believed to be from the jet's so-called black boxes -- its
flight data recorder and its cockpit voice recorder -- have helped
investigators narrow the search area, they would still face a formidable
task. "It's a lot of terrain to cover," given that the Bluefin-21 moves
at the pace of a leisurely stroll, she told CNN.
Though it moves slowly,
it creates good images -- so good that they are "almost a picture of
what's there ... but it's imaged with sound instead of with a camera."
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Once the debris field is
found, then other equipment -- such as remotely operated vehicles --
would be brought in to recover the black boxes, Earle said.
ROVs working at depths of
three miles would require power conveyed down a cable from a ship
above, she said. "There are not many pieces of equipment in the world
able to do this."
And there are only a
handful of countries that have manned submarines capable of descending
to such depths, she said, citing the United States, Russia, Japan,
France and China.
"Having the human
presence there can make a big difference," she said. It "can give you a
real edge in terms of understanding what's there."
The scarcity of
resources "shows how ill-prepared we are to operate in the deep sea,"
Earle said. "We've invested in aviation and aerospace, and we've been
neglecting the ocean."
The time to move from
listening for pings to looking for debris is fast approaching, said Alan
Diehl, a former Air Force accident investigator. "We're right on the
cusp where we need to go from passive listening to active (looking) with
the Bluefin," he told CNN.
That's because the
batteries powering the black boxes' locator devices are probably already
dead, said Mary Schiavo, former inspector general for the U.S.
Department of Transportation, who noted that more than four days had
elapsed since any pings were detected.
"I'm surprised that they lasted as long as they did," she said.
The failure of searchers
to find any debris linked to the plane has not surprised CNN Aviation
Analyst David Soucie, author of "Why Planes Crash."
The model used for
tracking the debris could be incorrect, he said, noting that that was
the case when investigators were searching for evidence of Air France
Flight 447, which plunged into the southern Atlantic Ocean in 2009,
killing all 228 people aboard.
"They spent weeks looking for debris in the wrong area," he said.
The lack of debris could also mean that the plane did not break apart on impact, but instead sank largely intact, he said.
If that was the case, it
could complicate the effort to retrieve the black boxes, since they
were stored inside the tail of the plane. Investigators would have to
dismantle the tail in order to extract them and whatever secrets they
may hold.
source: cnn
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