Inmarsat analysis for missing flight MH370

In summary, the satellite company Inmarsat said they were able to narrow the location of the missing Malaysian Airlines flight to the Southern corridor using a mathematical analysis of the pings sent from the aircraft.
  • #1
yuiop
3,962
20
Initially the pings from Malaysian airlines flight MH370 could only determine the distance of the aircraft from the satelite based on round trip times of the pings sent at one hour intervals. Taking the fuel range and estimated speed of the aircraft into account this confined the possible location of the missing aircraft to two arcs, the so called North and South corridors. What is the physics behind the claim of the satellite company to have narrowed the location to the Southern corridor? Does anyone have any idea what mathematical analysis they used?

I can see how a Doppler analysis of the pings would indicate whether the plane was going towards the satellite or away from it, but that still gives no indication of whether the aircraft was going North or South.
 
Science news on Phys.org
  • #2
yuiop said:
What is the physics behind the claim of the satellite company to have narrowed the location to the Southern corridor? Does anyone have any idea what mathematical analysis they used?

I can see how a Doppler analysis of the pings would indicate whether the plane was going towards the satellite or away from it, but that still gives no indication of whether the aircraft was going North or South.

The probable physics behind the claim is that they had help and information from other sources that proved the northern track was impossible at the speed and altitude needed to travel that far north without detection once they refined the likely travel arc path to less than 3 percent of the possible arc using detailed signal analysis.

http://www.inmarsat.com/news/washington-post-tracks-inmarsat-role-hunt-mh370/
That said I guess it's possible to use a changing north/south satellite offset from the equator to generate some additional position information if the satellite is also moving in respect to the plane if you have precise reference data to known paths using GPS fixes from another plane(s) and their ping data.

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-26720772
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=4698717&postcount=161
 
Last edited:
  • #3
nsaspook said:
The probable physics behind the claim is that they had help and information from other sources that proved the northern track was impossible at the speed and altitude needed to travel that far north without detection once they refined the likely travel arc path to less than 3 percent of the possible arc using detailed signal analysis.

http://www.inmarsat.com/news/washington-post-tracks-inmarsat-role-hunt-mh370/
Everyone had already assumed that, assuming all the countries involved were competent and honest about their military radar data. The Inmarsat claim implies they pinpointed the aircraft independently of any radar information, using mathematical analysis of the satellite pings only (and analysis of pings from other aircraft flying at the time).

nsaspook said:
That said I guess it's possible to use a changing north/south satellite offset from the equator to generate some additional position information if the satellite is also moving in respect to the plane.
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=4698717&postcount=161

The Inmarsat satellite is supposed to be geostationary and so stay above the same point on the ground, but I guess there 'might' be some North/South wobble. I just get the impression there is something they are not telling us, like additional data from an independent military satellite not on the equator that helps triangulate the location. At the moment they are claiming to locate the aircraft using a single geostationary satellite. That is a bit like pin pointing a phone using a single mast when it normally takes 3 masts not in a straight line to triangulate the position, if there is not GPS data encoded in the signal.
 
  • #4
yuiop said:
... but I guess there 'might' be some North/South wobble...

You might be right about the North/South wobble. This map showing the last 4 ping arcs of MH370 shows the satellite is not exactly on the equator. Therefore the satellite cannot remain above the exact same spot on the ground over 7 hours and therefore the position of the satellite shown on the map is not accurate but just an average position. Given that additional information (exact varying latitude of the satellite at each ping) combined with the Doppler shift for each ping, I guess it is possible to narrow the aircraft location to the South corridor.
 
  • #5
I saw a map in some newspaper which showed a circle of possible positions around what was presumably the centre of the satellite footprint. I can only assume that would refer to the locus of locations with a given signal level (based on the satellite radiation pattern). But that would imply they could tell what the level was at the centre of the footprint. I guess there may be something clever they could do to correlate signal levels at various points on its path history, which assume a straight line (rhumb line or great circle (?) ) course. It would all be pretty speculative I think.
The North / South issue could be resolved if there were significant wobble in the orbit. But one thing bothers me and that is the beam pattern is pretty flat in the service area (sinc function) so what sort of accuracy are they dealing with?
I guess people (governments) want closure and will pick the evidence to suit them.
 
