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Austrian's edge-of-space jump aborted due to winds
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) Oct 9, 2012


Strong winds forced Austrian daredevil Felix Baumgartner to abort his attempt Tuesday at a record-breaking leap to Earth from the edge of space.

A new bid could be made later this week, a spokeswoman said, but everything depends on the weather, and the mission has only one spare balloon, after the first one was rendered unusable by the canceled launch.

The five-minute countdown had begun ticking down as the veteran sky diver prepared to hurl himself from a pressurized capsule 120,000 feet (37,000 meters) above sea level in the US state of New Mexico.

But as the clock reached zero, it became clear that conditions were too gusty to go ahead with the attempt.

The huge, gossamer-thin balloon which was to have taken Baumgartner aloft was buffeted mercilessly by the winds at the launch site in Roswell, New Mexico.

"Today's launch has been aborted... due to wind gusts making an attempt too risky," read a statement on the Red Bull Stratos mission's website.

Baumgartner looked visibly disappointed as he climbed out of the capsule, but said he was determined to go through with the mission.

"It's all about what we do now and accomplish now," he wrote in a message on the mission's Twitter feed.

"We've made it so far, there's no way turning back," he said.

The 43-year-old Austrian aims to break three records: the highest freefall from 23 miles (36 kilometers) above Earth; the fastest speed ever achieved by a human as he plunges through the sky; and the first person not in an aircraft to break the sound barrier of around around 690 miles (1,100 kilometers) per hour.

The jump was initially planned for Monday, but the attempt was delayed by 24 hours due to weather. Then the launch time began slipping again Tuesday morning, before the attempt was scuttled.

Baumgartner has been training for five years for the jump, during which he will be in freefall for some five minutes before opening a parachute at 5,000 feet (1,500 meters) to float back to the ground.

The biggest danger he faces is spinning out of control, which could exert G forces and make him lose consciousness. A controlled dive from the capsule is essential, putting him in a head-down position to increase speed.

Baumgartner has broken several records in the past, notably with spectacular base jumps from the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur and the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The mission, backed by a 100-strong team of experts, also hopes to contribute to medical and aeronautical research aimed at improving the safety of astronauts.

If and when it does go ahead, the ascent is expected to take between 2-3 hours. The descent, if all goes well, will take about 15 to 20 minutes -- five minutes or so in freefall, and 10 to 15 floating down with his parachute.

Spokeswoman Sarah Anderson said there would be no new attempt until Thursday at the earliest.

"Thursday could still be possible" for a new launch attempt, but a decision will not be taken until the day before then.

"Tomorrow (Wednesday) is definitely not an option," she said.

She added that any new attempt would have to use a different balloon.

"Today's balloon cannot be used... We have one back-up balloon on site. The weather team will not speculate more than two days, out because so much can change even in 12 hours."

Retired US Air Force Colonel Joseph Kittinger, who holds three of the records Baumgartner is trying to break, could be seen shaking his head, visibly upset in the mission control room Tuesday.

Kittinger, who jumped from 102,800 feet (31,000 kilometers) in 1960, said at the time that no one knew whether he could survive.

"We always like to push the envelope," said the 83-year-old, ahead of the aborted leap into the unknown.

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Austrian space diver no stranger to danger
Los Angeles (AFP) Oct 9, 2012 - Felix Baumgartner, the Austrian daredevil who had hoped to make history Tuesday with a jump from the edge of space, is no stranger to death-defying danger.

The 43-year-old, who said he may now try his aborted jump on Thursday, is hoping to break at least three records by conducting the highest and the fastest freefall jump and by becoming the first human to break the speed barrier without an aircraft.

"I love a challenge, and trying to become the first person to break the speed of sound in freefall is a challenge like no other," he said ahead of the canceled stunt in the skies over New Mexico.

Tuesday's attempt was scuttled at the last minute due to gusting winds which buffeted the huge, gossamer-thin balloon used to lift the skydiver to an altitude of 23 miles (36 km). Another bid may be made Thursday.

Baumgartner, born on April 20, 1969, grew up in the shadow of the Alps in Salzburg, Austria. He dreamed of skydiving and flying helicopters from an early age.

He made his first skydive at the age of 16, and improved his skills after joining the Austrian military, becoming a member of its Special Forces demonstration team.

One of Baumgartner's first records was in 1999 for the lowest BASE jump ever from the hand of Rio de Janeiro's Christ the Redeemer statue in Brazil, which is only 95 feet above the ground.

Baumgartner has "Born to Fly" tattooed in large letters on his forearm. BASE is an acronym for the four things which are jumped from: buildings, antennas, spans and earth.

The Austrian, a licensed gas balloon and helicopter pilot, twice set world records for the highest BASE jump from a building.

The first was from the 1,479-feet (450.8-meter) Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in 1999, and five years later from the even taller Taipei 101 tower in Taiwan.

In 2003, he completed the first winged "freefall crossing" of the English Channel, jumping out of an aircraft and flying the rest of the way to Calais in northern France with a pair of carbon wings.

Other feats include parachuting into a 623-feet (190-meter) deep cave in Croatia, leaping off the highest bridge in the world, the 1,125-feet (343-meter) high Viaduc de Millau in France.

Baumgartner has also imprinted his hands and feet in concrete in Vienna's "Street of Champions" and was nominated for a World Sports Award and two categories in the NEA Extreme Sports Awards.

He has been training for Tuesday's Red Bull Stratos jump -- from 120,000 feet (23 miles, 36 kilometers) -- for five years, and has successfully jumped from 71,600 feet (21.8 kilometers) and 97,100 feet (29.6 kilometers).

A major danger, he said, is losing consciousness.

"That could happen if I get into a flat spin... like a CD on a CD player. Then the blood goes to the head and leads to red-out. Black-out is the opposite, when the blood goes to the feet."

But he said it is unlikely that he will pay the ultimate price for his love of skydiving.

"In order for me to die, lots of things have to happen at the same time," Baumgartner said.

Meticulous planning makes that outcome unlikely, he said.

"I think it is all about preparation. Do your homework, you know. I hate it if someone calls me a thrill-seeker or an adrenaline junkie because I am not. I like the whole planning," Baumgartner said.

He divides his time between Switzerland and the United States but says: "The air is where I am at home."

"I believe in God and I truly believe that there is a plan that he has for everybody. And I also believe that he has a plan for me. It looks like I am becoming an astronaut," he has said.

"I'm going to slide the door open, bail out and become the first human person in freefall to break the speed of sound," he said.



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SPACE TRAVEL
Austrian eyes record jump from edge of space in US
Los Angeles (AFP) Oct 9, 2012
An Austrian daredevil is hoping to make an unprecedented leap from the edge of space Tuesday, setting records as he breaks the speed of sound in freefall in the skies above the US state of New Mexico. Felix Baumgartner will ascend to 120,000 feet - nearly 23 miles, or 36 km - in a capsule taken up to the edge of the stratosphere by a gigantic helium balloon, before stepping out in a pressu ... read more


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