Thursday, March 13, 2014

Malaysia: No engine data after plane went missing

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Officials dismissed reports Thursday that the missing Malaysian airliner's engines continued sending data for hours after its last contact, but said it was possible the plane continued flying and that they would widen their search farther to the west.

The Wall Street Journal newspaper quoted U.S. investigators on Thursday as saying they suspected the Boeing 777 remained in the air for about four hours after its last confirmed contact, citing data from the plane's engines that are automatically transmitted to the ground as part of a routine maintenance program.

Malaysian Defense Minister and acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said the government had contacted Boeing and Rolls Royce, the engine manufacturer, and both said the last engine data was received at 1:07 a.m., several minutes before the plane lost contact over the South China Sea on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

An international search effort is sweeping the South China Sea, but also focusing on the Strait of Malacca because of unconfirmed military radar sightings indicating the plane may have changed course and headed west after it stopped communicating.

Asked if it were possible that the plane kept flying for several hours, Hishammuddin said: "of course, we can't rule anything out. This is why we have extended the search."

He said the search had been expanded into the Andaman Sea and that the country was asking for radar data from neighboring countries such as India. If the plane flew far from the current search areas, then locating it will likely be a vast task.


Investigators have not ruled out any possible cause for the disappearance of the plane and the 239 people on board. Experts say a massive failure knocking out its electrical systems, while unlikely, could explain why its transponders, which identify it to civilian radar systems and other planes nearby, were not working. Another possibility is that the pilot, or a passenger, likely one with some technical knowledge, switched off the transponders.

The plane was heading northeast over the Gulf of Thailand toward Vietnam when it vanished. The last message from the cockpit was routine: "All right, good night," was the signoff transmitted to Malaysian air traffic controllers.

Dozens of ships and aircraft from 12 nations have been searching the Gulf of Thailand and the strait, but no confirmed trace has been found. The search area has grown to 35,800 square miles (92,600 square kilometers), or about the size of Portugal.

Experts say that if the plane crashed into the ocean then some debris should be floating on the surface even if most of the jet is submerged. Past experience shows that finding the wreckage can take weeks or even longer, especially if the location of the plane is in doubt.

The hunt has been punctuated by false leads, the latest Thursday when planes were sent to search the area where Chinese satellite images published on a Chinese government website showed "three suspected floating objects" of varying sizes in a 20-kilometer (12-mile) radius off the southern tip of Vietnam.

"There is nothing. We went there, there is nothing," Azharuddin said.

In the latest in a series of confusing events, he later said the Chinese Embassy had notified the government that the images were released by mistake and did not show any debris from Flight 370.

Malaysia's air force chief said Wednesday that an unidentified object appeared on military radar records about 200 miles (320 kilometers) northwest of Penang, Malaysia, and experts are analyzing the data in an attempt to determine whether the blip is the missing plane.


Thursday, February 13, 2014

One Cover Girl Just Isn't Enough for the 2014 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue

One Cover Girl Just Isn't Enough for the 2014 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue

Fans of bikini-clad babes everywhere should be three times as excited to find out the cover girl of this year's Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition.

The 2014 cover of the iconic annual issue — celebrating its 50th anniversary this year — belongs not to a single lovely lady, but a trio of them: Nina Agdal, Lily Aldridge, and Chrissy Teigen. The sun-kissed threesome posed together in the Pacific Ocean during a photo shoot in the gorgeous Cook Islands wearing nothing but itsy-bitsy bikini bottoms, although their backs are facing the camera.

In 2013, Kate Upton, starring in the issue for the second consecutive year, also went without a bikini top, although she wore a parka in a pic taken in brutally cold Anarctica. For those who were hoping for an Upton three-peat, this year's cover promises that she's prominently featured within the magazine's pages.

The women who did make the cover are already familiar to those who keep up with celebrities. Agdal, 21, was named the magazine's Rookie of the Year in 2012, and has been romantically linked to Adam Levine, Leonardo DiCaprio, and The Wanted's Max George.

The 28-year-old Teigen, who's married to singer John Legend, was named SI's Rookie of the Year in 2010 and has become a social media star thanks to her entertaining tweets.

Aldridge, also 28, is married to Kings of Leon's Caleb Followill and shares a daughter, Dixie Pearl, with him. (Yes, she's given birth!) Aldridge happens to be a Victoria's Secret Angel, but this year marks her first time in the SI Swimsuit Issue.

The cover was set to be officially unveiled on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" Thursday night, but this year's class of models got some attention earlier in the week when several of them, including Teigen, appeared in a new version of Air New Zealand's in-flight safety video. Teigen and company wore sexy swimsuits as they instructed passengers on using their oxygen masks and other safety gear during their flight.

Now that's a way to actually get people to pay attention before takeoff!


Friday, October 25, 2013

Satellite Spots Light Show in the Middle of the Atlantic Ocean

Those weird lights in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean — what are they?
Are they an unstoppable force of electric underwater creatures swimming, slowly but steadily, toward the shore where they will flood our cities and force us all to watch "Finding Nemo" from now until the end of time?

Fortunately, no (for now). The lights, which were spotted using Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite on the Suomi NPP satellite, are actually a large collection of fishermen.


NASA explains, "There are no human settlements there, nor fires or gas wells. But there are an awful lot of fishing boats."
 
Yep, that's right, those lights that could easily be mistaken for a series of heavily populated islands are actually powerful lights on boats.

What exactly are the fishermen looking for? And why are they out blasting their high beams?

From NASA:
  " The night fishermen are hunting for Illex argentinus, a species of short-finned squid that forms the second largest squid fishery on the planet. The squid are found tens to hundreds of kilometers offshore from roughly Rio de Janeiro to Tierra del Fuego (22 to 54 degrees South latitude). They live 80 to 600 meters (250 to 2,000 feet) below the surface, feeding on shrimp, crabs, and fish. In turn, Illex are consumed by larger finfish, whales, seals, sea birds, penguins ... and humans. "

Fishermen use the powerful lights, "generating as much as 300 kilowatts of light per boat," to draw the plankton and fish that the squid eat toward the surface. The squid then follow the food. Alas, it's the last meal for many.