The 120,000-Foot Leap
Can space-diver Felix Baumgartner break the sound barrier without breaking his neck?
- By Mark Betancourt
- Air & Space magazine, July 2012
Up above 96 percent of the atmosphere, Felix Baumgartner prepares for a 13.5-mile test jump. This summer he’ll leap from nearly twice as high.
Jay Nemeth/Global-Newsroom
Update: Baumgartner hopes to make his jump on Sunday, October 14. Check here for the latest news.
ON THE MORNING OF March 15, 2012, Felix Baumgartner scooted forward, stood up, and grabbed the handrails on either side of the door he’d just opened. From where he was standing, he could see all of New Mexico and parts of Texas, Arizona, and Colorado. He was 71,581 feet —13 and a half miles—above Earth, dangling in a small capsule from a balloon the size of a 16-story building. Facing the cameras mounted on the capsule, he gave a little salute, a bit awkward in his full-pressure spacesuit, and stepped off.
After freefalling for three and a half minutes and reaching a top speed of 364 mph, the Austrian skydiver pulled open his chute and glided safely to the ground. Back at the airstrip where the balloon had launched, near Roswell, New Mexico, the Red Bull Stratos project team at mission control erupted into cheers.
This was only a test jump. Sometime early this summer, Baumgartner will try from 90,000 feet. Then, later in the summer, he’ll jump from more than 120,000 feet, setting, he hopes, a number of world records.
Always ready to sponsor the latest extreme sport, energy-drink maker Red Bull is footing the bill for what began as a personal dream for Baumgartner. An accomplished BASE jumper (someone who parachutes off of Buildings, Antennas, Spans—bridges—and Earth—cliffs), he set his sights in 2005 on breaking the world record for highest skydive. Since then, Red Bull has helped Baumgartner assemble a world-class team of experts, and has paid for the gear and ground support to get him up to 23 miles and back.
One of the first people to congratulate him upon his return to Earth was retired Air Force Colonel Joe Kittinger, one of only two other people to have survived a skydive from more than 70,000 feet, and the current record holder (102,800 feet). He’s the Stratos Capcom, or capsule communicator, and he’ll be the voice Baumgartner hears as he makes his balloon ascent.
“Felix is a very fortunate man, just like I was,” says Kittinger. “Freefall for five and a half minutes—that is the absolute fantasy of every skydiver.”
When Kittinger, who early in his Air Force career was a test pilot, set the record back in 1960, it was under slightly different circumstances. The Space Race had just begun, and the U.S. government was in a hurry to find out how humans could survive beyond Earth’s atmosphere. First came a series of manned balloon tests called Project Manhigh, in which human guinea pigs, including Kittinger, climbed into the stratosphere to experience the kind of environment astronauts would face.





Comments (7)
Here's to success and setting the new record,
Col. (ret) T. L. Albert, USAFR.
Posted by Tolfe Lee Albert on May 22,2012 | 05:52 PM
Great article, just like the mission. My fingers crossed for Felix :)
Posted by she's a darling on May 23,2012 | 02:32 PM
Hoping the best for you Felix, and that you may be able to set the new World records in every respect you want to. You are lucky you have Joe Kittinger in your team: You couldn't ask for a better advisor/friend.
Cheers from Guatemala. :):):)
Posted by Herbert Erdmenger on June 3,2012 | 04:20 PM
Hi i have never done a jump before; what would i need to do a high altitude jump? I'm not here to break any records, just want to do some thing mad before i drop dead. At 51 this year i have done nothing to leave my mark on this world. So if I become a splat or live--What would i need to do?
Johno
Posted by Johno on August 5,2012 | 05:58 AM
What becomes of the balloon and capsule after the leap?
Posted by Gary Eastham on October 11,2012 | 09:50 AM
Wouldn't the force in free fall dislocate his joints?
Posted by Clark on October 14,2012 | 01:17 PM
Can someone clear something up for me?
Ever since Joe Kittinger made his jump when I was a little boy, I've heard that he went supersonic.
Now it is said Felix will be first? What is the story on this apparent contradiction?
Posted by Lee Dalton on October 14,2012 | 02:45 PM