File National Geographic

UNITED STATES (VOP TODAY NEWS) – A new documentary about the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has revealed that the plane ended with a deadly “spiral fall” in which it crashed into water, causing it to crash.

The Boeing 777 was on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, carrying 239 passengers, including 12 crew members, when it derailed and then flew south across the Indian Ocean until its fuel ran out.

In their July report, the Malaysian investigators were unable to determine the ultimate cause of the flight’s disappearance when it turned off and traveled thousands of miles before landing in the Indian Ocean.

Investigators also did not have enough information to determine whether the aircraft crashed into the air or after it fell into the ocean.

Amidst the ambiguity surrounding MH370, the new National Geographic film on Thursday, as part of its “Drying the Ocean” series, tried to break the scene.

According to the film – which was revealed by the newspaper “Independent” – the British believed that the aircraft was on the position of the autopilot, and that the right engine was the first to ignite because of the depletion of fuel.

While the autopilot was trying to explain that the right engine was on fire, the left engine also stopped working, and pilots expected the plane to drift left after two minutes.

The authors expect the plane to fly into a spiral spiral known scientifically as the “deadly whirlpool”.

The plane veered 45 degrees left, then fell into the vortex, which means in marine science a large range of circular ocean currents, especially those affected by large wind movements.

The documentary includes imaginative images of what the seabed look like if it is dried up, and displays the plane, which is broken and stable at the bottom of the ocean.

On May 29, Malaysia halted a three-month search by Ocean Infinity, covering an area of ​​112,000 square kilometers in the South Indian Ocean, and found no significant results.

“You are doing well, the Malaysian flight 370,” said Zahari Ahmed Shah, the pilot of the plane as she left Malaysian airspace.