According to BBC news, the Malaysian government has released the raw data used to determine that the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 with 239 passengers on board, mostly Chinese nationals, which went missing on 8 March as it flew from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, crashed into the southern Indian Ocean.
The data was first released to relatives of passengers, who have been asking for greater transparency, before copies were also provided to media.
The document released on Tuesday comprises 47 pages of data, plus notes, from British firm Inmarsat.
The sate lite data released includes the hourly "handshakes" between the plane and a communications satellite that led investigators to conclude that the plane ended its journey far off Australia.
"Inmarsat and the DCA have been working for the release of the data communication logs and the technical description of the analysis," Malaysia's civil aviation authority said in a statement.
BBC science correspondent Jonathan Amos says although the data is now open for scrutiny, it would be a surprise if something new turns up.
Independent teams have already assessed it and come to the same conclusion: MH370 lies somewhere far off the coast of western Australia, he says.
The Australian government is now preparing for a fresh deep-sea search using commercially-contracted equipment.
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