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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Daredevil skydiver completes record-breaking jump

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http://news.insing.com/tabloid/skydiver-stratosphere-jump/id-b6613f00

An Austrian daredevil leapt into the stratosphere from a balloon near the edge of space 38.6km above Earth on Sunday and safely landed, setting a record for the highest skydive and breaking the sound barrier in the process.

Cheers broke out as Felix Baumgartner, 43, jumped from a skateboard-sized shelf outside the 3.3m by 2.4m fiberglass and acrylic capsule that was carried higher than 40m by an enormous balloon.

"We love you Felix!" screamed the crowd gathered in a mission control setting at his launch site in Roswell, New Mexico as more than 8 million people watched his feat online.



Baumgartner's body pierced the atmosphere at 1342kph, according to preliminary numbers released by Brian Utley, the certification official for the Federation Aeronautic International, at a press conference afterward.

Baumgartner's speed clinched one of his goals: to become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier, typically measured at more than 1,110km/h. And he did so on the 65th anniversary of legendary American pilot Chuck Yeager's flight shattering the sound barrier on 14 October, 1947.

Utley said preliminary figures indicate Baumgartner broke a total of three established world records, including the highest altitude skydive, longest freefall without a parachute and fastest fall achieved during a skydive.

Baumgartner landed safely on the ground and raised his arms in a victory salute just 10 minutes after he stepped into the air. Soon he was hugged by his mother and father, who took their first trip outside Europe to see his historic plunge, and his girlfriend jumped up and wrapped her legs around him.

"It was way harder than I expected," Baumgartner said. Recalling his final words before he stepped into the stratosphere, he said: "Sometimes you have to get up really high to know how small you are."

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