  • #6
yuiop said:
The Inmarsat satellite is supposed to be geostationary and so stay above the same point on the ground, but I guess there 'might' be some North/South wobble. I just get the impression there is something they are not telling us.

This is the position, zoom into see the N/S movement. http://www.n2yo.com/?s=23839

They do have at least 6 sets of timing data over at least 6 hours on the plane to generate a good pattern of distance and possible speeds to match a flight path if the first ping was close to known good fixes heading south before it was lost on radar but I would expect some sort of 'cover' if classified sources and methods are being used to determine a location.
 
Last edited:
  • #7
nsaspook said:
They do have at least 6 sets of timing data over at least 6 hours on the plane to generate a good pattern of distance and possible speeds to match a flight path if the first ping was close to known good fixes heading south before it was lost on radar but I would expect some sort of 'cover' if classified sources and methods are being used to determine a location.

What is meant by that expression? Does it really involve measurement of actual distance between satellite and transceiver? I wonder what use that very approximate measure would be (think of the trigonometry involved). Rescue beacons always send GPS coordinates of the casualty (from the casualty's equipment) and they are received and relayed to the rescue services via the satellite. Afaik, the Inmarsat system doesn't attempt to locate the casualty. Is there another layer to this system that I don't know about? It would be nice to know if there is.
 
  • #8
According to http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-26720772 the new features of the analysis seem to be
(1) developing a new analysis technique using the Doppler shift in the signals received, and
(2) comparing the signals with previous Malaysian Airways flight data, going back several weeks (presumably to validate the new method).
 
  • #9
sophiecentaur said:
What is meant by that expression? Does it really involve measurement of actual distance between satellite and transceiver? I wonder what use that very approximate measure would be (think of the trigonometry involved). Rescue beacons always send GPS coordinates of the casualty (from the casualty's equipment) and they are received and relayed to the rescue services via the satellite. Afaik, the Inmarsat system doesn't attempt to locate the casualty. Is there another layer to this system that I don't know about? It would be nice to know if there is.

The round trip time is measured very accurately as it's used to assign data time slots for future transmissions in the protocol for Inmarsat satellite users due to the long latency times.

Location methods.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/solutions/Enterprise/Mobility/WiFiLBS-DG/wifich2.html#wp1049497
 
Last edited:
  • #10
yuiop said:
Initially the pings from Malaysian airlines flight MH370 could only determine the distance of the aircraft from the satelite based on round trip times of the pings sent at one hour intervals. Taking the fuel range and estimated speed of the aircraft into account this confined the possible location of the missing aircraft to two arcs, the so called North and South corridors. What is the physics behind the claim of the satellite company to have narrowed the location to the Southern corridor? Does anyone have any idea what mathematical analysis they used?

I can see how a Doppler analysis of the pings would indicate whether the plane was going towards the satellite or away from it, but that still gives no indication of whether the aircraft was going North or South.

I think it involves viewing the track of the airliner in three dimensions. If I plot the velocity toward or away from the satellite as a function of time, there should be a big difference between the north track and the south track, since on the north track it was always north of the equator, while on the south track it had to cross the equator. So on the north track the z-component (away from the satellite, towards the center of the Earth) would be steadily increasing, while on the south track it would decrease, go through zero, and then begin increasing.
 
  • #11
phyzguy said:
I think it involves viewing the track of the airliner in three dimensions. If I plot the velocity toward or away from the satellite as a function of time, there should be a big difference between the north track and the south track, since on the north track it was always north of the equator, while on the south track it had to cross the equator. So on the north track the z-component (away from the satellite, towards the center of the Earth) would be steadily increasing, while on the south track it would decrease, go through zero, and then begin increasing.

The problem is it's so near the equator at the beginning so the z-component change is small until it's very far away. It might be detectable but it really looks to be in the distance noise level.
http://tmfassociates.com/blog/2014/03/17/locating-satellite-pings/

"We looked at the Doppler effect, which is the change in frequency due to the movement of a satellite in its orbit. What that then gave us was a predicted path for the northerly route and a predicted path the southerly route," explained Chris McLaughlin, senior vice president of external affairs at Inmarsat. "That’s never been done before; our engineers came up with it as a unique contribution."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolo...lite-company-Inmarsat-tracked-down-MH370.html

