Google Exec’s Stratospheric Plunge Breaks World Record
Alan Eustace during his record-breaking ascent into the upper stratosphere on Friday. Courtesy of J. Martin Harris Photography & Paragon Space Development Corporation
This morning in Roswell, New Mexico, a spacesuit-clad 57-year-old Google executive, Alan Eustace, strapped into a harness beneath a giant helium balloon and lifted off to new heights in the upper stratosphere. After reaching an altitude of 135,908 feet—more than 25 miles high, with a black sky overhead and a visibly-round planet beneath—Eustace severed his connection to the balloon with a small explosive charge, and fell to Earth.
Whereas Baumgartner’s plunge was a heavily promoted sponsored by energy-drink company Red Bull, Eustace’s attempt was pure Silicon Valley: shrouded in secrecy until today, and apparently largely self-funded. That minimalist, low-key approach may have contributed to Eustace’s decision to ascend dangling free beneath his balloon, rather than riding in a more complex and costly pressurized capsule as Baumgartner did.
The “StratEx” Eustace mentioned is short for “Stratospheric Explorer,” according to the prime contractor he partnered with for his stunt, Paragon Space Development Corporation. The company’s website that the StratEx system has, among other uses, “wide-ranging applications for the study of the science of the stratosphere,” and encourages potential customers to get in touch. Eustace, it seems, is hoped to be only the first of many future daredevils ascending to lofty heights.
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