Surface search Flight 447 was due to pass from Brazilian airspace into
Senegalese airspace around 02:20 (UTC) on 1 June, and then into
Cape Verdean airspace at roughly 03:45. Shortly after 04:00, when the flight had failed to contact air traffic control in either Senegal or Cape Verde, the controller in Senegal attempted to contact the aircraft. When he received no response, he asked the crew of another Air France flight (AF459) to try to contact AF447; this was also met with no success. After further attempts to contact Flight 447 were unsuccessful, an aerial search for the missing Airbus commenced from both sides of the Atlantic.
Brazilian Air Force aircraft from the
archipelago of
Fernando de Noronha and French reconnaissance aircraft based in
Dakar, Senegal, led the search. They were assisted by a
Casa 235 maritime patrol aircraft from Spain and a
United States Navy Lockheed Martin
P-3 Orion anti-submarine warfare and maritime patrol aircraft. By early afternoon on 1 June, officials with Air France and the
French government had already presumed the aircraft had been lost with no survivors. An Air France spokesperson told ''
L'Express'' that "no hope for survivors" remained, and
French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced almost no chance existed for anyone to have survived. On 2 June at 15:20 (UTC), a Brazilian Air Force
Embraer R-99A spotted wreckage and signs of oil, possibly
jet fuel, strewn along a band north-east of Fernando de Noronha Island, near the
Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago. The sighted wreckage included an aircraft seat, an orange buoy, a barrel, and "white pieces and electrical conductors". Later that day, after meeting with relatives of the Brazilians on the aircraft,
Brazilian Defence Minister Nelson Jobim announced that the Air Force believed the wreckage was from Flight 447. Brazilian vice-president
José Alencar (acting as president since
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was out of the country) declared three days of
official mourning. Also on 2 June, two
French Navy vessels, the frigate and helicopter-carrier
Mistral, were
en route to the suspected crash site. Other ships sent to the site included the French research vessel
Pourquoi Pas?, equipped with two minisubmarines able to descend to , since the area of the Atlantic in which the aircraft went down was thought to be as deep as . On 3 June, the first Brazilian Navy (the "Marinha do Brasil" or MB) ship, the
patrol boat , reached the area in which the first debris was spotted. The Brazilian Navy sent a total of five ships to the debris site; the
frigate Constituição and the
corvette Caboclo were scheduled to reach the area on 4 June, the frigate
Bosísio on 6 June and the
replenishment oiler Almirante Gastão Motta on 7 June. Early on 6 June 2009, five days after Flight 447 disappeared, two male bodies, the first to be recovered from the crashed aircraft, were brought on board the
Caboclo along with a seat, a nylon backpack containing a computer and vaccination card, and a leather briefcase containing a boarding pass for the Air France flight. Initially, media (including
The Boston Globe, the
Los Angeles Times, and the
Chicago Tribune) cited unnamed investigators in their reporting that the recovered bodies were naked, which implied the plane had broken up at high altitude. However, the notion that the aircraft fragmented while airborne ultimately was refuted by investigators. At this point, on the evidence of the recovered bodies and materials, investigators confirmed the plane had crashed, killing everyone on board. The following day, 7 June, search crews recovered the Airbus's
vertical stabilizer, the first major piece of wreckage to be discovered. Pictures of this part being lifted onto the
Constituição became a poignant symbol of the loss of the Air France craft. The search and recovery effort reached its peak over the next week or so, as the number of personnel mobilized by the Brazilian military exceeded 1100. Fifteen aircraft (including two helicopters) were devoted to the search mission. The Brazilian Air Force Embraer R99 flew for more than 100 hours, and electronically scanned more than of ocean. Other aircraft involved in the search scanned, visually, of ocean and were used to direct Navy vessels involved in the recovery effort. They were transported to shore, first by the frigates
Constituição and
Bosísio to Fernando de Noronha, and thereafter by air to
Recife for identification. Pathologists identified all 50 bodies recovered from the crash site, including that of the captain, by using dental records and fingerprints. The search teams logged the time and location of every find in a database which, by the time the search ended on 26 June, catalogued 640 items of debris from the aircraft. The BEA documented the timeline of discoveries in its first interim report.
