You know, skydiving is already a heart-stopping experience. You’re soaring up to 14,000 feet and then, with a deep breath, you’re jumping out of a plane.
But for Felix Baumgartner, that was just child’s play.
He was dreaming bigger, way bigger.
He wanted to shatter the sound barrier.
Felix and Red Bull decided to team up for a stunt that would make jaws drop worldwide.
The plan? A leap from the very edge of space, aiming to be the first person to break the sound barrier without any vehicle.
With the Red Bull Stratos Project team biting their nails on the ground, Felix began his ascent.
He used a helium balloon to climb to a dizzying height of 127,852 feet.
There, he was met with the silent expanse of space and our beautiful blue planet beneath.
Now, this wasn’t just any jump. Felix had to get everything spot on.
A tiny error could send him into a dangerous spin. The design of his suit, its weight – everything had to be perfect.
Taking that leap, time seemed to slow. And in a mere 34 seconds, he did it.
He broke the sound barrier, reaching speeds that would make a Formula 1 car blush.
But the ground team? They were on tenterhooks.
Would he stay stable, or would the worst happen?
Felix once said, “The problem is, there’s no protocol. There’s nobody in the world telling you, ‘Listen, Felix, if this happens, you have to do this,’ while the whole world is watching.”
That’s some serious pressure.
But Felix wasn’t just chasing an adrenaline rush.
He was pushing the envelope, trying to answer scientific questions that had been lingering in the air.
Okay, he was probably in it at least a little bit for the adrenaline rush, but of course, science takes precedent.
There was a heart-stopping moment when Felix began to spin faster than anyone had anticipated.
But he had an ace up his sleeve: the G-Whiz device.
It deployed a chute that steadied his fall, and he touched down safely.
Felix’s feat shows what’s possible when you combine human grit, teamwork, and the wonders of technology.
He didn’t just break the sound barrier; he set two other world records.
It’s stories like these that remind us of the incredible things we can achieve when we set our minds to it.
See Felix drop 127,852 feet from space and all the incredible video he captured along the way below!
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