loading...
aminoresin
aminoresin بازدید : 5 پنجشنبه 21 فروردین 1393 نظرات (0)


Hydrophones picking up the sounds can't determine what direction they're coming from, Fish said. Typically, a ship would tow the hydrophone back and forth over the search zone, ruling out areas without a signal and listening for when the signal is strongest, Fish said. His Bourne, Mass.-based company has been involved in several searches for aircraft under water.It may still take days to get a more precise location, he said.Klearfold plastic carton The hydrophone, which is pulled by a cable miles behind the boat, can swing back and forth with currents and can be difficult to control, he said.Many factors can interfere with the signal and make it harder to detect, Fish said. Temperature inversion layers known as thermoclines can bend or reflect sound waves. In one case, Fish's team wasn't able to hear a crashed helicopter's pinger beyond one-quarter mile because it had fallen beneath one of the craft's rotor blades.
The pinger should be detectable within about 2 nautical miles, Portale said.Sometimes, pingers become dislodged from the recorders, so undersea vehicles must photograph a wider area to locate them, Fish said.It also isn't clear how valuable the recorders will be to investigators if they are recovered, John Cox, president of Washington-based Safety Operating Systems, said in an interview.One of the boxes records four channels of sound from the cockpit on a two-hour loop. Since the plane flew for about seven hours after it turned off its planned course from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing and disappeared from radar,clear plastic tube it probably only captured the last two hours, said Cox, who teaches aviation safety and has been involved in several crash investigations."As far as the initial event goes, it's virtually impossible that it would be on the voice recorder," he said.

aminoresin بازدید : 14 پنجشنبه 21 فروردین 1393 نظرات (0)


Brochu couldn't comment on complaints of Ontario students "stealing" the election, or complaints alleging voter suppression — particularly by anglophone students denied the possibility of registering because a DGEQ employee was not convinced they were truly domiciled in Quebec."This was the first year for voting on campus," she said. "So it's all new and maybe it takes some getting used to. As for those who couldn't register to vote, I can't comment on that."Nor could she comment on the news that Robert Cutler, the president and CEO of Delmar International Inc., a customs broker and transport company, has offered a day off to his employees if the PQ loses.In an internal memo to staff — posted on Facebook Monday — Cutler says in the event of a PQ loss, Delmar will "celebrate by allowing every Canadian employee an additional vacation day this fiscal year."He goes on to say Delmar owners and shareholders are "extremely proud Canadians" strongly opposed to the "current" separatist PQ government.
"We believe in and support multiculturalism and freedom of religion!"Brochu said the DGE is aware of the incident but wouldn't comment as to the legality of Cutler's statement.Cutler could be subject to a fine of up to $20,000, however.Article 558 in the Quebec elections act states that anyone has violated the act if, "in order to obtain or because he has obtained a donation, loan, responsibility, job or other advantage ... incites someone to abstain from voting or vote for a certain candidate."It is not clear whether someone could be found in violation for offering an advantage to someone — a day off — in the event of a particular election result.

اطلاعات کاربری
  • فراموشی رمز عبور؟
  • آرشیو
    آمار سایت
  • کل مطالب : 2
  • کل نظرات : 1
  • افراد آنلاین : 1
  • تعداد اعضا : 0
  • آی پی امروز : 1
  • آی پی دیروز : 3
  • بازدید امروز : 2
  • باردید دیروز : 0
  • گوگل امروز : 0
  • گوگل دیروز : 0
  • بازدید هفته : 4
  • بازدید ماه : 5
  • بازدید سال : 64
  • بازدید کلی : 507