Supersonic Skydiving 58
Almost six years ago, we talked about the story of Michel Fournier, a retired French army officer who planned to skydive from a height of 25 miles. That plan and a subsequent attempt one year later both failed due to "technical and weather-related problems." Now, at the age of 64, Fournier is set to try again. If everything goes right, his speed will approach 1,000 miles per hour during the early stages of his 15-minute descent. Quoting the NYTimes:
"Fournier faces plenty of perils. Above 40,000 feet, there is not enough oxygen to breathe in the frigid air. He could experience a fatal embolism. And 12 miles up, should his protective systems fail, his blood could begin to boil because of the air pressure, said Henri Marotte, a professor of physiology at the University of Paris and a member of Fournier's team. 'If the human body were exposed at very high altitude, the loss of consciousness is very fast, in five seconds,' Marotte said. 'Brain damage, in three or four minutes.'"
Yet another thing... (Score:2, Informative)
I for one think that it is an interesting idea if they can reliably pull it off.
Re:Yet another thing... (Score:4, Interesting)
Something like this will never be reliably pulled off. The challenges in reaching that altitude are immense, the skydive itself very dangerous, and the costs prohibitive. Many people have been trying to break Joseph Kittinger's 102,800 jump since he did it, and nobody has succeeded. That was in 1960. Everybody who's tried has either died, or postponed their plans due to danger.
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Looks like fun ! You first...
bets anyone? (Score:2)
Press: How was the trip? What did you experience?
Fournier: It was pretty exciting.
Press: What went through your mind as you were falling?
Fournier: I remembered that I had forgot to shut the garage door at home at one point.
blah blah blah.....
Re:bets anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
Reporter: So, what did you think as you took that fall and broke every bone in your body?
Evil:
More savings for NASA (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:More savings for NASA (Score:5, Funny)
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Good Luck, Old News (Score:3, Informative)
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Been there, Done that.
And haven't been back in almost 50 years. And if you'd bothered to RTFA, you'd see they talk about Kittinger's jump; in fact, Fournier has been in regular contact with him and he supports Fournier's jump.
More to the point, this almost 25% higher than that one, about 3.7 miles more.
Besides, given how incredible the footage from the first jump [youtube.com] turned out, I'd love to see this one in full HD.
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And not to dick on
Re:Good Luck, Old News (Score:4, Informative)
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http://www.warprecords.com/dayvancowboy/ [warprecords.com]
Now with the music.
Re-entry (Score:3, Interesting)
"I can't think of a bigger stunt, other than perhaps trying to re-enter the earth's atmosphere with just your body, and I think we're a long way away from that."
It sounds pretty feasible to me. Assuming the jump is from above the atmosphere but not from orbit, the re-entry heating is fairly small (SpaceShipOne had little to no heat-shielding). Given a spacesuit and some sort of partially-rigid insulating blanket (like the old 'astronaut's inflatable lifeboat' idea), it's probably only a matter of time until someone jumps out of a suborbital craft.
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I wonder if the issue with reentry from orbit is the heat generated when scrubbing off the horizontal velocity. Basically, the space shuttle is aerobraking [wikipedia.org].
Since he doesn't have to establish or maintain an orbit maybe he'll have little or no horizontal velocity
When I jumped from a hot-air balloon (from 5,000 feet), there was no forward velocity. At first, there was only a little air resistance. Then, as I accelerated due to gravity, I had mo
How old is this guy?... Really?! (Score:5, Funny)
Many years from now.
Will you still be sending me a valentine,
Birthday greetings, bottle of wine.
If I'd been setting several new records by skydiving from the edge of space, breaking the sound barrier for the first time in history and risking death in several interesting and horrible ways
Would you lock the door?
Will you still need me, will you still feed me,
When I'm sixty-four.
Elaborate Suicide (Score:2, Insightful)
When birds go flying at the speed of sound... (Score:1)
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He is possibly correct. At high altitude, the temperature drops and the speed of sound drops off. However at very high altitudes, there is an increase in atmospheric temperature that reverses the results from the formulae. At 25 miles the temperature can be up to 18 degrees Celsius that places sound speed at 336m/s. All depends how fast the drop-off is versus his speed/acceleration and atmospheric density.
Mach Calculations [fiu.edu]. Temperature v Altitude [pbs.org].
Correct you... (Score:2)
High Alttitude Skydiving video... (Score:1)
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Skydiving into water (Score:2)
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What do you mean? Are parachutes not fragile or not expensive or are they cheap to rent or do they have much better used value than I think or what? The first link from a Google search for parachute is the parachuteshop.com which lists new setups at about $4000 and a used main canopy at $1200. That leaves plenty of room for reducing cost. I'd estimate that a chute with 1/4 the area could be made of fabric four times thicker and still come in a frac
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Did he make it? (Score:1)
We'll know tomorrow... (Score:1)
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Bruno Gouvy... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm still curious as to whether this was doable or not. It would still take at least 4500 meters of free fall to go to Mach one... And letting go of the handles must be a bitch of a slap in the face!
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It's all about air friction and terminal velocity: a normal falling body reaches about 200km/h at normal pressure. Drop a heavy and profiled 'bullet' and there's no real limit to the speed it can reach.
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Halo? (Score:1)
Hearing Protection (Score:1)
I for one (Score:1)
Supersonic (Score:2)
With this trick he'll be the master of his domain!
Indeed, this feat will transform the field of skydiving forever!
*dodges rotten fruit*
chirp...chirp...chirp... (Score:3, Funny)
Re-scheduled to tomorrow (Tuesday27/05) morning (Score:1)
It has been rescheduled for tomorrow when weather conditions are forecast to be much better.
Put off until tomorrow (Score:1)
Unbelievable! He lost his balloon! (Score:1)
French skydiver's hopes deflate as balloon escapes Updated Tue. May. 27 2008 8:06 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff
French skydiver Michel Fournier's massive helium balloon appeared to break free from its moorings Tuesday, soaring into the sky and deflating his hopes to set a new world record for highest jump. It was the second straight day that Fournier's hopes were cut short.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080526/skydiver_freefall_080527/20080527?hub=CanadaAM [www.ctv.ca]
Jump failed today b/c balloon left w/o Fournier (Score:1)