How Math Solved the Mystery of the Missing Malaysian Jet's
Path
BY ALAN BOYLE
Analysts at the Inmarsat satellite
venture executed a computational tour de force to determine where a missing
Malaysia Airlines jet probably went, but mathematician John Zweck says the feat
is simple enough to explain with a basketball, a hoop ... and an
ant.
"The math involved is really just a little bit more than the
trigonometry you'd have in high school," Zweck, a professor at the University of
Texas at Dallas, told NBC News.
Don't worry: Zweck isn't popping a trig
quiz on us. Instead, he's retracing the steps that the investigators at
Inmarsat, Britain's Air Accidents Investigations Branch and the Boeing Co. took
to narrow down the search area for the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 jet, which
disappeared from radar screens on March 8.
All the investigators had to
go on were signals from a transmitter on the Boeing 777 jet that sent hourly
pings to an Inmarsat telecom satellite, hovering high over the Indian Ocean.
They were able to glean two key sets of clues from those signals: the angular
distance of the jet when each of the pings was sent, and the frequency of each
ping.
The angular distance allowed Inmarsat to draw a series of arcs, to
the north and to the south, indicating the range of possible locations when each
ping was sent. "We know the times at which the airplane crossed those arcs,"
Zweck said. But the arcs stretch so far it'd be impossible to search the entire
swath of ocean.
An analysis of satellite pings from Malaysia
Airlines Flight 370 allowed Inmarsat to sketch out broad arcs that the jet
crossed hour by hour. Further analysis produced projected flight paths for the
missing jet. The black dashed lines indicate the paths plotted by Inmarsat, and
the yellow line indicates mathematician John Zweck's computed flight path. The
black dot with a white dot in the center indicates the precise point over which
the satellite was flying.
To narrow down the search area, Zweck took the
plane's last known position, as of 2:11 a.m. local time, and then looked for
straight-line routes that traced a great circle around the globe. That would be
consistent with a scenario in which the crew - and perhaps the passengers as
well - were incapacitated, leaving the plane to fly on autopilot until the fuel
ran out.
North-south lines of longitude are examples of great circles.
"However, in our case, instead of the great circles being lines of longitude
through the North Pole, they are going through where the plane was thought to be
at 2:11 a.m.," Zweck said.
Put the ball in the hoop
If you're
looking for a straight-line, great-circle route, it's possible to figure out the
jet's path using only the satellite data. This is where the basketball comes in
handy.
"You could take a basketball, and draw the arcs with a red pen on
the basketball," Zweck said. "Then put the basketball in a hoop that fits snugly
around the ball. Pin that basketball onto the rim at the place where the plane
was at 2:11 a.m., and put another pin on the exact opposite point on the
ball."
The rim of the hoop can now define any of the great circles that
pass through the starting point.
"Let's say the rim has a ruler marked on
it," Zweck said. "Rotate the rim around the sphere and look to see where it
crosses the arcs. Measure the distance between the first arc and the second arc,
the second arc and the third arc, the third and the fourth. You want all those
measurements to be the same."
That would produce a route that intersected
all the pings at the right time to reflect a constant speed for the
plane.
Inmarsat's analysts had an advantage over Zweck, in that they
could estimate the speed of the plane by analyzing Doppler shifts in the
frequency of the pings. "They knew how to calibrate their ruler," Zweck said. "I
didn't, but I was able to infer it."
Zweck ended up with a speed estimate
that was the same as Inmarsat's: 450 knots, or 518 mph.
"What I was able
to do was reproduce Inmarsat's results," Zweck said. "But I didn't use a
basketball and a rim. I used a computer and trigonometry."
North vs.
south
There was one other problem to solve: The arcs could point to a
northward flight just as easily as a southward flight. So which path did Flight
370 take? The key clue came from the pings' Doppler shift.
You can hear a
Doppler shift in the whistle of a passing train: The pitch rises when the train
is approaching you, and falls when it's chugging away from you. Similarly, the
frequency of the jet's ping would be slightly higher if the plane is moving
toward the satellite, and slightly lower if it's moving away.
To explain
how this relates to the north vs. south question, Zweck metaphorically passes
you the basketball once more. Imagine you're holding the ball in front of you at
arm's length. The point in the very center of your vision is analogous to the
point on Earth directly below the satellite.
"It makes all of
us math majors around the world swell with pride."
"We know
the plane started north of the satellite," Zweck said. "If you imagine that the
plane was an ant on the basketball, the ant starts a little bit above the level
of your eye. Now imagine that the ant is walking south, across the surface of
the basketball. When the ant walks south along that straight line, it's getting
just a little closer at first."
