head cam video. very cool. http://gizmodo.com/5951725/first-head-cam-footage-from-daredevils-space-jump?tag=watch-this wonder what he was thinking when he went into the spin? http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/vid...baumgartner-skydive-space-video?newsfeed=true link of entire fall.
No, Steve Martin. No, wait, that would be "you have to get really small to see how high you are." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let's_Get_Small
Dude, you really need to get a life. Following me around like a gnat buzzing around my head is not the picture of mental health.
Well, if that's what makes you happy, go for it. Just don't get overly upset if I don't respond. I presume you're doing it "pro-boner" as well?
While still a soft vacuum, he's well in the region where his blood would boil as well as fluid in his lungs if exposed to that thin of atmosphere. My question is what it felt like to break mach 1 in a flexible craft (his suit). I may be wrong, but I believe it may be the first time a human has been exposed to >mach 1 in a non-rigid 'airframe' in anything other than hard vacuum. . .well. . . and lived.
Since his attitude was (presumably) head down, his helmet (nice and rigid) would have been what was exposed to the pressure waves which is what is "broken" in "breaking the sound barrier".
Considering he wasn't doing a handstand on the platform, that would be a given. The point, though, is what his attitude was at the time he broke the sound barrier.