Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Why has Inmarsat refused to release the data showing that MH370 flew on a circular arc about the satellite???


Why has Inmarsat refused to release the data showing that MH370 flew on a circular arc about the satellite???

“The plane automatically sent a brief signal — a "ping" — every hour to a satellite belonging to Inmarsat, a British company, even after other communication systems shut down. The pings indicated that the jet kept flying for seven hours after its last radar contact.

Inmarsat was able to calculate two long arcs indicating where the plane might have flown.”

They admitted that the system used was not designed for this purpose and had never before been used to determine distance between satellite and airplane.

But how did they do that calculation and what was the precision???

What was really observed was that the plane travelled for 7 hours with no detectable variation in the distance between the airplane and the satellite.  No data have been provided about the expected accuracy and precision of this purported measurement.

This conclusion ignored the possibility that the purported distance measurement between the plane and the satellite lacked sufficient precision to provide any believable information about the flight path of the airplane. 

A number of competent scientists have examined the Doppler data that was released and have been unable to confirm the southern path stated by Inmarsat. See
TMF Associates MSS blog <understanding the satellite ping conclusion>
The data on measured transit time for signals between satellite and MH370 at each detected ping must be released immediately if  Inmarsat hopes to maintain any credibility.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Why not look for MH370 where it might be found?


Why not look for MH370 where it might be found?

Now that the massive search for the plane in the Indian Ocean has failed perhaps returning to the known facts might be in order.

The search location was based on misinformation supplied by Inmarsat and their conclusions were not publically challenged.

A few scientists including myself and Duncan Steel , among others, have questioned the validity of their data, but we have been unable to penetrate the wall of conventional wisdom and mass hysteria.

I feel like the child in the parable of the naked emperor. 

At this late date it is possible that flight MH370 will never be found, but if it is found it will be on land most likely on the northern coast of Australia or near the coast in Somalia, Yemen, Oman, Iran, or Pakistan.   

Why not look there?

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Australian Search for MH370 Should Shift to North Coast


Australian Search for MH370 Should Shift to North Coast

Marvin Vestal has completed an objective analysis of the known facts (not speculation) on the disappearance of flight MH370 and has conclusive evidence that the information supplied by Inmarsat is not credible.  There is no reason to believe that the plane is more likely to be found in the present search area than any other area in the Indian Ocean picked at random.  See marvinsthinking.blogspot.com for detailed analysis.  The possible end points within the known range of the plane include the north coast of Australia, and the coasts of Somalia,  Yemen, Oman, Iran, and Pakistan.  Intensive search of these areas may find the plane.  The possibility that the plane ended up almost anywhere in the vast expanse of the ocean cannot be ruled out, but at this late stage it is clear that if the plane crashed in the Indian Ocean it will never be found.   One the other hand, if it is on land in any of these areas it will ultimately be found if anyone looks hard enough.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Where is MH370?? Not found in the Indan Ocean


Where is MH370

If found, MH370 will be on land in Northern Australia,  Somalia, Yemen, Oman, Iran, or Pakistan.

It will not be found in the Indian Ocean, even if it is there.  There is no valid data that indicates that it will be found in the present search area.

Recent scientific calculations clearly show that the information supplied by Inmarsat is bogus.  (see marvinsthinking.blogspot.com),  The places where the plane may be found are shown in Figure 1.  This conclusion is based on the following facts not speculation.

1.        The communication systems were turned off 40 minutes after take-off and the plane was turned to the west from the path to Beijing.

2.       A competent pilot was in control of the airplane.

3.       The last radar detection placed the plane 500 km to the west 1:30 minutes after take-off.

4.       The plane flew for 6 hourshH 8 minutes at a nominal true airspeed of 872 km/hr for a total nominal distance of 5350 km.

5.       The plane was not detected by air defense radar in any of the countries the north of the last known position.

The area where the end point of the flight may be is shown in Figure 1. 



