At the end of MH370, jump out of the sky and head straight into the sea!

With 3D technology, National Geographic has recreated the dreadful final moments of MH370 when the plane flew in a spiral, bouncing out of the sky before crashing into the Indian Ocean.

According to the British Daily Star newspaper, the final scary moments of MH370, missing on March 8, 2014 on the way to Beijing from Kuala Lumper were re-shown in a National Geographic 3D documentary called "Drain The Oceans ".

Picture 1 of At the end of MH370, jump out of the sky and head straight into the sea!
The moment MH370 plunges into the sea is recreated in the 3D documentary of National Geographic.

The film brings together the evidence surrounding the mysterious disappearance of MH370 and concludes that the plane flew in a spiral, spurting out of the sky before running out of fuel and heading straight into the sea.

Such evidence includes MH370 continuing to exchange signals with satellites, called Inmarsat, though disappearing from radar screens. Experts used this clue to judge the direction of MH370's movement. Accordingly, MH370 is supposed to fly south and fly another six hours before crashing into the Indian Ocean.

More detailed analysis showed that MH370 had lowered altitude quickly, probably due to running out of fuel, the right engine of the plane caught fire first, causing the plane to tilt to the left, until the second engine caught fire after a few minutes. Losing power, running out of fuel, the autopilot stopped working, the ill-fated plane flew in a spiral and plunged straight into the Indian Ocean, creating numerous fragments.

Picture 2 of At the end of MH370, jump out of the sky and head straight into the sea!
The ignited MH370 engine is reproduced.

Rare fragments found so far reveal somewhat how the plane crashed into the water. One of them was a metal fragment that drifted to the coast on Reunion Island.

Picture 3 of At the end of MH370, jump out of the sky and head straight into the sea!
Fragment MH370 was found on Reunion Island.

Boeing then confirmed the debris was the extra wing of the aircraft MH370. Peter Foley, an accident investigator, said : 'Some debris showed that the plane crashed into the sea with a very high level of impact.

However, in July, investigators published the final report saying they could not determine what caused the plane to disappear. The Malaysian government declared the aircraft under manual control when it "intentionally" turned its head and plunged into the Indian Ocean, killing 239 people. The international search campaign costing more than US $ 120 million has ended without a trace of the aircraft.