Felix Baumgartner an Austrian jumped from a
balloon flying at an altitude more than 18 miles (29 kilometres) above Earth on
Wednesday, falling at speeds topping 500 miles per hour (805 kilometres per
hour) in a training run for his attempt to make the world’s highest skydive. Felix
Baumgartner landed safely in a desert near Roswell, New Mexico after leaping
from an estimated 96,940 feet (29,547 metres) wearing a pressurized space suit
equipped with an oxygen supply. The test parachute jump was the second for
Baumgartner, who is on a quest to complete a record-breaking skydive from
120,000 feet (36,576 metres) in the coming weeks. He also hopes to become the
first man to break the speed of sound at 700 mph (1,126 kph) in a free fall. “Only
one more step to go,” Baumgartner said in a statement. The current record for
the highest altitude skydive is 102,800 feet (31,333 metres). It was set 52
years ago by U.S. Air Force Captain Joe Kittinger, who is serving as an adviser
to Baumgartner. A 43-year-old former member of the Austrian military,
Baumgartner has jumped from Malaysia’s Petronas Towers and Taiwan’s Taipei 101,
two of the world’s tallest buildings. A helium-filled balloon lifted
Baumgartner into the sky on Wednesday carrying him in a pressurized capsule. He
executed a free fall of 3 minutes and 48 seconds, reaching speeds of 536 mph
(862 kph), according to Red Bull Stratos, a project using the jumps to gather
medical and scientific research data. In the next jump, the size of the balloon
that will carry Baumgartner will rise as tall as a skyscraper.
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