10/14/2012

Conditions had to be just right

Pilot Felix Baumgartner of Austria leaves his capsule on Tuesday, October 9, in Roswell, New Mexico, after the Red Bull Stratos mission was aborted due to high winds. Baumgartner is aiming to jump from a higher altitude than anyone ever has -- 120,000 feet (about 23 miles), more than three times the cruising altitude of the average airliner -- with nothing but a space suit, helmet and parachute.Pilot Felix Baumgartner of Austria leaves his capsule on Tuesday, October 9, in Roswell, New Mexico, after the Red Bull Stratos mission was aborted due to high winds. Baumgartner is aiming to jump from a higher altitude than anyone ever has -- 120,000 feet (about 23 miles), more than three times the cruising altitude of the average airliner -- with nothing but a space suit, helmet and parachute.
The high altitude balloon twists in the wind just seconds before the launch was aborted on Tuesday.The high altitude balloon twists in the wind just seconds before the launch was aborted on Tuesday.
Baumgartner leaves his capsule after the flight was aborted on Tuesday.Baumgartner leaves his capsule after the flight was aborted on Tuesday.
Baumgartner stands in the desert after completing the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico, on July 25. Baumgartner stands in the desert after completing the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico, on July 25.
Baumgartner sits in his capsule before the scheduled final manned flight of Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on Tuesday, October 9.Baumgartner sits in his capsule before the scheduled final manned flight of Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on Tuesday, October 9.
Baumgartner's flight was delayed until further notice because of high winds.Baumgartner's flight was delayed until further notice because of high winds.
TV crews report from the launch site.TV crews report from the launch site.
Baumgartner works out during preparations for the flight in Roswell on Sunday, October 7.Baumgartner works out during preparations for the flight in Roswell on Sunday, October 7.
Baumgartner stands in his trailer during preparations Saturday, October 6.Baumgartner stands in his trailer during preparations Saturday, October 6.
A crew member launches a weather balloon into the stratosphere on Thursday, October 4.A crew member launches a weather balloon into the stratosphere on Thursday, October 4.
Crew members recover the capsule after the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on July 25.Crew members recover the capsule after the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on July 25.
Baumgartner steps out from the capsule during the second manned test flight on July 25.Baumgartner steps out from the capsule during the second manned test flight on July 25.
ATA crew members fill the balloon with helium at the flight line on July 25.ATA crew members fill the balloon with helium at the flight line on July 25.
Baumgartner plans to wear this suit during his jump.Baumgartner plans to wear this suit during his jump.
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  • Felix Baumgartner to attempt skydive from 23 miles up
  • Weather will determine whether the jump will go on
  • Meteorologist Judson Jones is anxiously awaiting the jump

Editor's note: Judson Jones is a meteorologist, journalist and photographer. He has freelanced with CNN for four years, covering severe weather from tornadoes to typhoons. Follow him on Twitter: @jnjonesjr

(CNN) -- Update: Felix Baumgartner landed safely on Earth after jumping from 128,000 feet.

I will always wonder what it was like to huddle around a shortwave radio and through the crackling static from space hear the faint beeps of the world's first satellite -- Sputnik. I also missed watching Neil Armstrong step foot on the moon and the first space shuttle take off for the stars. Those events were way before my time.

As a kid, I was fascinated with what goes on in the sky, and when NASA pulled the plug on the shuttle program I was heartbroken. Yet the privatized space race has renewed my childhood dreams to reach for the stars.

As a meteorologist, I've still seen many important weather and space events, but right now, if you were sitting next to me, you'd hear my foot tapping rapidly under my desk. I'm anxious for the next one: a space capsule hanging from a crane in the New Mexico desert.

It's like the set for a George Lucas movie floating to the edge of space.

You and I will have the chance to watch a man take a leap into an unimaginable free fall from the edge of space -- live.

The (lack of) air up there
Watch man jump from 96,000 feet

Tuesday, I sat at work glued to the live stream of the Red Bull Stratos Mission. I watched the balloons positioned at different altitudes in the sky to test the winds, knowing that if they would just line up in a vertical straight line "we" would be go for launch.

I feel this mission was created for me because I am also a journalist and a photographer, but above all I live for taking a leap of faith -- the feeling of pushing the envelope into uncharted territory.