Anywhere inside the large blue circle is possible based on the known facts about speed and direction of the plane.  The plane could have turned south at the time of the second ping or north at the time of the fourth ping.  The north and east regions above the limiting paths shown are excluded on the basis that a plane flying in this space would have been detected.  If the plane had flown for 6 hours 8 minutes toward any region within range it would have reached  somewhere on the  large blue circle.  It is obvious that a large portion ends in the Indian Ocean including the region being searched, but there is no evidence to favor one area over any other.  It is also possible that the plane flew about aimlessly and crashed anywhere inside the circle.  In either case the plane will never be found and the present search effort is a waste of time and energy.  On the other hand, if the person controlling the plane had a definite destination in mind, he could have reached the northern coast of Australia, or the coast of Somalia, Yemen, Oman, Iran, of Pakistan.  Any serious effort to find the plane should be directed to these areas.
 

Possible Flight Paths for MH370 from Inmarsat Data Not Supported by Scientific Calculations


Possible Flight Paths for MH370 from Inmarsat Data Not Supported by Scientific Calculations

Dr. Marvin Vestal CEO of SimulTOF Systems Sudbury, MA, has developed and applied methods for calculating the time shifts and Doppler Shifts for various possible flight paths of missing airliner MH370.  The distance determination depends on precise determination of the delay time between transmission and reception of radio transmissions and the direction determination is from Doppler shift of the frequency of the transmissions.   These calculations are compared to data produced from detection of hourly pings from the airplane by the satellite provider Inmarsat.  Results show conclusively that Inmarsat has misinterpreted these data to conclude that the plane flew south into the Indian Ocean.  Objective analysis of the Inmarsat data shows that the noise on the Doppler data is at least 20 times larger than the maximum signal consistent with a change in direction and the noise is 100 times larger than the signals that could provide definitive data on the flight path.   The massive search for the plane in the Indian Ocean continues even though there is no credible data that indicates that if will be found in the search area.

Calculation of Doppler Shift for Various Flight Paths

Summary of data relevant to flight path of MH370

Communication turned off 40 minutes after takeoff at 6.92 deg N, 103.5786 deg E

Satellite is on equator at 64.5 deg E

Last radar contact about 500 km east of initial position when plane turned west

Distance between satellite and initial position is 4336 km

Radius of earth at equator is 6353 km, diameter 39,943 km

Satellite is 35,800 km from earth surface

Ping 1 detected 1 hour 30 minutes after take-off and 4 minutes before last radar sighting

Doppler shift df/f=dv/v where dv is the dot product of the velocity of the plane onto the vector from the plane to the satellite.

                dv=vpsinacosb

            Where vp is the speed of the airplane, a is the angle of the satellite position relative to the position of the plane, and b is the angle between the direction of the airplane and the direction to the satellite in the plane of motion of the airplane.

 sin a=dp/ds where dp is the distance between the airplane and the satellite in the plane of the motion and ds is the height of the satellite above the plane of motion.

b=arc sin(d1/dp) where d1 is the distance in the plane of motion from the satellite perpendicular to the flight path. 

v=299,972 km/s

vp=872 km/hr=0.242 km/s

df/f=0.8075sinacosb parts per million

Maximum value of sin a =0.12, thus maximum value of df/f=97.9cosb parts per billion.

Therefore the Doppler shift must be determined with a precision of about 1 part per billion to provide accurate information on the flight path.

This is possible with modern equipment, but Inmarsat has provided no information on the precision of their measurement.

Since the Doppler data, the process can be inverted and the Doppler shift expected can be calculated for any proposed flight path.  This calculation can then be compared with the actual data if and when it is available and the calculated trajectory adjusted as required. 

cosb=(df/f)/(0.8075sina) with df/f in ppm.



Calculation of Doppler Shift for Path Straight west at 7 deg N latitude


 


 

Calculation of Doppler Shift for 90 degree turn to south after ping 2
 
   Ping no.             west      turn to S        Inmarsat



Comparison of our calculations with data from Inmarsat  


 
Conclusion:

Noise on the Inmarsat data is about 20 times larger than the maximum expected change in Doppler shift and is at least 100 times larger than is required for meaningful measurements on flight path.  Inmarsat shows 3 values at ping 1 (only 1 shown above) apparently determined within a 2 minute period.  They interpret this as a change in direction at ping 1, but instead it clearly indicates the noise in their data. There is absolutely no credible evidence from the Inmarsat data about the direction that the flight may have taken following the last radar detection.

