Comments on: NASA tests super-high-altitude balloon
Project is designed to allow research at more than 100,000 feet, as much as three times higher than commercial airliners fly.
Project is designed to allow research at more than 100,000 feet, as much as three times higher than commercial airliners fly.
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Secondly, Captain J. Kittenger jumped from 102,800 feet above the ground, BUT it is not an official record as he did not carry the required sealed barometric device required at the time to prove the altitude achieved. It was not a skydive, it was an uncontrolled fall to approximately 17,000 feet as a result of equipment malfunction, his drogue ribbon chute did not open properly and he was unconscious for the entire fall, until an automatic opener saved his bacon.
Getting back to the scientific package, it would be launched over unpopulated areas and most likely all attempts to keep it away from people would be taken. After all safety is a major concern for ongoing experimentation approval.
- by Bill_I January 12, 2009 8:23 AM PST
- All is well until a bird flies into that balloon and deflates it rapidly. I hope the material is actually the felted version of polyethylene microfibers, which is marketed as DuPont Tyvek. You may remember that as the mailing envelope you cannot tear in half.__http://www2.dupont.com/Tyvek/en_US/assets/downloads/tyvek_handbook.pdf__
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