LAST TRACE

Hopes of MH370 breakthrough as experts say mystery sound heard by nuke sensor may be noise of doomed jet hitting water

Only a few pieces of debris from the doomed jet have ever been found

A MYSTERY underwater sound detected by a pressure monitor could be the last known trace of a doomed jet that vanished over a decade ago, researchers believe.

Malaysia Airlines' MH370 flight, with 239 people onboard, disappeared from radars as it flew into Vietnamese air space en route to Beijing.

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The Malaysia Airlines flight disappeared on March 8 with 239 people onboard, never to be seen again
A computer reenactment shows what MH370's final moments could have looked like as it plunged into the Southern Indian Ocean
Since 2014 only a few pieces of confirmed debris from the jet have ever been found

On March 24, 2014, 16 days after the plane went missing, the Malaysian Government concluded that "Flight MH370 ended in the Southern Indian Ocean".

Its disappearance sparked the biggest search in aviation history with the whereabouts of the jet still unknown to this day.

Now, researchers at Cardiff University have provided fresh hope for a new search after analysing over 100 hours of underwater audio from historical aircraft accidents and a submarine disappearance.

Experts believe that this analysis could finally solve the mystery of MH370.

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They have already pinpointed an underwater signal in the ocean that could have been caused by the impact of the jet hitting the waves.

The official MH370 narrative suggests the plane made a bizarre U-turn, flying across Malaysia, turning northwest at Penang Island and across the Andaman Sea.

Data from military radar Inmarsat satellite communications network revealed that the plane then flew until at least 8.19am, travelling south into the Southern Indian Ocean.

Many theories have since emerged about what happened to those onboard MH370 and where the jet's final resting place could be.

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Mathematician and engineer Dr Usama Kadri says a network of hydrophones used to monitor pressure changes in the ocean as part of a nuclear explosion detection system could be the answer.

Usama and his team trawled through 100 hours of data before looking at signals from the time that MH370 vanished over the Southern Indian Ocean.

There appeared to be one unidentified event in an area known as the Seventh Arc that was picked up at the Leeuiwn station.

The Seventh Arc is an area of the ocean where the last known satellite communication with MH370 occurred.

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