But when it crosses the plane of your
vision, the ant starts receding. The jet would go through a similar,
ever-so-slight advance and retreat as it crossed the equator and headed
south.
That rate of movement, forward and back, was reflected in the
pings' Doppler shift: first a slight rise in frequency, and then a fall. "They
were able to tell by looking at the frequency of the signal that it was getting
closer to the satellite, but then after a certain point, it's moving away,"
Zweck said.
That suggested that the plane took the southern route. If it
had gone north, the Doppler data would have shown that the plane was
consistently farther away from the satellite.
The forward-and-back
Doppler shift was so subtle that Inmarsat's analysts had to double-check it by
comparing data from other 777 jets that traveled similar routes. They also
checked the data that the Malaysian jet sent back before it disappeared. "It all
agreed," Zweck said.
For more of the technical nitty-gritty, check out
this statement from Malaysia's acting transport minister, or Zweck's UT-Dallas
website.
Producing the proof
"It's an amazing bit of analysis,
because the beginning of the path is so darn close to the equator," observed
James Oberg, NBC News' space analyst. "It makes all of us math majors around the
world swell with pride."
However, the only way to verify the analysis is
to identify wreckage in the search area, an Alaska-sized stretch of the Indian
Ocean about 1,550 miles (2,500 kilometers) southwest of Perth,
Australia.
There have been some intriguing sightings of debris, gleaned
from satellite imagery and aerial observations. Ships and aircraft from six
countries - Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and the United
States - are combing the area. NASA says it's taking pictures of the southern
search zone with its Terra and EO-1 satellites. But so far, Inmarsat's masterful
theorem has yet to be proven.
This Underwater Microphone Could Find the Missing Malaysia Airlines
Jet
The TPL-25 System locates emergency
pingers on downed Navy and commercial aircraft to a maximum depth of 20,000
feet. Photo: U.S. Navy
Authorities are all but certain
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went down in the south Indian Ocean in water that
may be as deep as 23,000 feet. That makes finding the all-important "black box"
flight data recorder infinitely more difficult, and a job perfectly suited to
the U.S. Navy's tow fish.
The 70-pound tow fish, which is formally known
in true Pentagon style as Towed Pinger Locator 25, is a hydrodynamic microphone
designed specifically to listen for the acoustic signal of the data and cockpit
voice recorders carried aboard all commercial and military aircraft. It can
track the devices to depths of 20,000 feet.
"Basically, this
super-sensitive hydrophone gets towed behind a commercial vessel very slowly and
listens for black box pings," says Commander Chris Budde, U.S. 7th Fleet
operations officer.
The U.S. Navy deployed a pair of tow fish aboard the
Seahorse Standard, a Royal Australian Navy Rescue Support vessel that will drag
it through the search area west of Perth, Australia. The Standard joins a
flotilla of a dozen ships scouring a vast swath of sea for any sign of the
Boeing 777-200ER, which vanished March 8 enroute to Beijing from Kuala
Lampur.
Although satellite images have revealed debris floating in the
area, authorities have so far found no sign of the airplane or the 239 people
aboard.
The Seahorse Standard will drag a TPL 25 through the search area
at around 3 knots, while a second is on-hand as a backup. The device, tethered
to the ship by 20,000 feet of cable, remains about 1,000 feet above the sea
floor, listening for the telltale ping of the underwater locator beacon
installed on black boxes (they're actually orange) and cockpit voice recorders.
It can detect a transponder signal between 3.5 and 50 kHz (most commercial
airliner data systems transmit at 37.5 kHz) within a 2-mile radius, and cover
about 150 square miles of ocean each day.
"We have worked off of that
ship before," says Mike Dean, the U.S. Navy's Supervisor of Salvage and Diving.
"It's a good platform and a good crew."
TPL 25 is the third iteration of
the technology that's been around for 20 years.
"We've used it for just
about any aircraft that's gone down," Dean says.
It was instrumental in
finding TWA flight 800 off the coast of New York after it crashed in 1996,
although at a relatively shallow depth of 130 feet. It also was deployed during
the search for Air France Flight 447 which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in
2009. It was less successful there, however, because the underwater locator
beacon, which is activated the moment it's submerged, has enough power to
transmit for 30 days or so. The search for the missing Airbus A330 took two
years.
Beyond the limitations of the beacon, there's also the fact no one
knows just where Flight 370 went down, or where the strong currents of the south
Indian Ocean might have carried the debris. The search area covers some 35,400
square miles-roughly the size of Massachusetts and West Virginia
combined.
"There's an awful lot of ocean to cover," Dean tells WIRED.
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