The guy who is going to do this, Felix Baumgartner, must have that same feeling, at a level I will never reach. However, it did not stop me from feeling his pain when a gust of swirling wind kicked up and twisted the partially filled balloon that would take him to the upper end of our atmosphere. As soon as the 40-acre balloon, with skin no thicker than a dry cleaning bag, scraped the ground I knew it was over.

How claustrophobia almost grounded supersonic skydiver

With each twist, you could see the wrinkles of disappointment on the face of the current record holder and "capcom" (capsule communications), Col. Joe Kittinger. He hung his head low in mission control as he told Baumgartner the disappointing news: Mission aborted.

The supersonic descent could happen as early as Sunday afternoon.

For the latest updates on timing, check Red Bull's status clock

The weather plays an important role in this mission. Starting at the ground, conditions have to be very calm -- winds less than 2 mph, with no precipitation or humidity and limited cloud cover. The balloon, with capsule attached, will move through the lower level of the atmosphere (the troposphere) where our day-to-day weather lives. It will climb higher than the tip of Mount Everest (5.5 miles/8.85 kilometers), drifting even higher than the cruising altitude of commercial airliners (5.6 miles/9.17 kilometers) and into the stratosphere. As he crosses the boundary layer (called the tropopause), he can expect a lot of turbulence.

The balloon will slowly drift to the edge of space at 120,000 feet (22.7 miles/36.53 kilometers). Here, "Fearless Felix" will unclip. He will roll back the door.

Then, I would assume, he will slowly step out onto something resembling an Olympic diving platform.

Below, the Earth becomes the concrete bottom of a swimming pool that he wants to land on, but not too hard. Still, he'll be traveling fast, so despite the distance, it will not be like diving into the deep end of a pool. It will be like he is diving into the shallow end.

Skydiver preps for the big jump

When he jumps, he is expected to reach the speed of sound -- 690 mph (1,110 kph) -- in less than 40 seconds. Like hitting the top of the water, he will begin to slow as he approaches the more dense air closer to Earth. But this will not be enough to stop him completely.

If he goes too fast or spins out of control, he has a stabilization parachute that can be deployed to slow him down. His team hopes it's not needed. Instead, he plans to deploy his 270-square-foot (25-square-meter) main chute at an altitude of around 5,000 feet (1,524 meters).

In order to deploy this chute successfully, he will have to slow to 172 mph (277 kph). He will have a reserve parachute that will open automatically if he loses consciousness at mach speeds.

Even if everything goes as planned, it won't. Baumgartner still will free fall at a speed that would cause you and me to pass out, and no parachute is guaranteed to work higher than 25,000 feet (7,620 meters).

It might not be the moon, but Kittinger free fell from 102,800 feet in 1960 -- at the dawn of an infamous space race that captured the hearts of many. Baumgartner will attempt to break that record, a feat that boggles the mind. This is one of those monumental moments I will always remember, because there is no way I'd miss this.

Former Sen. Arlen Specter dies at age 82

Former Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania died Sunday. He was 82.
Former Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania died Sunday. He was 82.
  • Specter died of complications from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
  • He represented Pennsylvania in the Senate longer than anyone else
  • He was long one of the most prominent Jewish-American politicians

(CNN) -- Former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter -- who embodied a dying breed of liberal Republicanism, switching to the Democratic Party at the twilight of his political career -- died after a lengthy battle with cancer, his family announced Sunday.

Specter died of complications from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma on Sunday morning at his home in Philadelphia, his family said. He was 82.

The veteran Pennsylvania senator had overcome numerous serious illnesses over the past two decades, including a brain tumor and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He had been in the public eye since the 1960s, when he first gained attention as a member of the Warren Commission.

Specter was elected to the Senate in 1980 and represented Pennsylvania in that chamber longer than anyone in history.

All along, his politically moderate image fit hand in glove with the politically blue Northeast, both its Democratic centrists and its liberal Republicans.

He had long been one of America's most prominent Jewish politicians, a rare Republican in a category dominated by Democrats over the decades.

His name is synonymous with Pennsylvania, an idiosyncratic state that pushes and pulls between the two parties, and his home, the staunchly Democratic city of Philadelphia.

"One of the few true wild cards of Washington politics," a 2006 article in Philadelphia magazine called him, "reviled by those on both the right and the left."