It's inclination is 1.7 ° , that's pretty big when compared to a fairly new 'stationary' bird like this one near the USA http://www.n2yo.com/satellite/?s=28884
rzLFT.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • #12
I think I have figured it now. The diagram below shows the principle of how the North/South motion of the satellite allows the North/South corridors to be differentiated.

attachment.php?attachmentid=67973&stc=1&d=1395708354.jpg


The diagram is not to exact scale but exaggerated to show the principle. The satellite is here assumed to be moving North over the time period. Successive pings are shown as dashed circles from red -> green -> blue -> brown. Starting from the last known military radar detection, segments of constant length are drawn going North and South that assume constant flight speed. Successive pings from the North going route have progressively less Doppler shift as they get progressively more parallel to the the ping arcs. By contrast, successive pings from the South going route have progressively more Doppler shift. This is presumably what the Inmarsat team detected.

Additionally, the South going route follows a great circle which is what you would expect from an aircraft on auto pilot going on a fixed heading. The North going route on the other hand is clearly not on a geodesic and requires continuously varying change of direction from a pilot with detailed knowledge of what would be detected by detailed analysis of the Inmarsat data.

It seems the possibly unintended 'imperfection' of the satellite's geostationary position is what made location of the aircraft possible with a single satellite. If that is the case it would seem to be good idea to increase the North/South wobble of the satellites or add some non-geostationary satellites to the Inmarsat satellite constellation. That way, satellites could track aircraft across oceans (or anywhere else) in near real time, using the current technology already installed in most commercial aircraft. The additional safety and chance of being rescued in a timely manner would surely be worth the cost. In fact, it is a bit shocking to me, that most aircraft on oceanic routes or on overland routes far from airports are "off radar" most of the time. See http://planefinder.net/

NOTE: The ping arcs are shown as perfect circles in the above diagram, which is an approximation. This is only valid for a satellite position exactly in the centre of the map. For perfect accuracy, the ping circles should become increasingly elliptical as the satellite position deviates from the centre of the map. (Some of the maps published by the press do not take this into account.)
 

Attachments

  • pings.jpg
    pings.jpg
    29 KB · Views: 724
Last edited:
  • #13
nsaspook said:
"We looked at the Doppler effect, which is the change in frequency due to the movement of a satellite in its orbit. ..."
Most of the Doppler effect is due to the movement of the aircraft (in flight) which is much greater than the movement of the satellite relative to the ground, but nevertheless, you were right that the key ingredient to differentiating the North route from the South route is the movement of the satellite itself.
 
  • #14
nsaspook said:
The round trip time is measured very accurately as it's used to assign data time slots for future transmissions in the protocol for Inmarsat satellite users due to the long latency times.

Location methods.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/solutions/Enterprise/Mobility/WiFiLBS-DG/wifich2.html#wp1049497

I looked at the link and it deals mainly with ground level location. It does suggest a timing accuracy of around 100ns, which corresponds to a distance error of around 30m. There is the added factor of the trigonometry involved with the satellite at a distance of 35000km but, surprisingly, that only seems to increase the error by a factor of about 20, for distances of 1700km from the satellite lat and long. That's less than 1km error - which surprised me - but I think it's right. The advantage this system has, over the personal rescue beacon system is the timing measurement. For EPIRBs, the casualty's position is found by a local GPS receiver and (I think) the LEO satellites are used to relay that information to the rescue services. A 1km error would not be good for finding a sinking yacht in bad conditions, even if the system used by the aircraft were used.
 
  • #15
yuiop said:
... Successive pings from the North going route have progressively less Doppler shift as they get progressively more parallel to the the ping arcs. By contrast, successive pings from the South going route have progressively more Doppler shift. This is presumably what the Inmarsat team detected...

The chart below for the "MH370 burst frequency offset analysis" seems to agree with the assumption of progressively increasing Doppler shift for the South going route in post #12.

http://en.harakahdaily.net/images/stories/mh2.png
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #16
yuiop said:
Most of the Doppler effect is due to the movement of the aircraft (in flight) which is much greater than the movement of the satellite relative to the ground, but nevertheless, you were right that the key ingredient to differentiating the North route from the South route is the movement of the satellite itself.

