Once any wreckage is found, then begins the slow process of trying to find out how Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 ended up where it did.
Authorities are still searching for signs of any objects seen about 2,500km off the coast of Western Australia that may be wreckage from the flight.
Two objects – one 24 metres in size, the other smaller at five metres – were identified in Australian satellite images. It shows that satellite imagery may be helpful in such a wide area searches, despite the earlier images of debris from a Chinese satellite proving to be false.
Satellite imagery shows the largest 24 metre size object, which may be possible debris from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
If any wreckage is found by RAAF search aircraft and confirmed to be from flight MH370, it will be a major breakthrough in the hunt for an aircraft that has been missing since it left Kuala Lumpur on Saturday 8 March on its regular flight to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew on board.
The hunt for clues
What happens next, if the wreckage is found to have been from MH370, is that search planners will try to extrapolate its journey backwards in time.
Based on best estimates of ocean currents in the area, they will try to estimate where the wreckage might have begun to drift and possible tracks the aircraft may have flown to get to the southern Indian Ocean after radar contact was lost.