China activates an international charter started in 1999 to aggregate global
space data from satellites in an effort to locate Malaysian Airlines' flight
MH370.
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An Indonesian Air Force military surveillance aircraft searches the Malacca Strait for Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 |
As the latest piece of technology to be enlisted in the search for missing
Malaysian flight MH370, satellites have the eyes of the world watching them as
they watch us.
On Monday, a crowdsourcing platform called Tomnod, along with parent company
DigitalGlobe, launched a crowdsourcing campaign to enlist the help of citizens
in scouring satellite images to search for the plane that disappeared on March
7.
China has followed that up by activating the International Charter on Space
and Major Disastersto join the hunt on Tuesday. The goal of the charter is to
enlist space data from 15 member organizations to provide assistance in the case
of a "natural or technological disaster." The charter describes such a disaster
as "a situation of great distress involving loss of human life or large-scale
damage to property, caused by a natural phenomenon, such as a cyclone, tornado,
earthquake, volcanic eruption, flood or forest fire, or by a technological
accident, such as pollution by hydrocarbons, toxic or radioactive
substances."
Now that the charter has been activated, space scientists around the planet
will enlist the satellites available to them to gather images from the suspected
area in which flight MH370 disappeared. The hope is that one of those images
will pick up something that can direct search and recovery efforts.
Satellites are just one of the tech tools involved in the massive
multi-national aircraft hunt that already includes the use of 42 sophisticated
ships and 39 high-tech aircraft combing the waters according to the BBC. For
example, listening devices are being lowered into the water to pick up the
"ping" of the black box, and sophisticated MH60 Seahawk helicopters from the
United States are employing Forward Looking Infra-red (FLIR) cameras that arm
the searchers with night vision.
The International Charter on Space and Major Disasters was most recently
activated on February 13 to help with monitoring the Mount Kelud volcano
explosion on the Indonesian island of Java. Prior to that it's been used to
monitor flooding, forest fires, snowfalls, cyclones, oil spills and other
damaging events around the world. It was also used to assist in recovery efforts
from earthquakes, including the one that rocked Japan in March 2011 and caused a
devastating tsunami and the meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear plant. The
charter has been activated 400 times in its history, but Tuesday represents the
first time it was called into service to look for a missing aircraft. The only
other transportation-related event for which it's been used was to assist in
gathering data after a train full of dynamite exploded in North Korea on April
23, 2004.
The charter, which began after Vienna's Unispace III conference in 1999 with
three agencies, has grown to its current membership of 15 organizations with the
Russian Federal Space Agency being the most recent to join in 2013. Other member
organizations include the European Space Agency, the Korea Aerospace Research
Institute and China's National Space Administration. The US member organizations
include the United States Geological Survey and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. After the charter has been activated, data typically
starts coming in within 24 hours, according to a report in Phys.org.
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