The Tech Behind Felix Baumgartner's Stratospheric Skydive 109
MrSeb writes "Felix Baumgartner has successfully completed his stratospheric skydive from 128,000 feet (39km), breaking a record that was set 52 years ago by Air Force Captain Joe Kittinger — that much we know. From the balloon, to the capsule, to the gear that Baumgartner wore during his 730 mph (1174 kph) free fall, the technology behind the scenes is impressive, and in some cases bleeding edge. ExtremeTech takes a deep dive into the tech that kept Baumgartner alive during the three-hour ascent and (much shorter) descent — and the tech that allowed us to watch every moment of the Red Bull Stratos mission live, as captured by no less than 15 digital cameras and numerous other scientific instruments."
Helium. (Score:1, Funny)
So, that's where all that Helium is going...
Too bad. Helium could have been put to good use (Score:1)
like all of us talking in squeacky voices for a week.
Tech Fell behind (Score:3)
I initially thought this said "The tech fell behind". As in Youtube collapsing in the middle.
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Re:Tech Fell behind (Score:5, Informative)
Felix stabilised the spin manually WELL before deploying his parachute.
They had a drogue chute ready to help stabilise the spin if it was required but he didn't use it because it could have prevented him from reaching Mach speed.
If he HAD deployed his main parachute while in an uncontrollable spin it is VERY UNLIKELY that it would have deployed properly, much more likely he would have remained in a spin, not so fast but with his body mass further away from the centre of rotation and hence still massive G forces.
Re:Tech Fell behind (Score:5, Interesting)
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Shouldn't the tech fall at exactly the same speed ?
One small step for man, one giant leap for ... (Score:5, Funny)
1. Figure out a cool project
2. Find a sponsor
3. Take one step to skydive from 128,000 ft
4. Profit
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You would've been more impressed if it were funded with tax dollars?
Crazy is as crazy does. And I'm not talking about a skydiver.
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Yes, and this is definitely why there's a line of people willing to skydive from 128,000ft. Easy money, right?
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Oh, I suspect there'd be a long line of people willing to do this. But very few of them would have the means to do so, or the time or dedication required.
The path into the history books isn't guaranteed to be paved with gold.
Re:One small step for man, one giant leap for ... (Score:4, Informative)
When explaining his motives for joining Red Bull, Joe Kittinger explained that since 1960 he had been getting at least 1 phone call a month from some skydiver who wanted to beat his record and was asking for advice but when he explained to them the logistical challenges they faced they would quickly back off.
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This only the second article today and you are already complaining? I would expect one more article summarizing the press conference. And one or two dupes in the next slow news day. If you were expecting any different, you must be new here.
Re:Too many stories (Score:5, Informative)
Let's not forget all the Aussie stories plastered over Slashdot whenever certain "editors" are in charge..
Aussie refers to Australian. Felix is Austrian
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Apparently, there are kangaroos in Austria too [googleusercontent.com].
Re:Too many stories (Score:4, Interesting)
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You [slashdot.org]
have [slashdot.org]
seriously [slashdot.org]
underestimated [slashdot.org]
the [slashdot.org]
scope [slashdot.org]
of my [slashdot.org]
complaint [slashdot.org]
Stand by .... (Score:3)
We're getting a report about a balloon-launched capsule coming down on some guy's front lawn.
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You [slashdot.org]. [slashdot.org].
have [slashdot.org]
seriously [slashdot.org]
underestimated
the [slashdot.org]. V
scope
of my [slashdot.org]
complaint [slashdot.org]
And we have seriously underestimated the scope of your Asperger's. (And I have underestimated Slashcode's retard factor -- 'too few characters per line'? WTF? Next, we won't be able to use Unicode. )
How many stories (Score:2)
I'd guess about 10,500 to 11,000 if he was jumping from a building thats how many stories it would have.
Shoot? (Score:4, Funny)
There is a fail-safe which could have deployed the main shoot if he had been moving at more than 115 feet (35 meters) per second at 2,000 feet (610 meters) or less altitude.
You know, the parashoot. Idiots.
833.9 mph actually (Score:1)
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Typo, somebodies finger hit the 8 instead of a 7
Re:833.9 mph actually (Score:5, Informative)
Indeed, during the press conference the following figures were stated at least twice:
Exit altitude: 128100 ft (39045m) [record]
Free fall time: 4m 20s
Free fall distance: 119826 ft (36529m)
Max velocity: 373 m/s (1342.8 km/h, 833.9 mph, Mach 1.24) [record]
A third record would be the maximum distance of ascent with a human-occupied balloon, which may exceed the 39045m of exit altitude, as the balloon appeared to descend somewhat before Baumgartner exited. Actually, if the telemetry information displayed on the feed can be trusted then he reached at least 39068m (128177 ft) at the time that he was first sticking his feet out into the open.
