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"Open Question: Could US Military SIGINT satellites help to narrow down flight MH370's last location?"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Unknown said...

Very interesting, thanks!

But what I wonder about, is where are those other "arcs" from the 5 missing pings? It wouldn't reveal position of aircraft, but it would reveal if airplane was flying in a straight line or not the last five hours, and also reveal if last observations on radar can be trusted in such detail. I tried google this, but came no closer.

17/3/14 23:16

Blogger PapaGeorge said...

Katherine Harris, Fox News reported "....that's based on additional signal intelligence beyond that satellite link communications." Thought that might add grist to you speculation.

18/3/14 00:08

Blogger Aireps said...

Many thanks for your insights on the presence of SIGINT sats.

On 13 March, Malaysia's Transport Minister said that the last ACARS transmission was received from the aircraft at 17:07 UTC. ACARS was somehow disabled. Reportedly, the plane's SATCOM system kept on replying to Inmarsat's SATCOM pings for several hours. Therefore, it would be better to address SATCOM pings, not ACARS pings. You may also view info on ACARS and SATCOM pings

5/4/14 10:47

Blogger Tony Verow, MD said...

Great explanations, thank you for the hard work. I suspect that there may be issues in gleaning data from the fact that the southern Indian Ocean is not terribly relevant most of the time to US military and geopolitical concerns. I would hypothesize that American satellite resources are usually deliberately spent on the Middle East, North America, etc. Even if signals are picked up from the Indian ocean they may not be high on the list of priority in terms of processing capacity, analyst time, etc. Nonetheless there might be very useful information stored somewhere !

6/4/14 15:44

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