TheShuttleExperience
Well-known member
I think it depends on the speed. I don't really would like to experience frictional heating on my suitWould you claim that an EVA is easier at merely 100 km?![]()
Yeah, I know. It's not easy, especially when we consider that even ISS and higher objects are still experiencing drag and actually fall back without reboost. So we also could easily exclude ISS and all that stuffAgain: There must be a definition where space begins, or we don't have ANY spaceflight at all.
I just think that referring to LEO makes more sense since it provides sustainable powerless flight through space. New Shepard is in the atmosphere/below the Kármán line by 97% of its flight. It goes just 4km above for exactly 1 minute of its 10 minute trip (on its last flight). It just barely punctures the 100 km boundary.