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On the left, Felix Baumgartner salutes as he starts his walk towards his space capsule in Roswell, New Mexico, on March 15. On the right, the moment before he jumped from 13 miles up in the sky. That photo alone blows my mind. https://gizmodo/man-to-break-sound-barri...ce-5454895 Click image to expand The 42-year-old Baumgartner鈥攊n a fully p stanley cup ressurized jump suit鈥攇ot into his specially designed Red Bull Stratos capsule to reach the 13.6 miles mark in the first successful test towards his world record-breaking space jump. The capsule, attached to a 100-foot-wide helium balloon, only took him to 71,581 feet stanley ca this time. He then jumped into a free fall that lasted for three minutes and 43 seconds. He reached a speed of 364.4 miles per hour 586.4 kilometers per hour . To give you an idea of how amazing this is already, a Boeing 747 normally flies at about 8.6 miles high 14,000 meters . And yet, it is nothing compared to what is coming. Baumgartner wants to jump from an altitude of 23 miles 120,000 feet or 37 kilometers , getting close to the edge of the stratosphere. When he does that, he will fall for an estimated 5 minutes and 30 seconds, breaking the speed of sound in the process. After flying at Mach 1 for a while, he will open his stanley cups parachute at one mile about 1,500 meters . If everything goes ok, he will reach the ground 10 minutes later. When he does that this summer, after another test jump at 90,000 feet, he will break the record set by United S Qogi If you text a lot, you are probably also racist and shallow
Nothing is more awesom stanley cup e than fire in slow motion, captured with a really fantastic camera. But it even better when fire is combined with imagery that seems ripped from a tale of megapolisomancy, where strange magic lurks in the urban storm drains beneath our feet. Take a few seconds out of your day to enj stanley website oy the physics of fire, and possibly the fantasy of something beyond science. Filmmaker Danny Cooke writes: I performed this test as an experiment with the overcranking mode on the Sony FS700 camera 240fps/480fps in order to direc stanley taza tly compare the results to Incendium ; where the slow motion was interpolated using Twixtor and shot on Canon 7D 60fps . Nicely done, fire-breather Elliott Montello. See more of Cooke work on his website.
On the left, Felix Baumgartner salutes as he starts his walk towards his space capsule in Roswell, New Mexico, on March 15. On the right, the moment before he jumped from 13 miles up in the sky. That photo alone blows my mind. https://gizmodo/man-to-break-sound-barri...ce-5454895 Click image to expand The 42-year-old Baumgartner鈥攊n a fully p stanley cup ressurized jump suit鈥攇ot into his specially designed Red Bull Stratos capsule to reach the 13.6 miles mark in the first successful test towards his world record-breaking space jump. The capsule, attached to a 100-foot-wide helium balloon, only took him to 71,581 feet stanley ca this time. He then jumped into a free fall that lasted for three minutes and 43 seconds. He reached a speed of 364.4 miles per hour 586.4 kilometers per hour . To give you an idea of how amazing this is already, a Boeing 747 normally flies at about 8.6 miles high 14,000 meters . And yet, it is nothing compared to what is coming. Baumgartner wants to jump from an altitude of 23 miles 120,000 feet or 37 kilometers , getting close to the edge of the stratosphere. When he does that, he will fall for an estimated 5 minutes and 30 seconds, breaking the speed of sound in the process. After flying at Mach 1 for a while, he will open his stanley cups parachute at one mile about 1,500 meters . If everything goes ok, he will reach the ground 10 minutes later. When he does that this summer, after another test jump at 90,000 feet, he will break the record set by United S Qogi If you text a lot, you are probably also racist and shallow
Nothing is more awesom stanley cup e than fire in slow motion, captured with a really fantastic camera. But it even better when fire is combined with imagery that seems ripped from a tale of megapolisomancy, where strange magic lurks in the urban storm drains beneath our feet. Take a few seconds out of your day to enj stanley website oy the physics of fire, and possibly the fantasy of something beyond science. Filmmaker Danny Cooke writes: I performed this test as an experiment with the overcranking mode on the Sony FS700 camera 240fps/480fps in order to direc stanley taza tly compare the results to Incendium ; where the slow motion was interpolated using Twixtor and shot on Canon 7D 60fps . Nicely done, fire-breather Elliott Montello. See more of Cooke work on his website.