
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4Z7M4bPfHk
Moderator: HAZ - Moderators
signature splatAZWaterRat wrote:"the first human to break the sound barrier with just his body"
How cool would that be to put on a resume!
Yeah, that's cool land all, but I have been "caller number 9."AZWaterRat wrote:"the first human to break the sound barrier with just his body"
I wondered that too. There's a point where you enter the Earth's atmosphere where s*** catches fire and burns up. I mean they had to have special tiles on the Shuttle to protect from the heat. So was he still lower than that point? He certainly looks like he was above the actual atmosphere to me.....paulhubbard wrote:I wonder how warm he got from the air friction created by traveling that fast?
He only went about mach 1, not mach 20+ where the shuttle hits the atmosphere. Aerodynamic heating only begins around mach 3. The hypersonic ionization that causes plasma heating on the shuttle doesn't start until you get way up above that.Outdoor Lover wrote:I wondered that too. There's a point where you enter the Earth's atmosphere where s*** catches fire and burns up. I mean they had to have special tiles on the Shuttle to protect from the heat. So was he still lower than that point? He certainly looks like he was above the actual atmosphere to me.....paulhubbard wrote:I wonder how warm he got from the air friction created by traveling that fast?
I wouldn't waste my $$ on a Red Bull but it seems there are enough who do that Red Bull makes enough money they can afford to.autumnstars wrote:Well, let's just say Red Bull is really helping push the limits of extreme sports (and other antics) by being willing to sponsor these types of things that other companies wouldn't touch with a 10-ft pole.
It might break apart long before it got there.Outdoor Lover wrote:If a Jet did Mach 20+ at 5000 feet, would it burn up???
Outdoor Lover wrote:@nonot
Great Explanation. So if I get it, it's all about friction. But since air/atmosphere itself doesn't have the ability to produce much friction on it's own, you need some incredible speeds to create enough friction moving through the air, to create actual heat, in this case, alot of heat....![]()
So is that the case just for the Upper Atmosphere? Or just any good old air. If a Jet did Mach 20+ at 5000 feet, would it burn up???
Alston Neal wrote:What about terminal velocity, how was he able to exceed it?
For a cat it's 60 mph, don't ask me why I know this.
But a human...around 200?