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Saturday, May 24, 2008

Frenchman poised for 'Great Leap,' a 40-kilometer-high adventure

fournier

He has spent two decades, and nearly $20 million, in a quest to fly up 40 kilometers to the upper reaches of the atmosphere using a helium balloon, just so he can jump back to Earth again. Now Michel Fournier says he's ready at last to make his "Great Leap."

Depending on weather conditions, Fournier, a 64-year-old retired French Army officer, will attempt what he has dubbed Le Grand Saut (The Great Leap) on Sunday over the plains of northern Saskatchewan, Canada. He will climb into the gondola of a helium balloon that when inflated resembles a giant jellyfish. A two-hour journey will take him to 130,000 feet - higher than any balloonist has been before.

At that altitude he will see the blackness of space on the horizon and the curvature of Earth below, and experience weightlessness. Then he plans to step out of his capsule wearing only a pressurized suit and a parachute, and plunge to Earth in a mere 15 minutes.

If successful, Fournier will fall longer, farther and faster than anyone has in history. Along the way he will accomplish other firsts, breaking the sound barrier and records that have stood for nearly 50 years.

So yes, there are old parachutists and bold parachutists, and there are old, bold parachutists. Godspeed Michel Fournier!

4 Comments

Weightlesness at 130,000 ft? I don't think so.

Floating 24 miles above the surface of the 8,000 mile diameter earth does cause the pull of gravity to disappear. If it did, why would he expect to fall toward the earth when he jumps?

Ooops. That should have said does "not" cause the pull of gravity to disappear - of course.

For perspective (3rd photo, down), Joseph Kittinger, short of 50 yrs. ago, set the current record of just over 100,000 feet, during which jump he was also the first human to exceed the speed of sound unaided by any vehicle. In the event you're tempted, don't try this at home, kids.

Floating 24 miles above the surface of the 8,000 mile diameter earth does [not] cause the pull of gravity to disappear

True. The media strikes again.

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