It wasn't a complete 'WAG' as we had to handle birds in some pretty crappy orbits 'stationary' orbits when I was a young GAPFILLER/SATCOM system hacker in the 1970s Navy. The station-keeping fuel budget for N/S alignment must have been an afterthought for some of the early FLTSATCOM designers that made our job of tracking them at sea a pain with old gear like this. :cool:

http://electronicstechnician.tpub.com/14092/css/14092_42.htm
http://www.fas.org/spp/military/program/com/fltsat.htm
 
Last edited:
  • #17
I have just noticed that the diagram I posted in #12 has the arrow indicating the satellite motion pointing the wrong way. Here is the corrected diagram with some minor refinements:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67996&stc=1&d=1395759157.jpg
 

Attachments

  • pings2.jpg
    pings2.jpg
    32.4 KB · Views: 640
  • #18
sophiecentaur said:
I looked at the link and it deals mainly with ground level location. It does suggest a timing accuracy of around 100ns, which corresponds to a distance error of around 30m. There is the added factor of the trigonometry involved with the satellite at a distance of 35000km but, surprisingly, that only seems to increase the error by a factor of about 20, for distances of 1700km from the satellite lat and long. That's less than 1km error - which surprised me - but I think it's right.

These guys seem to be using a similar technique to locate 'interference' using single satellite technology at <100 miles but that's with a stationary target.
http://www.satellitetoday.com/publi...-to-solve-interference-geolocation-obstacles/

Chu: The development of single-satellite involved using math and a lot of trial and error. Our engineers simulated satellite interference using the dishes on the roof of our own facility. At first, we were able to achieve single-satellite accuracy within 100 miles, which was not within our own standard of performance. Eventually, we were able to get it down to the 40- to 60-mile range, which is down to an accuracy range that is acceptable to us for a product and quite remarkable for using only a single satellite.
 
  • #19
In post #17 I assumed the satellite was going South as the was the best fit to the information I had available. This diagram captured from http://live.wsj.com/video/flight-370-how-pings-revealed-the-flight-path/991D6CB0-852F-4D44-9B44-6107093815EC.html#!991D6CB0-852F-4D44-9B44-6107093815EC confirms that was in fact the case.

attachment.php?attachmentid=68015&stc=1&d=1395832520.jpg


The diagram shows the satellite started heading South back towards the Equator at around 03:30 AM not long after Malaysian Airways flight MH370 also started heading South into the Indian Ocean. The data for the diagram comes from a much more detailed account given by http://www.duncansteel.com/

03:30 hrs (19:30 Hrs UTC) is also when the chart in post #15 for the Doppler shift of MH370 changed from decreasing to increasing.
 

Attachments

  • wobble.jpg
    wobble.jpg
    17.3 KB · Views: 698
Last edited:
  • #20
It's looks like we got lucky they were using INMARSAT for data links in the Indian Ocean.
Almost all of their birds except the newest have usable wobbles for single-satellite geolocation.

91018A INMARSAT 2-F2 -142.0 9.3
08039A INMARSAT 4-F3 -97.6 3.0
97027A INMARSAT 3-F4 -53.9 3.5
96053A INMARSAT 3-F2 -15.5 0.1 : Mainly broadcast services in that slot so better station keeping? http://www.satbeams.com/channels?norad=25949
98006B INMARSAT 3-F5 24.6 0.3 : Last of the 3 series launch date 1998.
05044A INMARSAT 4-F2 25.1 2.3
13073A INMARSAT 5-F1 62.7 0.0
96020A INMARSAT 3-F1 64.6 1.6
05009A INMARSAT 4-F1 143.5 2.7
96070A INMARSAT 3-F3 178.2 1.0

http://www.satsig.net/sslist.htm

I monitor KU band satellite broadcasts over NA on a 1M movable dish as a hobby using several DVB PC cards in a Linux server, most are pretty stable in orbit but a few are getting long in the tooth and have the 'shakes'.
 

Attachments

  • P8250058.jpg
    P8250058.jpg
    30.7 KB · Views: 403
Last edited:
  • #21
I can see several thing wrong with this article but it's here for others to evaluate.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technolo...ation-of-mh370s-demise-doesnt-hold-up/361826/

My main problem is the article doesn't account for the Doppler shift corrections of the SATCOM transmitters to keep the shift at the distant receivers within 250hz of the channel and the black box pings confirm the satellite pings. For the US and others in the search to spend the time and money it has so far in that location I'm pretty sure our best people have looked at the detailed Inmarsat data to find fault and have given it their blessing as the best we can do with what we have.
http://mashable.com/2014/04/07/malaysia-flight-370-search-pings-whales/

Inmarsat offers free airline tracking
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-27369288
 
Last edited:
  • #22
One thing this episode has achieved has been to make the World aware that we are not, in fact, on someone's screen every second of our lives. This has really shaken a lot of people. Personally, I find it rather reassuring . . . . .
 
