Lunar_Lander
New member
Hi @all,
just found this about two weeks ago. Don Piccard (uncle of Bertrand Piccard) prepares for his eXtreme Altitude Project XAP. The goal is to fly a mixed hot-air/helium balloon system (but no Rozieré! something completely new) to an altitude of 150,000 feet!
Until now, only two unmanned balloons reached that height (the Winzen Resarch Balloon of Oct. 1972, 50 km and the BU-60 from Japan, 2002, 53 km). And now Don is about to go higher than any manned balloon before. Maybe he'll place the final world record mark, because I think it's then unlikely that there will be a higher balloon flight.
Here's his website: www.piccard.info
It's also great that he will take up scientific instruments and that it's therefore not just a world record attempt. And here's my discussion idea: Which measurements would you take on a balloon flight into the Mesosphere? I'll post my ideas later, now it's your turn
.
Cheers
,
Lunar_Lander
just found this about two weeks ago. Don Piccard (uncle of Bertrand Piccard) prepares for his eXtreme Altitude Project XAP. The goal is to fly a mixed hot-air/helium balloon system (but no Rozieré! something completely new) to an altitude of 150,000 feet!
Until now, only two unmanned balloons reached that height (the Winzen Resarch Balloon of Oct. 1972, 50 km and the BU-60 from Japan, 2002, 53 km). And now Don is about to go higher than any manned balloon before. Maybe he'll place the final world record mark, because I think it's then unlikely that there will be a higher balloon flight.
Here's his website: www.piccard.info
It's also great that he will take up scientific instruments and that it's therefore not just a world record attempt. And here's my discussion idea: Which measurements would you take on a balloon flight into the Mesosphere? I'll post my ideas later, now it's your turn
Cheers
,Lunar_Lander
