An Australian scientist, Aron Gingis claims that it is possible to trace the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 by examining cloud changes for proofs of vapour trails caused by burning fuel emissions from the aircraft.
Gingis specialises in cloud microphysics and heads the environmental consultancy firm Australian Management Consolidated, News 24 reported. Gingis said he has used the technology to locate shipwrecks in the north Pacific Ocean by identifying ship trails and the changes in cloud microphysics caused by emissions of floating vessels using archival satellite data.
Gingis believes that there is a realistic chance to follow flight path of Malaysian Airline MH370 and follow its flight direction and possibly identify its landing or crash site, Gingis wrote to the Malaysian High Commissioner Eldeen Husaini in an email dated April 3, less than a month after the plane vanished.
Flight MH370, operated on a Boeing B777-200 aircraft, was travelling from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing when it went disappeared on March 8. So far, attempts to find the plane have failed.
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