Gray, an experienced sailor, owned a sailboat. On January 28, 2007, he failed to return from a short solo trip to scatter his mother's ashes at the
Farallon Islands near
San Francisco. The weather was clear, and no distress call was received, nor was any signal detected from the boat's automatic
Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacon. A four-day
Coast Guard search using planes, helicopters, and boats found nothing. On February 1, 2007, the
DigitalGlobe satellite scanned the area and the thousands of images were posted to
Amazon Mechanical Turk. Students, colleagues, and friends of Gray, and computer scientists around the world formed a "Jim Gray Group" to study these images for clues. On February 16 this search was suspended, and an underwater search using sophisticated equipment ended May 31. Marine search expert Bob Bilger explains that the type of boat used by Gray, a
C&C 40 is vulnerable to hull damage, and can sink as quickly as in 30 seconds, also taking any equipment with it, not leaving any loose debris. The
University of California, Berkeley and Gray's family hosted a tribute on May 31, 2008. Five years after the disappearance, Carnes petitioned a court to have her husband declared dead and on January 28, 2012, Gray was
declared legally dead. In 2012, Carnes co-authored a paper on coping with
ambiguous loss. In 2014, in conjunction with the disappearance of
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, CNN interviewed Carnes. At the time, she lived with her elderly mother who was suffering from dementia in Wisconsin. ==Legacy==