"Charming and churlish, brilliant and pedantic, he can be fiercely independent, entertainingly eccentric, and simply maddening," the article said.

G. Terry Madonna, director of the Franklin & Marshall College Poll and professor of pubic affairs at Franklin & Marshall College, said Frank Sinatra's song "My Way" could apply to Specter.

"There isn't any doubt in many respects he was an unusual politician," Madonna said. "He didn't look at polls. He didn't track how his comments were playing out in the press. ...

"He was fundamentally a pragmatist who could bend with the times," Madonna said, and he believed greatly that government could help people.

"The Republicanism in his day, it was a different kind of Republican. He was a Philadelphian, and not into that staunchly conservative Republicanism that we see" today.

Readers wished the best for Specter

Madonna called Specter an "indefatigable" public figure, very demanding of both himself and those who worked for him over the years. He had a few election losses but he was undeterred by defeat, the prospects of losing and the challenges he faced.

"The last thing you would have thought about Arlen Specter was that he was born in Kansas," Madonna said. "He always came across as kind of urbane. He had a kind of caustic sense of humor."

But Specter in fact was born in Wichita, the youngest child of Lillie Shanin and Harry Specter, an immigrant from Ukraine. He grew up in Russell, Kansas, also the hometown of another Republican icon, a one-time presidential nominee and senator, Bob Dole.

After graduating from Russell High School in 1947, Specter first went to the University of Oklahoma. But he eventually went east for his higher education. He earned a bachelor's degree in international relations in 1951 from the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia, where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa.

He was in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War from 1951 to 1953, serving as a second lieutenant in the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. He returned to his studies and graduated from Yale Law School in 1956.

After Yale, he started practicing law and became an assistant district attorney in Philadelphia.

He served on the Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, at the recommendation of Rep. Gerald Ford.

He is credited with co-authoring the "single bullet theory," which suggested that some of the wounds to Kennedy and then-Texas Gov. John Connally were caused by the same bullet.

Even though he was a registered Democrat, Specter ran successfully for Philadelphia district attorney on the Republican ticket in 1965 and eventually registered as a Republican. He lost an election for Philadelphia mayor in 1967.

He served as district attorney until 1974 and prosecuted corruption cases against Philadelphia magistrates and Teamsters.

Specter ran for the U.S. Senate in 1976, but was defeated in the Republican primary by John Heinz. He ran for governor but was defeated by Dick Thornburgh in the primary.

But he won his bid for Senate in 1980, and distinguished himself, serving until 2011.

"During his tenure in the Senate, Specter championed Pennsylvania's economy and took an active interest in foreign affairs, meeting with dozens of world leaders as well as supporting appropriations to fight the global HIV/AIDS pandemic and backing free trade agreements between the U.S. and under-developed countries," according to a bio from the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

He served on the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which he was chairman from 2005 to 2007. He served as chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence from 1995 to 1997. And he was a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Specter brought more financial resources to Pennsylvania than anyone in the state, working with mayors and other local leaders to help them get grants and aid, Madonna said. And he's remembered across the state's 67 counties for his efforts.

"He didn't shy away from pork," Madonna said.

He participated in the confirmation hearings of 14 U.S. Supreme Court nominees, the Penn bio says. He is remembered for leading the charge against conservative nominee Robert Bork and going after Anita Hill, who accused nominee Clarence Thomas of harassment.

"No member of Congress shaped the Supreme Court more than he did," Madonna said. "He had a prosecutorial mindset. He could be incredibly persuasive as an interrogator."

Specter straddled right and left. He criticized Republicans for President Clinton's impeachment and voted in favor of the Iraq war. He supported embroyonic stem cell research.

During the 1990s, he briefly announced a run for president but eventually dropped the effort and endorsed Bob Dole.

Despite his longtime membership in the Republican Party, Specter became more alienated from the party as it grew more conservative.

Like many of his moderate compatriots he came to be viewed by the new conservatives as a RINO -- a Republican in Name Only. Decades after he switched to the Republican Party, he changed his stripes again. He became a Democrat in 2009, saying Republicans had moved too far to the right and embraced social conservatism.

The move gave Democrats a 60-seat filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Two years later, when he ran for re-election, Specter lost in the Democratic primary, ending his political career.

