Posted on 03/26/2014 5:52:03 AM PDT by don-o
Satellite images taken on Sunday show 122 "potential objects" in the search for debris from missing flight MH370, Malaysian investigators said Wednesday.
Analysis of the images, which were supplied by France-based aeronautical firm Airbus Defence, revealed objects in the southern Indian Ocean around 1,588 miles from Perth, Australia close to where other objects were previously seen.
(Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...
The only ones I recall seeing are: China, Australia, France.
No US and no UK that I’m aware of. That in itself seems odd.
They are the only ones I’ve seen, and I do agree that does seem odd.
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DigitalGlobe, in Colorado, was one source of satellite imagery.
I would think so.
Of course it's just what's on the internet.
I believe if anyone besides Obama was POTUS, the US would be much more involved and helpful.
OK.
All the craziness with the internet .kind of like relying on the Malaysians for credible information.
‘I believe if anyone besides Obama was POTUS, the US would be much more involved and helpful.’
I believe you’re right.
It might help if you understand that the 'Australian' satellite images you've seen are generally, in fact, from American satellites. Australia doesn't actually have its own surveillance satellites - we have a handful of communications satellites but that's it.
Because the joint US/Australian base at Pine Gap in central Australia, is a downlink location for satellite data, Australia often has access to American satellite feeds, but in this case, the images came from a commercial satellite, WorldView-2 owned by American company DigitalGlobe.
Australians did the analysis of the images which made the first ID of possible debris, and geographically was in the best location to launch the initial search of that area, so the announcement came from Australia, but they are not actually Australian satellite images, despite the way some of the media is reporting them.
“DigitalGlobe, in Colorado, was one source of satellite imagery.”
I was looking more for the expertise of NASA rather than an online crowdsource .I think it’s odd that the U.S. hasn’t provided any official help in this area.
Why? It wasn't our airline. It wasn't our plane. Something like 99% of the passengers weren't from the U.S. Where is our involvement? We've provided ships, search planes, technical assistance, what more do you want?
Thank you for the info.
So we retired the SR71 because satellites could do a better job? I find it hard to believe that after several days we cannot get a clear satellite image of whats floating in the ocean. Especially pieces over 70’ in length.
What was all that stuff about being able to read a license plate? Something else is at play here.
I agree. I think we should all ask for a tax refund. What a disgrace.
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