No matter the numbers, this is an impressive achievement!
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Technically, he's not the first to do a supersonic jump. An earlier recorded event had a test pilot and his specialist violently ejected from their SR-71 when it broke up at Mach 3+ [roadrunner...ionale.com].
Of course, it wasn't too high up (only 70k ft) but it was supersonic (just horizontally, instead of vertically). I would be surprised if a lot of what was learned came from that event.
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Wow.. you can generalize just about anything.
Jump:
Guy steps in balloon, 3 hours later steps out of ballon (sic), some minutes later he deploys his chute
land speed record:
guy gets in vehicle, accelerates, deploys chute to decelerate.
Moon landing:
guys get into capsule, fire spews from the bottom of rocket, guys step out of capsule after it lands
Seriously, don't generalize, it makes you look stupid.
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Heh. Tis you who is the tool!
Not the first (Score:5, Informative)
He was not the first to parachute faster [jalopnik.com] than the speed of sound. He was the first to do so voluntarily. Of the first two people to do this, one of them died in the air. Not an easy feat.
There is a difference... (Score:5, Informative)
Holy polysemy Batman! (Score:2)
Baumgartner achieved speed of sound 'autonomously' without first sitting in a high-speed jet but by freefalling.
Now we'll have to ask: "Is that 'free' as in beer, speech, fall or will?"
In space no one can hear you fall. (Score:2)
'Speed of sound' means little in a vacuum, at least that is what I hear.d.
They forgot two critical elements (Score:3)
Re:Unassisted (Score:5, Funny)
What about gravity?
Gravity doesn't really exist. It's actually Intelligent Pushing, where an external all-powerful creator stretches his invisible arm out to make sure that nobody floats off the Earth, or falls off its edge.
I wonder what went through his head as he fell (Score:2)
"Hello Ground!" or "oh no, not again"
I bet it was one of them though.
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"Hello Ground!" or "oh no, not again"
I bet it was one of them though.
Initial camera footage of his passing a bowl of petunias was mysteriously erased.
One important piece of tech was still missing (Score:2)
The recording of this event, while impressive, missed one crucial bit of technology: a humidity meter.
Now we'll never know if he was the first to make this jump without wetting his pants in the process.
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The adults here call that a hygrometer.
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Where the hell is the Mach 1 headcam...? (Score:1)
...is what I'd like to know!? No doubt only available on some Red Bull(shite) pay-per-view site, pfft!
Call me when someone jumps from the *true* edge of space, 100k+ (or better yet, from the upper Thermo/Exosphere 700+ kms! :).
Cocaine (Score:2)
The standard Red Bull found in most US stores doesn't contain coca leaves, but the Swiss cola variety does, and it's mighty tasty -- very herbal and spicy.
A friend just noted something as I typed the above: This was literally a small step for man, but a rather giant leap for
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In Holland you can buy liqueur infused with coca leaves & other botanicals that while not cocaine will give you a nice speedy drunk feeling. No issues getting it into the US either.
Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher (Score:4, Insightful)
Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher as the molecular weight is only 1/2 of Helium. Also, it would not have wasted a precious finite resource for little gain.
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...molecular weight is only 1/4 of Helium...
There, fixed that for you.
And before we all reach for our tinfoil hats, here's why he didn't use hydrogen: http://www.airships.net/hindenburg/disaster/myths [airships.net]
Sorry mate - hydrogen is diatomic with a molecular mass of 2; helium is monatomic with a molecular mass of 4 (atomic mass units). Ask your neighborhood chemist if you want to get it right...
Re:Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher (Score:5, Informative)
.
A molecule of hydrogen is made up of 2 hydrogen atoms. A molecule of helium is made up of 1 helium atom. "2 times 1" is half of "1 times 4".
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Re:Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher (Score:4, Interesting)
What makes you think they wanted to go any higher? They infact had to vent out helium, by opening valves, so that they dont go any higher than 128K ft.
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Probably to keep the balloon from expanding too much, as well. The higher in altitude you go, the thinner the atmospheric pressure and the more the content expands.
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Actually if you see the video, they talked specifically about the balloon capacity (you can also visually see the spare balloon capacity (as a side note, it was fun to see the balloon keep expanding slowly occupying spare capacity, if you get a chance you should really watch the complete video)). The balloon could have expanded much more. The commentary specifically talks about not going higher than 128K for the safety of the jump. I assume they had a range for him, in which he could jump, and 128K was the
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For a balloon in air, the lifting power of hydrogen is only about 8.6% more than that of helium. Buoyancy depends on the difference in density between the gases inside and outside. The sea-level densities are:
Air 1.2 kg/m^3
Hydrogen 0.0899 kg/m^3
Helium 0.178 kg/m^3
So the density differences are 1.11 and 1.022 respectively.