After the loss, he moved from the halls of Congress to those of academia, taking on a new role at the University of Pennsylvania Law School as an adjunct professor.

"Arlen's knowledge of the inner workings of the government and lawmaking is second to none," said Michael Fitts, the law school's dean. "The insight he brings from his career in public service, particularly as a leader on judicial issues, will be invaluable to our students as they prepare for their own careers in the law."

The senator practiced law when he wasn't in office and authored books throughout his career, including:

-- "Passion for Truth: From Finding JFK's Single Bullet to Questioning Anita Hill to Impeaching Clinton"

-- "Never Give In: Battling Cancer in the Senate"

-- "Life Among the Cannibals: A Political Career, a Tea Party Uprising, and the End of Governing As We Know It"

"For the past quarter-century, he's also been a Zelig-like national figure," the Philadelphia magazine article said, referring to the Woody Allen character from the film of the same name who changed his persona as his surroundings and circumstances changed.

"From his role in sinking Robert Bork's Supreme Court nomination to his cross-examination of Anita Hill, from stem-cell research to the impeachment of Bill Clinton, Specter's greatest talent may be his unique ability to put himself -- somehow, some way -- in the center of the nation's most important debates," the article said.

Obituaries 2012: The lives they've lived

CNN's Sarah Hoye in Philadelphia contributed to this report.

Longtime GOP Senate moderate Arlen Specter dies

By The Associated Press

Former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the Republican-turned-Democrat who played a key role in many Supreme Court nominations, has died. He was 82.

His son Shanin Specter says his father died Sunday morning at his home in Philadelphia, from complications of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He had battled cancer and other health problems.

Specter served 30 years in the Senate, a Pennsylvania record.

In April 2009, he startled fellow senators when he announced he was switching to the Democratic side because he did not think he could win the nomination for a sixth term in the increasingly conservative GOP. He wound up losing the 2010 Democratic primary to then-Rep. Joe Sestak, who narrowly lost Specter's seat to conservative Pat Toomey.

Specter was the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee before the Democrats regained power in 2007.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Claustrophobia almost grounded him

Pilot Felix Baumgartner of Austria stands in the desert after completing the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico, on July 25. Baumgartner is aiming to jump from a higher altitude than anyone ever has -- 120,000 feet (about 23 miles), more than three times the cruising altitude of the average airliner -- with nothing but a space suit, helmet and parachute.Pilot Felix Baumgartner of Austria stands in the desert after completing the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico, on July 25. Baumgartner is aiming to jump from a higher altitude than anyone ever has -- 120,000 feet (about 23 miles), more than three times the cruising altitude of the average airliner -- with nothing but a space suit, helmet and parachute.
Baumgartner sits in his capsule before the scheduled final manned flight of Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on Tuesday, October 9.Baumgartner sits in his capsule before the scheduled final manned flight of Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on Tuesday, October 9.
Baumgartner's flight was delayed until further notice because of high winds.Baumgartner's flight was delayed until further notice because of high winds.
TV crews report from the launch site.TV crews report from the launch site.
Baumgartner works out during preparations for the flight in Roswell on Sunday, October 7.Baumgartner works out during preparations for the flight in Roswell on Sunday, October 7.
Baumgartner stands in his trailer during preparations Saturday, October 6.Baumgartner stands in his trailer during preparations Saturday, October 6.
A crew member launches a weather balloon into the stratosphere on Thursday, October 4.A crew member launches a weather balloon into the stratosphere on Thursday, October 4.
Crew members recover the capsule after the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on July 25.Crew members recover the capsule after the second manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell on July 25.
Baumgartner steps out from the capsule during the second manned test flight on July 25.Baumgartner steps out from the capsule during the second manned test flight on July 25.
ATA crew members fill the balloon with helium at the flight line on July 25.ATA crew members fill the balloon with helium at the flight line on July 25.
Baumgartner plans to wear this suit during his jump.Baumgartner plans to wear this suit during his jump.
  • Felix Baumgartner has made more than 2,500 skydiving jumps
  • "Fear has become a friend of mine," he said
  • Baumgartner wore a pressured suit for a record-breaking jump, adding claustrophobia

(Wired) -- Of all the things Felix Baumgartner had to worry about while pursuing his dream of skydiving from 120,000 feet, the one that almost stopped him cold was ...