  • #24
nsaspook said:
Inmarsat has released the raw handshake data set for MH370.
http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/i/MSNBC/Sections/NEWS/MH370-Data.pdf
No, they didn't. That's a summary of the data, not the raw data itself. They have no plan to release the actual data. So we can't duplicate their efforts and the victims families are still complaining.

I have no problem with them withholding the data if they have a reason, but this seems like a runaround and I don't like that.
 
  • #25
russ_watters said:
No, they didn't. That's a summary of the data, not the raw data itself. They have no plan to release the actual data. So we can't duplicate their efforts and the victims families are still complaining.

I have no problem with them withholding the data if they have a reason, but this seems like a runaround and I don't like that.

The actual raw data is probably in a form that nobody except Inmarsat can understand without them spending a lot of time explaining. If they release that, they will spend all of their engineering hours answering E-mails from people that have no idea what the data is or what it means. This will add nothing to the problem of locating the plane. I don't blame them for releasing a summary that people can understand.
 
  • #26
russ_watters said:
No, they didn't. That's a summary of the data, not the raw data itself. They have no plan to release the actual data. So we can't duplicate their efforts and the victims families are still complaining.

I have no problem with them withholding the data if they have a reason, but this seems like a runaround and I don't like that.

Yes, it's a raw data summary in a readable and understandable format for humans instead of a binary blob of data but what would be their reason for withholding other data? What other information do you think they might have? The system wasn't design for tracking aircraft, it provides information for optimizing a narrow communications channel that has embedded timing information that might give 10km range distance tracking and hints to what side of the equator the distant transponder is by using Doppler shifts logged to keep it on that very narrow channel when objects are moving.
 
  • #27
nsaspook said:
Yes, it's a raw data summary in a readable and understandable format for humans instead of a binary blob of data but what would be their reason for withholding other data? What other information do you think they might have? The system wasn't design for tracking aircraft, it provides information for optimizing a narrow communications channel that has embedded timing information that might give 10km range distance tracking and hints to what side of the equator the distant transponder is by using Doppler shifts logged to keep it on that very narrow channel when objects are moving.

It's important to avoid getting all 'conspiracy theory' obsessed. If they really didn't want to publish the data, they could have given a doctored version of their binary file and left people to deal with it on their own. Raw data needs an explanation about how to get what you want out of it and it may not suit them to publish the decoding system (why should they?). This is one of those events that will never die and it really doesn't help to put it in the same drawer as JFK and 9-11 on a forum like this.
 
  • #28
phyzguy said:
The actual raw data is probably in a form that nobody except Inmarsat can understand without them spending a lot of time explaining.
Perhaps.
If they release that, they will spend all of their engineering hours answering E-mails from people that have no idea what the data is or what it means.
Not if they don't provide an email address (or just dump the questions to the trash).
nasaspook said:
Yes, it's a raw data summary in a readable and understandable format for humans instead of a binary blob of data...
I doubt it's binary, but it's possible.*
...but what would be their reason for withholding other data?
They said because it is "opaque" (hard to interpret):
http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/27/world/asia/malaysia-missing-plane/index.html?hpt=hp_bn2

What other information do you think they might have?
I'm not completely clear. But when asked if people can use the released data to recreate Inmarsat's work, the company official says no. He says additional expertise is needed, but isn't clear on whether additional data is needed - and I'm not completely clear on if it is or isn't. He is clear that they haven't provided the model that they used to interpret the data.
sophiecentaur said:
It's important to avoid getting all 'conspiracy theory' obsessed. If they really didn't want to publish the data, they could have given a doctored version of their binary file and left people to deal with it on their own. Raw data needs an explanation about how to get what you want out of it and it may not suit them to publish the decoding system (why should they?). This is one of those events that will never die and it really doesn't help to put it in the same drawer as JFK and 9-11 on a forum like this.
Please note: I don't doubt the expertise and sincerity of the people who did the work or have any reason to doubt the quality of their results. I just think it would be nice to release everything that is necessary to re-create it. Note also I have some confusion about whether it is Inmarsat or Malaysia that is doing the releasing.

