Don't look down! Daredevil skydiver leaps 13 miles from the edge of space at
354mph (and it takes him just 8 minutes to hit the ground)
By Associated Press and Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 02:03 GMT, 16 March 2012 |
UPDATED: 09:40 GMT, 16 March 2012
Skydiving daredevil Felix Baumgartner is more
than halfway toward his goal of setting a world record for the highest
jump.
He's aiming for nearly 23 miles this summer.
The record is 19.5 miles.
Mr Baumgartner lifted off Thursday for a test
jump from Roswell, New Mexico, aboard a 100-foot helium balloon. He rode inside
a pressurized capsule to 71,581 feet - 13.6 miles - and then jumped.
New heights: Felix Baumgartner is practicing for his upcoming record-breaking
jump from 23 miles in the air
He parachuted to a safe landing, according to
project spokeswoman Trish Medalen.
?The view is amazing, way better than I
thought,? Mr Baumgartner said after the practice jump, in remarks provided by
his representatives.
Thursday's rehearsal was a test of his
capsule, full-pressure suit, parachutes and other systems.
A mini Mission Control - fashioned after
NASA's - monitored his flight.
Mr Baumgartner reached speeds of up to 364.4
mph Thursday and was in free fall for three minutes and 43 seconds, before
pulling his parachute cords. The entire jump lasted eight minutes and eight
seconds.
With Thursday's successful test, Mr
Baumgartner is believed to be only the third person ever to jump from such a
high altitude and free fall to a safe landing, and the first in a
half-century.
?I'm now a member of a pretty small club,? he
said.
When the 42-year-old Austrian known as
?Fearless Felix? leaps from 120,000 feet in a few months, he expects to break
the sound barrier as he falls through the stratosphere at supersonic speed.
There's virtually no atmosphere that far up,
making it extremely hostile to humans, thus the need for a pressure suit and
oxygen supply.
Support team: Mr Baumgartner (left), seen here with engineer Mike Todd, is
also being assisted by the man whose record he is attempting to break
The record for the highest free fall is held
by Joe Kittinger, a retired Air Force officer from Florida. He jumped from
102,800 feet - 19.5 miles - in 1960.
Mr Baumgartner is out to beat that record.
He plans one more dry run - jumping from
90,000 feet - before attempting the full 120,000 feet. The launch window opens
in July and extends until the beginning of
October.
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