ORIGINAL: The Guardian / EFE
Dominic Rushe in New York
Sunday 14 October 2012
Austrian skydiver jumped from 24 miles above New Mexico, falling at speeds up to 725mph in bid to break sound barrier
Photo: Red Bull Stratos |
Felix Baumgartner in the capsule on a screen at mission control center during the final manned flight in Roswell, New Mexico. Photograph: Reuters |
In 10 heart-stopping minutes on Sunday Felix Baumgartner leapt fromspace, falling to earth in a record breaking parachute jump 24 miles (38.6 km) above New Mexico.
Baumgartner, a man for whom the term adrenaline junkie hardly does justice, landed on the run in Roswell, New Mexico, after plunging from a capsule that had pulled him 127,000ft (m)above the planet, a new world record. He fell to earth at speeds reaching 725mph.
Cheers broke out as Baumgartner, 43, jumped from a tiny shelf outside the 11-by-8-foot (3.3-by-2.4 metre) fiberglass and acrylic capsule that was carried to 128,000 feet by an enormous balloon.
"We love you Felix!" screamed the crowd as he plunged through the stratosphere. "My visor is fogging up," he gasped over the radio and he fell through the air moments before his parachute opened to the applause of the crowd on the ground, including his teary-eyed mother, father and girlfriend, watching on monitors miles below.
He landed about 10 minutes later, having broken the world record for the highest altitude jump by a skydiver, sponsors said.
As he prepared to jump from the pressurized capsule, Baumgartner went through a checklist of 40 items with project adviser Joe Kittinger, holder of a 19-mile high altitude parachute jump record that Baumgartner hopes to smash.
He checked through an equipment list from his seat and expressed concern that his astronaut-like helmet was not heating properly.
"This is very serious, Joe," said Baumgartner as the capsule, designed to remain at 55 degrees Fahrenheit ascended in skies where temperatures were expected to plunge below -91.8 F (-67.8 C), according to the project's website.
"Sometimes it's getting foggy when I exhale. ... I do not feel heat."
Baumgartner's ascent into the stratosphere took about 2 1/2 hours.
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