Underwater search On 5 June 2009, the French
nuclear submarine Émeraude was dispatched to the crash zone, arriving in the area on the 10th. Its mission was to assist in the search for the missing
flight recorders or "black boxes" that might be located at great depth. The submarine would use its
sonar to listen for the ultrasonic signal emitted by the black boxes' "
pingers", covering per day. The
Émeraude was to work with the
mini-sub Nautile, which can descend to the
ocean floor. The French submarines would be aided by two U.S.
underwater audio devices capable of picking up signals at a depth of . relief map of the part of Atlantic Ocean into which Air France Flight 447 crashed. Image shows two different data sets with different resolution. Following the end of the search for bodies, the search continued for the Airbus's "black boxes"—the
Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) and the
Flight Data Recorder (FDR). French
Bureau of Enquiry and Analysis for Civil Aviation Safety (BEA) chief
Paul-Louis Arslanian said that he was not optimistic about finding them since they might have been under as much as of water, and the terrain under this portion of the ocean was very rugged. Investigators were hoping to find the aircraft's lower aft section, for that was where the recorders were located. Although France had never recovered a flight recorder from such depths, The Air France flight recorders were fitted with water-activated acoustic underwater locator beacons or "pingers", which should have remained active for at least 30 days, giving searchers that much time to locate the origin of the signals. France requested two "towed pinger locator hydrophones" from the United States Navy to help find the aircraft. The French nuclear submarine and two French-contracted ships (the
Fairmount Expedition and the
Fairmount Glacier, towing the
U.S. Navy listening devices) trawled a search area with a radius of , centred on the aircraft's last known position. By mid-July, recovery of the black boxes still had not been announced. The finite beacon battery life meant that, as the time since the crash elapsed, the likelihood of location diminished. In late July, the search for the black boxes entered its second phase, with a French research vessel resuming the search using a towed sonar array. The second phase of the search ended on 20 August without finding wreckage within a radius of the last position, as reported at 02:10. The third phase of the search for the recorders lasted from 2 April until 24 May 2010, and was conducted by two ships, the
Anne Candies and the
Seabed Worker. The
Anne Candies towed a U.S. Navy sonar array, while the
Seabed Worker operated three
robot submarines AUV ABYSS (a
REMUS AUV type). Air France and Airbus jointly funded the third phase of the search. The search covered an area of , mostly to the north and north-west of the aircraft's last known position. The search area had been drawn up by oceanographers from France, Russia, Great Britain and the United States combining data on the location of floating bodies and wreckage, and currents in the mid-Atlantic in the days immediately after the crash. A smaller area to the south-west was also searched, based on a re-analysis of sonar recordings made by
Émeraude the previous year. The third phase of the search ended on 24 May 2010 without any success, though the BEA says that the search 'nearly' covered the whole area drawn up by investigators. was assigned to assist in the recovery of materials from the ocean floor. Within a week of resuming of the search operation, on 3 April 2011, a team led by the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution operating full ocean depth
autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) owned by the Waitt Institute discovered, by means of
sidescan sonar, a large portion of the debris field from flight AF447. Other items found were engines, wing parts and the
landing gear. The debris field was described as "quite compact", measuring and a short distance north of where pieces of wreckage had been recovered previously, suggesting the aircraft hit the water largely intact. The French Ecology and Transportation Minister
Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet stated the bodies and wreckage would be brought to the surface and taken to France for examination and identification. The French government chartered the
Île de Sein to recover the flight recorders from the wreckage. An American Remora 6000
remotely operated vehicle (ROV) and operations crew from
Phoenix International experienced in the recovery of aircraft for the
United States Navy were on board the
Île de Sein.
Île de Sein arrived at the crash site on 26 April, and during its first dive, the Remora 6000 found the flight data recorder chassis, although without the crash-survivable memory unit. On 1 May the memory unit was found and lifted on board the
Île de Sein by the ROV. The aircraft's cockpit voice recorder was found on 2 May 2011, and was raised and brought on board the
Île de Sein the following day. On 7 May, the flight recorders, under judicial seal, were taken aboard the French Navy patrol boat
La Capricieuse for transfer to the port of
Cayenne. From there they were transported by air to the BEA's office in
Le Bourget near Paris for data download and analysis. One engine and the
avionics bay, containing onboard computers, had also been raised. By 15 May, all the data from both the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder had been downloaded. The data was analysed over the following weeks, and the findings published in the third interim report at the end of July. The entire download was filmed and recorded. The search ended with the remaining 74 bodies still not recovered. ==Investigation and safety improvements==