1.        Inmarsat data provided by Duncan Steel in the form of Burst Frequency Offset in Hz.  These have been converted to parts per billion by dividing by the base frequency of the transmitter 135.55 MHz.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Scientific Method for Determining the Flight Path of MH370


Scientific Method for Determining the Flight Path of MH370

Dr. Marvin Vestal CEO of SimulTOF Systems Sudbury, MA, has proposed a method for determining the flight path of missing airliner MH370 from data produced from detection of hourly pings from the airplane by the satellite provider Inmarsat.  These radio transmissions can be interpreted to determine the distance between the plane and the satellite, and the direction of the plane relative to the position of the satellite.  The distance determination depends on precise determination of the delay time between transmission and reception and the direction determination is from Doppler shift of the frequency.   Inmarsat has interpreted these data to indicate that the plane flew south into the Indian Ocean, but failed to point out that the independent measurements of distance and direction were inconsistent.  This conclusion by Inmarsat has initiated a massive search for the plane in the Indian Ocean even though an objective analysis of the data indicates that this is only 1 of 14 end points consistent with the data available.   The methods used by Inmarsat for interpreting the data have not been released, nor has the actual data on time delays and Doppler shifts.  These are required for independent evaluation of their conclusions.

Details of the method and application to the flight path of MH370 are given in an earlier posting on marvinsthinking.blogspot.com.  This information has been given to Mr. Patrick Lally in the Boston office of Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts and has been forwarded by him to the FAA and the NTSB.  To date there has been no official response.  Mr. Ron Suskind of the Harvard Ethics Center has recently been contacted by Dr. Vestal with the suggestion that these events should be examined for evidence of scientific fraud.

Dr. Vestal is a   pioneer in time-of-flight mass spectrometer and a charter member of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry.  He received the Field and Franklin Award from the American Chemical Society in 2005 and the ASMS Award for Distinguished Contribution to Mass Spectrometry in 2010.  He organized the James L. Waters Symposium at PittCon on The History of MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry in March 2014.  He has published more than 100 papers in refereed journals and holds more than 50 US patents.  He received BS and MS degrees from Purdue University in Engineering Sciences and Phd in Chemical Physics from the University of Utah.  For more information about Dr. Vestal and Mass Spectrometry visit our website simultof.com.

Saturday, April 5, 2014

MH370 is Not Lost in the Indian Ocean


MH370 is Not Lost in the Indian Ocean

Inmarsat has pulled off the hoax of the century by directing the search for MH 370 to the Indian Ocean.

The probability of finding the plane in the present search area is no higher than for any other randomly selected area in the Indian Ocean.  

Inmarsat is guilty of some combination of scientific incompetence and fraud.  The original interpretation of the purported measurement of distance between the satellite and plane based on time shift of the pings may have been an honest misinterpretation of the data and failed to recognize the plausible conclusion that the measurement was not sufficiently precise to accurately determine the distance.  This was the basis for the conclusion that that plane would be found in the Indian Ocean west of Australia and initiated a massive search and rescue operation.  Subsequently, the Doppler data clearly showed that the original conclusion was wrong, but instead of admitting their error and telling the world that they had absolutely no credible information about the location of the airplane they produced a flight path consistent with the Doppler data pointing toward the same general area in the Indian Ocean.  The search continued.  Inmarast failed to note that the proposed flight path was only one of at least 14 equally probable paths pointing in totally different directions.  This is fraudulent.

This fraud has unfortunately shifted the focus from the information that is available from the Doppler measurements.  The position and direction of the plane at the last radar detection provides a starting point for predicting the probable end position of the airplane.  We know that the plane flew for 7 hours and the Doppler data provides information on the direction of the airplane at the time of each ping.  To the extent that the speed of the plane is known, the position and direction of the plane at the time of each ping is determined.   This allows the flight path of the plane to be plotted and the end point determined.  The accuracy is limited only by the uncertainty in the speed and the accuracy of the Doppler measurements.  It is true that the Doppler shift depends only on the magnitude of the angle between the airplane velocity vector and the vector pointing at the satellite, and does not depend on the sign of the angle.  Thus, at each measurement two complementary directions are possible, and Inmarsat picked the one that led to their desired conclusion rather than others that were equally probable. 

