Nearly a week after Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 went missing,
officials are still at a loss for what happened to the jetliner carrying
239 people.
What the fate and the location of the plane remains a mystery,
investigators have been able to reconstruct is a timeline of the plane's
last contacts.
- 12:41 a.m.: Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 takes off from Kuala
Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia heading for Beijing, China. The
plane shows up on radar two minutes after taking off.
- 1:07 a.m.: The last automated data transmission is sent
from the plane. U.S officials told ABC News they believe that sometime
after this transmission the data reporting system was shut down.
Sometime after this transmission Kuala Lumpur's air traffic control
tells the plane's pilot they are handing off to air traffic control
based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The pilot responds, "All right. Good
night."
- 1:21 a.m.: The plane's transponder, which transmits
location and altitude, shuts down. Sources told ABC News that U.S.
officials are “convinced that there was a manual intervention.”
- 1:22 a.m.: MH370 should have come to the navigational
way-point called Igari point. Before it reached this point, Vietnamese
air traffic control noticed they had lost contact with MH370, according
to the Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority.
- 1:30 a.m.: The last moment that the plane was seen by Malaysian radar.
- 1:38 a.m.: Air traffic control in Ho Chi Minh City informs
Kuala Lumpur air traffic control about the signal loss.
Ho Chi Minh City asks two other planes to contact MH370. Neither plane
is able to raise the pilot of MH370. At least of the planes report
getting a “buzz signal” and no voices, then losing the signal.
- 2:15 a.m.: A Malaysian military defense radar pick up a
plane that is hundreds of miles west of MH370’s last contact point. It’s
unclear if that is the missing plane.
- Following hours: In the hours after contact was lost MH370
"pings" a satellite several times. It's not clear if those pings
include data that could reveal the plane's location.
- 6:32 a.m.: A broadcast call was made from Kuala Lumpur's
air traffic control on emergency frequencies asking MH370 to call them.
- 6:51 a.m.: A broadcast call was made from Ho Chi Minh City's air traffic control on emergency frequencies asking MH370 to call them.


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