[edit] *I'll admit I didn't take a close look at the description. It appears from the description in the file that the raw data is an ascii csv string/file, with some of the fields being hex code. The relevant pieces of data are not encoded. If all they did was delete some of the columns, I'm fine with that, but I'd still prefer if they released their model -- heck, someone should write and publish a paper on how this was done; it is definitely publish-worthy work.
 
Last edited:
  • #29
russ_watters said:
I just think it would be nice to release everything that is necessary to re-create it.
Immarsat are a commercial company, not a research institute. Reading the description of the BTO and BFO data in the PDF, I guess "everything necessary" would include some proprietary information about their hardware.

Note also I have some confusion about whether it is Inmarsat or Malaysia that is doing the releasing.
The BBC news website explicitly says it was released by the Malaysian government, and gives a link to what is presumably the government website: http://www.dca.gov.my/mainpage/MH370%20Data%20Communication%20Logs.pdf (The document looks the same as the earlier link in this thread).

http://www.inmarsat.com/ is consistent with the BBC news statement.

See also http://www.dca.gov.my/mainpage/MH370%20Press%20Statement%20by%20DCA%20-%2027%20May%202014.pdf

I'm fine with that, but I'd still prefer if they released their model -- heck, someone should write and publish a paper on how this was done; it is definitely publish-worthy work.

From what I know of the way air accident investigations work, I wouldn't hold you breath for any formal publication until some hardware has been found, whether or not it is at the predicted location. Publishing could possibly make Immarsat (or its individual employees, or other people who were involved in peer reviewing the prediction method) legally liable for damages if the predictions turn out to be wrong.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #30
russ_watters said:
[edit] *I'll admit I didn't take a close look at the description. It appears from the description in the file that the raw data is an ascii csv string/file, with some of the fields being hex code. The relevant pieces of data are not encoded. If all they did was delete some of the columns, I'm fine with that, but I'd still prefer if they released their model -- heck, someone should write and publish a paper on how this was done; it is definitely publish-worthy work.

I'm glad they didn't release 'their' model so third parties can devise other ways to validate the data to the predicted flight path or not instead of just looking for errors in their math and methods. If there is a glaring hole in their southern arc theory somebody will devise a method of proving it like was done with the FTL neutrino mess.
 

1. What is Inmarsat analysis and how does it help in the search for missing flight MH370?

Inmarsat analysis is a method of using satellite data to track and analyze the movements of an aircraft. In the case of missing flight MH370, Inmarsat analysis was used to determine the final location of the aircraft based on satellite pings and other data. This analysis helped narrow down the search area and provided crucial information for the search efforts.

2. How accurate is Inmarsat analysis in determining the location of a missing aircraft?

Inmarsat analysis is considered to be a highly accurate method of determining the location of a missing aircraft. The analysis takes into account various factors such as satellite pings, aircraft performance data, and other parameters to calculate the most likely location of the aircraft. However, it is important to note that the accuracy of the analysis also depends on the quality and availability of the data.

3. Can Inmarsat analysis be used to track other missing flights?

Yes, Inmarsat analysis can be used to track other missing flights as long as there is sufficient data available. Inmarsat has a global network of satellites that can provide data for tracking and analysis of aircraft movements. However, the accuracy of the analysis may vary depending on the specific circumstances of each case.

4. How long does it take to complete an Inmarsat analysis for a missing flight?

The time it takes to complete an Inmarsat analysis for a missing flight can vary depending on the complexity of the case and the availability of data. In some cases, the analysis can be completed within a few days, while in others it may take weeks or even months. The accuracy of the analysis is also dependent on the amount of time and effort put into the analysis.

5. What other information can be obtained through Inmarsat analysis for a missing flight?

In addition to determining the location of a missing flight, Inmarsat analysis can also provide valuable information about the flight's altitude, speed, and direction of travel. This information can be crucial in understanding the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the aircraft and can aid in the search and investigation efforts.

Similar threads

Replies
6
Views
2K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
23
Views
7K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
2
Views
7K
  • General Discussion
Replies
4
Views
7K
  • General Discussion
Replies
17
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
2
Replies
65
Views
8K
  • General Discussion
2
Replies
49
Views
6K
Back
Top