I have neither the Doppler data nor a good estimate of the expected speed of the airplane, but any competent person with that data can determine the endpoint of the flight with an accuracy only limited by the uncertainties in the speed and Doppler frequency shifts.  This calculation will clearly show the areas where the plane is most likely to be found. 

The mysterious disappearance of MH370

The Malaysian government has now officially declared that flight MH 370 has crashed in the Indian Ocean.  The people on the plan are dead, and the plane is located at an unknown place and the chances that the plane will ever be found are remote.  End of story.

“The plane automatically sent a brief signal — a "ping" — every hour to a satellite belonging to Inmarsat, a British company, even after other communication systems shut down. The pings indicated that the jet kept flying for seven hours after its last radar contact.

Inmarsat was able to calculate two long arcs indicating where the plane might have flown.”

“But how did they do that calculation and what was the precision???

But perhaps it is only the beginning of the real story.  It is a tragic testimonial to the scientific ignorance of the media, government officials, and the public at large. If an “expert” states that something is true and no other “expert” disputes the statement, then it is accepted as established fact.  Early in this tragedy an expert stated that analysis of the data on the hourly pings between the aircraft and a stationary satellite showed that the plane travelled in a circular arc either to the north or the south as depicted in Figure 1.  The northern route was quickly discounted on the grounds that an airplane travelling on that path would have been detected by radar of the numerous air defense systems along that path.  The southern path was accepted as truth and a massive, and so far fruitless, effort was launched to find the wreckage of the plane.  This conclusion ignored the possibility that the purported distance measurement between the plane and the satellite lacked sufficient precision to provide any believable information about the flight path of the airplane.  What was really observed was that the plane travelled for 7 hours with no detectable variation in the distance between the airplane and the satellite. 


Figure 1.  Flight paths on circles about satellite according to Inmarsat.

I am a physicist with expertise in time-of-flight mass spectrometry and have no expertise in either control of aircraft or aircraft communication.  I have made a good living for more than fifty years applying logical analyses to empirical observations and have learned many times that the seemingly obvious answer is not always correct.  I am surprised that no one has challenged the original conclusion that MH370 followed either a northern arc or a southern arc and could not have continued on its last observed westerly direction.  No one has pointed out the obvious fact that the routes supposedly followed arcs that were exactly equidistant from the satellite.  This could have been correct, but there is another more likely explanation.  The alternative is that the signal used to determine the distance from the satellite did not, in fact, correlate with the distance from the satellite, because the resolution of the measurement was inadequate.  If so, the data from the pings confirms that the flight remained in the air for 7 hours but nothing about the direction of travel. We routinely measure distances and times with a precision of 1 part per million.  This employs sophisticated instruments and software designed for this application.  The apparatus used for determining the path of the airplane was not designed for that purpose and the precision and accuracy expected for the measurement has not been stated.  If the plane had instead followed the trajectory such as illustrated by the red arrow pointing west, determining the apparent distance to the satellite would have required a precision of about 1 part per thousand to distinguish the straight trajectory from the circular one. (See Figure 2)  No data have been provided about the expected accuracy and precision of this purported measurement.


Figure 2.  Maximum change in the distance to the satellite for the straight path vs. the circular path.


The data from the Doppler affect measurements clearly show that the flight did not follow the circular route initially determined.   If the flight had followed the circular route, there would be no Doppler shift because the airplane velocity is then perpendicular to the direction of signal propagation.  The Doppler measurements may give an accurate determination of the flight path, but these data cannot distinguish between equivalent paths north or south of the satellite.  If the plane did not follow the circular route, then the reasons for discarding the northern direction disappear.  Inmarsat did not admit that without the Doppler data there was no evidence about the direction that the plane had flown and that there was no reason to believe that the plane would be found anywhere in the southern Indian Ocean. 

