Posted on 02/09/2010 7:56:11 PM PST by Chi-townChief
The Red Bull Stratos team has kept itself under wraps until todays press conference at the New York Academy of Sciences in NYC. The ambitious project marks the first major attempt at breaking an old but daunting skydiving record, one that starts at the edge of space.
In 1960, U.S. Air Force Captain Joe Kittinger stepped out of a capsule at 102,800 feet above the Earths surface and, in just minutes returned to the surface by simply falling. The falling part was easy. The surviving part was nothis first jump, from the Excelsior I module nearly ended in disaster when a parachute cord wrapped around his neck. His main chute, attached to a timer, deployed and saved him. In Excelsior III, he failed to report a malfunctioning glove and nearly lost his hand to depressurization. But his record-breaking jump was successful, and having fulfilled its mission, the Air Force stopped jumping from record heights.
His would-be successor is cut from the same mold, but has traveled a far different road. Felix Baumgartner wears two tattoosone, on his arm that says Born to Fly and another on his back, 502, that marks his BASE-jumping codeand has built a career out of from skydiving with frightening regularity and launching himself from architectural landmarks like the Gold Gate Bridge and Taipei 101 with a parachute on his back. He is a daredevil, but according to Kittinger and the rest of the Red Bull Stratos team, he is a calculating one that has survived thousands of skydives by knowing how to prepare and when to back away from a jump.
So then, is this jump a stunt? In a way, it is. This is sponsored by Red Bull, after all, which has associated itself with extreme, entertaining, and daring sporting endeavors for the last decade or so, from the Dakar Rally to snowboard racing.
But with people like Art Thompson, a veteran aerospace engineer who helped develop the B-2 bomber, and Jonathan Clark, a six-time Space Shuttle crew surgeon and advisor to the National Space Biomedical Research Institute, on board to develop the technology and training necessary to perform a jump from 120,000 feet, this attempt likely to mean much more than a stunt for three big reasons:
1) Mach 1. Blackbird SR-71 pilot Bill Weaver was forcibly ejected from his shattered plane at more than Mach 3. His copilot died in the accident. Weaver blacked out, but woke and lived to tell the tale of the only person to have traveled at more than Mach 1 in the Earths atmosphere in just a flight suit. Baumgartner, if he succeeds, will be the second, achieving between Mach 1 and 1.2 during his fall. Kittinger didnt quite achieve Mach 1, owing to his lower jump height. A lot can go wrong. Testing is obviously sparse, so this jump will add valuable data to the potential survival chances for those returning to the ground from space in just a pressurized suit.
2) Data collection and spacesuit design. Because Baumgartner will be traveling in a near vacuum, and because his suit will be filled with nearly pure oxygen, the use of traditional electronics and sensors will be fraught with hazard. According to Thompson, the technology necessary to collect biometric data they are hoping to get necessitated new, innovative solutions. In addition to physiological data, GPS, cameras, and other systems will be operating in Baumgartners suit continuously. Suit design is notoriously difficult, and the Red Bull Stratos team needed to heavily redesign the emergency suits already in use by NASA aboard the Space Shuttle. Greater mobility was necessary, but so was the incorporation of highly-aerodynamic drogue parachutes.
3) Commercial sponsorship. If efforts like SpaceX and Virgin Galactic are an indication of whats in store for space travel, then Red Bull Stratos is just another necessary step on the road toward safe space travel for all humans.
Much is still under a blanket. The dates for the jumps havent been announced. The locations for the jumps havent been revealed. The cost of the project, while assumed to be in the millions, has also been kept top secret.
Theres a good reason why a jump like this hasnt been attempted very often. A lot could go wrong. Many efforts literally dont get off the ground. The few successes have occurred with the support of the U.S. Air Force or Russias own military might: in 1962, Eugene Andreev jumped from 85,400 feet.
Baumgartner must complete several jumps at steadily escalating heights before attempting the record. Although he is reportedly comfortable in the pressure suit, he has yet to jump from more than 33,000 feet (which was during his flight across the English Channel). Sudden depressurization, unintentional spins, electrical or mechanical malfunctions, and the hazards of aerodynamics around the sound barrier all threaten to snuff out Baumgartners attempt.
But, as was evident at todays announcement, the 40-year-old is confident: he has already earned his pilots license, and after his successful jump, which will supposedly take place later this year, he will fight fires from the cockpit of a helicopter. Also dangerous, he admitted, but less risky by far than jumping from space.
Would you skydive from space? Email me at paul.livingstone@advantagemedia.com.
he is “the one” we’ve been waiting for.
Trash packin ping !.......:o)
Who would even fly the plane that high? Remember The Right Stuff?
The others who attempted those jumps died, if memory serves. Thanks Chi-townChief.
is 120,000 feet really the “edge of space”? thats what like 22 miles?
I always thought 40 miles was the cut-off but apparently it’s 100,000 feet.
He might bearn epp.
Yeah I remember that too. When I once hauled jumpers for a living we would always make a wind pass over the jump site and toss out a roll of toilet paper. It would unspool and float downward so the Jumpers could tell the winds and their estimated drift before they exited the plane. One would think he might have tossed something out too... ya know, just incase.
Oh I see—he went up in a balloon and a capsule. Smart, these people.
How does he get to that altitude?
Yes. The atmosphere is very small, relative to the size of the Earth. If the Earth was the size of a gumball, the atmosphere would be thinner than a cellophane wrapper. Mount Everest is 27,000 feet above sea level and there’s almost no oxygen up there.
In a heartbeat.
It’s called ‘near space.’ Depending on who you talk to space starts at either 50 miles or 62.5 miles (100km).
I always thought the magic number was 50 miles. I could be wrong.
Preposition overload.
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