I don’t have live access to current news streams right now, but I can share the latest widely reported information about Air France Flight 447 up to the last updates I’ve seen.
Direct answer
- As of my last update, Air France Flight 447 disappeared over the Atlantic on June 1, 2009, en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, with all 228 people on board. The BEA (France’s air safety investigation agency) concluded in 2012 that the crash resulted from a combination of pitot tube icing causing inconsistent airspeed readings, autopilot disengagement, and crew response leading to an aerodynamic stall that was not recovered.[2][3]
Key topics you might want to explore
- Final BEA investigation findings: Why the airspeed indicators iced up, how the autopilot disengaged, and the stall recovery attempts that followed.[2]
- Timeline of events: From departure and loss of communication to the discovery of wreckage and the long underwater search that culminated in identifying the crash cause.[4][10][2]
- Wreckage recovery and search efforts: How wreckage and black boxes were found years after the crash, and the impact on aviation safety practices.[10][4]
- Aftermath and safety changes: Changes in pitot tube design, icing protection, and pilot training prompted by AF447 and similar incidents.[2]
Recommended sources for the latest details
- BEA final report on Air France Flight 447 for authoritative findings and conclusions.
- Britannica’s overview of what happened and subsequent investigations and legal considerations.
- Wikipedia’s Aircraft accident article for a consolidated timeline, technical factors, and investigation milestones.
If you’d like, tell me which aspect you want deeper. I can pull together a concise timeline, a plain-language summary of the final BEA report, or a comparison of the safety changes that followed AF447, with citations after each key point.
Sources
On June 1, 2009, while flying over the Atlantic Ocean from Rio de Janiero to Paris, Air France flight 447 disappeared. It would take almost two years and tens of millions of dollars to find the plane, its passengers and crew, and some answers about what happened to Air France 447.
www.britannica.comFlight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris began as an ordinary flight across the Atlantic, carrying passengers from 32 nations. But it ended in disaster.
www.telegraph.co.ukAir France Flight 447 (AF447/AFR447) was a scheduled international passenger flight from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Paris, France. On 1 June 2009, inconsistent ...
www.wikiwand.comA search team led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic located the wreckage of the Airbus jet some 3,900 meters (nearly 2.5 miles) below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean.
www.whoi.edu