To put it in more concrete terms: If the lifting power of a gas were inversely proportional to its density, a vacuum bottle would lift infinite weight.
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Hydrogen would have gotten him a lot higher as the molecular weight is only 1/2 of Helium. Also, it would not have wasted a precious finite resource for little gain.
I had the same thought, but if WIkipedia is correct [wikipedia.org] and I'm parsing the article correctly, the gain would've only been about 8% at sea level:
Thus hydrogen's additional buoyancy compared to helium is: 1.202 / 1.113 = 1.080, or approximately 8.0%.
Now, as the balloon gained altitude, that percentage difference would've increased until the surrounding atmosphere has the same density as helium, at which point hydrogen would give an extra boost. But by that point the amount of lift itself will have drastically diminished (though the expansion of the balloon compensates for some of that, yes?) so you're chasing smal
Another typo (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old tech (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether or not Red Bull spent two years and who knows how much, why isn't this still one of the coolest things to happen in some time? Watching him stand there with the curvature of Earth below him is one of those things that makes me jealous. And there are some things being tested - newer versions of the high-alt suits and maybe more.
However, I'm a little annoyed about people thinking that now astronauts and such can use suits like Felix's to escape bad situations in space. Felix jumped more or less straight down with almost no lateral velocity. Someone BASE-jumping from ISS may pull some staggering free-fall numbers (greater height for 9.8 (m/s)^2) but those won't likely compare to the 11,000 mph they're already moving parallel with the surface just to maintain orbit. Toasty!
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I wonder how many capable individuals would queue up to test stuff like this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOOSE [wikipedia.org]
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When Joe Kittinger jumped for Excelsior in the '50s and '60s, he was testing the feasibilty high-altitude escape systems. He succeeded, and in the process, set some very impressive and rather durable records. Stratos was a not-very-subtle ad-funded stunt show. There's real science being done but I have little doubt that it's ultimately in service to the sponsor (also Austrian).
While it is all true, I am all for such ways to spend ad and marketing funds instead of just paying celebrities. Apple has reportedly spent 1 bn for marketing of iphone and ipad. Have they made anything really cool with all this money? I know that it is a matter of a different targetted group, but most Red Bull campaigns and stunts are awesome and some even borderline useful.
Disclaimer: I have drunk Red Bull twice. Nevermore. Likewise other "energy drinks".
Re:Old tech (Score:4)
You can't "base jump" out of the ISS unless you have a portable jetpack capable of decelerating you to deorbit. You need a delta-V of around 225 ft/s [cdeagle.com]. If you step outside the ISS, all that will happen is that you will continue orbit the Earth with the ISS. You would starve to death before deorbiting solely due to atmospheric friction.
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Someone BASE-jumping from ISS may pull some staggering free-fall numbers
Actually, no.
Since the ISS is in orbit, any object detaching from it without propulsion would stay in almost the same orbit.
To fall to the ground, one would first have to use a rocket to decelerate significantly.
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What about someone jumping from a satellite in geosynchronous orbit?
Live helmet cam (Score:3)
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The official site now has a video that includes some of the on-body camera shots, I am sure we will see many more of them as the footage is processed. I believe he had a couple cameras mounted on the suit, so don't worry.
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Downlink technology for the bandwidth needed for HD over 39km transmission distances isn't that small or power-frugal . Remember he has to carry it all, and then land it as well.
So let me see (Score:1)
Do you see now why it makes no sense to compare the evolution of information processing technology to physical technology?
Hypoxic. (Score:2)
Anybody watch the video and agree with me that he seemed severely hypoxic in his reactions to messages from ground control?
29 release seatbelt. ... no reaction
From then on, he's quite unresponsive. "say Roger if... " he responds with "roger", but that could just be a response to the "say roger" and not the part after the "if"....
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It could've been that FB simply couldn't hear ground control. As an Amateur Radio operator, I was appalled at the horrible quality of the comms they were using. They couldn't hear each other half the time, and even at the best of times the transmissions were garbled beyond readability.
I think there was a point where he went to an in-suit radio (possibly before step 29), and comms went downhill fast.
6 million people were able watch live on youtube (Score:1)
Not as impressive as the actual jump but could not help feeling it was cool that I could do that.
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Therefor it didn't happen, right?
833.9 MPH (mach 1.24) - not 730 (Score:2)