Rather than admit their error, Inmarsat attempted to interpret the Doppler data to indicate that the plane was in the south Indian Ocean even though that flight path had no basis in fact and represented only one of 14 flight paths consistent with the Doppler data.


Illustration of 6 of the 14 flight paths consistent with the Doppler data.  At each ping the angle between the flight path and the vector to the satellite is the same magnitude for either of 2 directions. The distances between the pings should be equal to distance travelled in 1 hour.  The positions shown here may not be accurate and are only for illustrating the principle.

Ignoring the speculations and faulty analyses, the established facts related to the disappearance of fight MH30 are the following:

1.       A competent person or person switched off the airplanes’ communication systems and directed the plane in a westerly direction.

2.       There is no credible data on the flight path following its last observation by radar.  The southern route generally accepted is not supported by the Doppler data.

3.       According to the interpretation by Inmarsat of the Doppler data the plane would have flown west until near the tip of India and then executed a sharp turn to the south.

4.       The Doppler data is consistent with the proposed route by Inmarsat, but it is equally consistent with the plane continuing on west and passing within ca. 2000 km of the satellite.  In the absence of any data indicating such a turn to nowhere, the latter seems most plausible.

5.       The plane flew for seven hours along one of the possible paths.  If it continued west, then it would have arrived at somewhere in Somalia, Ethiopia, Yemen, Oman, or if diverted to the north in Iran or Pakistan.



 
 
 

 


In the absence of other credible data it seems reasonable that the plane continued in a westerly direction and would have arrived at the coast of Africa in about 7 hours.  It would have arrived there at about 3 am local time and may not have been observed, and whether it landed at an airport or crashed somewhere is impossible to know with the data available. It has been established that the plane was directed to a new flight path by a competent person on the plane who was also able to turn off the normal airplane communication systems. If that person or persons had a definite destination in mind, then it would be logical to continue on the original course until that destination was reached.  It might also be reasonable that people on the ground at the destination were prepared to assist in landing and concealing the plane and in dealing with the people on board.

Continuing to search in the south Indian Ocean is unlikely to yield other than negative results, even if the plane were there.  On the other hand if the plane is on the ground in one of the countries above, then an exhaustive search may provide some answers.  In particular:

If the plan did reach the coast of Africa at about 3 am local time on March 8, the US and other countries may have satellite surveillance images that would indicate a plane arriving at a lighted airport or crashing somewhere in that area.  These data must be examined in detail.

If the plane did in fact land and has been concealed, then it may take a concerted international effort to find it, but such an effort makes more sense than continuing to pick up trash in the Indian Ocean.

Starting from the position and direction observed in the last Radar sighting of the plane, and given the Doppler data and a good estimate of the expected speed of the airplane, any competent person with that data can determine the position of the plane at each ping and the endpoint of the flight with an accuracy only limited by the uncertainties in the speed and Doppler frequency shifts. This is true for all 14 of the possible paths.  About half of these will indicate end positions in the Indian Ocean and many of the others to the north can be rejected on the same grounds as the original rejection of the northern path.   This calculation will clearly show that there are at most 2 or 3 areas where the plane is likely to be found. 

Without hard information it is fruitless to speculate further about who is responsible and why it happened.  Those questions will be answered if and when the plane is found.  Also the fate of the 239 people on board will remain a mystery.  After nearly a month has passed It is hard to be optimistic about the eventual outcome, but in the absence of definite information to the contrary it is possible that some or all of the people on board MH370 are still alive.

Notes for the Future

This should never be allowed to happen again.  If both the transit time of the signal from the plane to the satellite and the frequency shift of the signal were accurate, and the speed of the plane accurately estimated, then the position and direction at the time of the “ping” could be accurately determined for all possible flight paths.  Further, if the signal were detected by two satellites separated by a known distance, the results would be more accurate since the speed could then be directly determined and this would remove all ambiguity about possible flight paths.  This allows the flight path to be accurately monitored in real time and the future position determined unless the plane changes direction between “pings”. 

Marvin Vestal

CEO SimulTOF Systems