With 3D technology, National Geographic has recreated the terrifying final moments of MH370 as the plane spiraled out of the sky before crashing into the Indian Ocean.
According to the British Daily Star, the terrifying final moments of MH370, which went missing on March 8, 2014 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumper are reproduced in a 3D National Geographic documentary titled “Drain The Oceans”.
The moment MH370 plunged into the sea was recreated in National Geographic’s 3D documentary.
The film gathers evidence surrounding the mysterious disappearance of MH370 and concludes that the plane flew on a spiral, soaring out of the sky before running out of fuel and then plummeting into the sea.
The aforementioned evidence includes MH370 continuing to exchange signals with a satellite, known as Inmarsat, even though it disappeared from radar screens. Experts have used this clue to predict the direction of MH370’s movement. Accordingly, MH370 was supposed to fly south and fly for another six hours before crashing into the Indian Ocean.
More detailed analysis shows that MH370 descended rapidly, possibly due to the lack of fuel, the plane’s right engine ignited first, causing the plane to tilt to the left, until the second engine ignited. fire a few minutes later. Power outage, out of fuel, autopilot stopped working, the ill-fated plane spiraled and plummeted into the Indian Ocean, creating countless pieces of debris.
The burning MH370 engine has been recreated.
The rare pieces of debris found so far give some insight into how the plane crashed into the water. One of them is metal debris that washed up on the beach on Reunion Island.
MH370 debris found on Reunion Island.
Boeing then confirmed that the debris was the wing part of flight MH370. Crash investigator Peter Foley, said : “Some of the debris suggests that the plane crashed into the sea with a high degree of impact.”
However, this past July, investigators released their final report saying they were unable to determine what caused the plane to disappear. The Malaysian government claimed the plane was under manual control when it “deliberately” turned around and plunged into the Indian Ocean, killing 239 people. An international search operation that cost more than 0 million ended with no trace of the plane.