CHINA'S INPUT AND RESOLVE
Since the plane vanished, China has not only invested enormous resources into the search, but also served as a mainstay of the demanding mission.
As quickly as one day after the disappearance, Chinese rescue vessels arrived at the search site. As of now, China has dispatched 19 vessels and 13 planes and mobilized 21 satellites to help with the search, including icebreaker Xuelong, which was returning from its scientific mission in the Antarctic.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has pledged on several occasions that the search efforts will continue as long as there is a gleam of hope, despite the immense difficulties.
"We have not forgotten them. We will continue to make all possible efforts to find them," Xi said in his 2015 New Year message.
WRECKAGE FROM LA REUNION
While the search mission forged ahead some 1,800 km off Australia's western coast, a piece of aircraft debris was found on July 29 on a beach of the French island of La Reunion, which is located near the eastern coast of Africa and about 4,000 km away from Perth.
The object has turned out to a flaperon -- a small, lightweight piece attached to the wing -- which aviation experts and oceanographers believe could have stayed afloat while other, heavier pieces of the aircraft had sunk.
A witness reportedly described the piece as "partly encrusted with shells," indicating a long time under water.
The wreckage was transferred to Toulouse, France, where it was examined at a top-notch aviation lab. Malaysia has sent investigators to both La Reunion and Toulouse, while French police are searching La Reunion's coast for more debris.
On Thursday, Malaysia's prime minister announced that the found flaperon was confirmed to be from MH370.
"Today, 515 days since the plane disappeared, it is with a heavy heart that I must tell you that an international team of experts have conclusively confirmed that the aircraft debris found on Reunion Island is indeed from MH370," Najib said.
UNSOLVED MYSTERY, UNFINISHED SEARCH
Finding a piece of the missing plane is far from being enough to unravel one of the most mysterious incidents in human aviation history.
The exact location of the plane's crash remains unknown. A disheartening truth is that finding a flaperon belonging to MH370 might not help locate the aircraft.
The plane has fallen into the ocean and remained there for more than 500 days. The long time span, plus complicated and unpredictable currents of the Indian Ocean, makes recreating the paths of the found wreckage very difficult.
In addition, investigators and the aviation industry are still puzzled by what caused the plane crash, as its black box recorders, whose batteries have already expired, are yet to be retrieved.
Another question is what caused the plane to suddenly divert from its original course.
Najib told the public one week after the flight's disappearance that the deviation was deliberate, but Malaysia Airlines later ruled out the possibility of a pre-planned hijack attempt.
Finding a piece of MH370 wreckage is indeed a major breakthrough, but numerous questions remain to be answered. For the vanished lives, and for the bereft families, the search -- both for the aircraft and for the truth -- continues.