Still there were people out there wanna push their self out of limit.
Salute him and congrates to him.
Felix Baumgartner: Supersonic Skydive 'Like Swimming Without Touching the Water'
video and write up from abcnews.com
"Fearless"
Felix Baumgartner's supersonic skydive from 24 miles above the New Mexico desert was a rousing success,
and the Austrian daredevil has described his speed of sound shattering descent
as "like swimming without touching the water."
For a terror-inducing 4 minutes and 20 seconds Baumgartner freefalls, his body plummeting toward the earth at 833 miles an hour. Baumgartner finally managed to regain control, and deploy his parachute. He somehow managed to land perfectly on his feet in the New Mexico desert.
"It's like swimming without
touching the water, and it's hard because every time it turns you around you
have to figure out what to do. So I was sticking my arm out then it became
worse," he said. "I had a lot of pressure in my head. But I didn't
feel like I was passing out. I was still feeling ok, I -- I thought, 'I can
handle the situation.' And I did."
Dangling from a 55-story balloon with
a capsule beneath, which took two and a half hours to reach the edge of space,
the skydiver and B.A.S.E. jumper leapt after getting the okay from the only
voice he heard during his ascent – that of 84-year-old Joe Kittinger, a former
air force pilot who in 1960 set the record for longest skydive.
"There it is the world is out
there," Kittinger said to Felix as he looked down at Earth below.
"Our guardian angel will take care of you." Baumgartner, 43, then
disconnected himself from the capsule, put his hands on the capsule's railing –
and then took the leap. He began his fall from 24 miles above -- four times
higher than most passenger jets fly.
During the fee fall, Baumgartner was
plummeting so fast he was barely a speck on the infrared camera tracking him.
For 35 seconds of the fall, he was spinning out of control -- something his
team feared could cause him to lose consciousness.
"It started pretty good because
my exit was perfect. I did exactly what I was supposed to do, and then I was
falling over," Baumgartner said, once safely on the ground. "It
looked like for a second that I was going to tumble two more times, and have it
under control. But for some reason, that spin became so violent over all axis,
and it was hard to know how to get out of that spin."
With the aid of his team, became the
only man to achieve a supersonic skydive, and broke two other records,
including the highest exit from a platform at 128,000 feet, and the highest
free-fall without a drogue parachute, which was measured at 119,846 feet. Baumgartner
said he didn't only do the stunt to set a record. He also did it for science,
as the jump could help NASA design better and stronger spacesuits for
astronauts.
Doctors said the data from
Baumgartner's jump will "break new ground." When asked what he would
do next, Baumgartner said he'd like to be sitting in his mentor's chair. "Honestly
I want to inspire the next generation," he said. "I would love if
there was a young guy sitting next to me asking what my advice is, wanting to
break my record."
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