Claustrophobia.

"Fearless Felix" got a bit freaked out by the pressurized suit he'll wear during his ascent and, more importantly, his supersonic descent from 23 miles up -- now tentatively scheduled for Sunday or Monday. Getting over his discomfort was a key hurdle to clear as the Austrian adventurer set out to make the highest skydive ever.

To that end, Red Bull, his sponsor, called in Dr. Michael Gervais. He's a sports psychologist who specializes in high-performance and "extreme" sports like, say, falling out of the sky at the speed of sound. Red Bull wanted him to psychologically evaluate Baumgartner and help him conquer his fear.

The (lack of) air up there
Skydiver to jump 23 miles
Watch man jump from 96,000 feet
Extreme skydiver attempts record jump

It must be said that Baumgartner is no stranger to fear or death-defying situations. The 43-year-old former military parachutist has made more than 2,500 jumps, including dives from the Petronas Towers and the Taipei 101 skyscraper. Clearly he has learned how to put aside fear, even use it to his advantage.

"Fear has become a friend of mine," he said in a statement. "It's what prevents me from stepping too far over the line. On a mission like this, you need to be mentally fit and have total control over what you do, and I'm preparing very thoroughly."

But his plan to break the unofficial record retired Col. Joe Kittinger set with a leap from 102,800 feet in 1960 revealed a fear Baumgartner hadn't felt before. And it had nothing to do with coming down from such a height, but suiting up to reach it.

To prevent a potentially fatal condition called ebullism, Baumgartner must wear a custom-made space suit and helmet. Although the suit, based on those worn by high-altitude reconnaissance pilots, is designed to maximize maneuverability and visibility, it constricts his movement and vision. He'd never worn a pressurized space suit before, and he felt the claustrophobia — which, according to a New York Times account, was so severe it brought on panic attacks — threatened to bring the mission to a screeching halt.

That's when Gervais stepped in. After determining that Baumgartner was entirely committed to making the jump and not using claustrophobia as an excuse to back out, he set to work. (Baumgartner, who is in Roswell, New Mexico preparing for Sunday's launch, could not be reached for comment, but Red Bull confirmed Gervais' account for Wired.)

Over the course of three days, Gervais determined Baumgartner didn't have quite the right tools to manage his mind and emotions in the face of so great a risk. That's where the suit became an issue: It was a symbol of his not having complete control of the situation. To combat this, Gervais said, Baumgartner had to reconnect with his vision. He'd become too focused on the suit, not the goal he hoped to reach wearing it.

Simply put, he needed to get his eyes back on the prize.

"When we are in a high stakes or intense situation, it's not uncommon for our minds to jump forward, going to the next moment and worrying about what happens when this moment doesn't go well," Gervais said. "What happens is we give 50 percent to something that doesn't exist yet and 50 to this moment."

To reconnect with his vision, Baumgartner needed to reconnect to what Gervais called his hidden journey — what the jump meant to him, beyond being the first person to skydive from so great a height, or being the first person to exceed the speed of sound (about 700 mph at that altitude) in free fall. The hidden journey, he said, is much more basic: Baumgartner wants to go somewhere no one has ever been.

Gervais taught Baumgartner how to better manage his mind and body under pressure. Baumgartner mastered something Gervais called "combat breathing," or deep breathing, to calm himself. And he developed positive self-talk, using great care in choosing the words he used when talking to himself and others about the jump.

"Self-talk is considered one of the most powerful mental skills," Gervais said. "Self talk is the foundation for self-confidence and self-esteem."

To sharpen these skills, Gervais put Baumgartner in increasingly uncomfortable situations — which he would not specify — and made him try to gain control of his body and mind.

"We cultivated a situation to move a person to the edge of panic," said Gervais. "Imagine doing that repeatedly over 30 hours of training and at the end of it, you've got full control of how your mind works, and you breathe freely in those moments."

To further help Baumgartner, Kittinger — a trusted adviser who has worked closely will Baumgartner over the years — will be the only voice the Austrian will hear on the radio.

"Felix trusts me because I know what he's going through — and I'm the only one who knows what he's going through," the retired colonel told the Times. His flight team also devised a detailed pre-launch procedure to help occupy Baumgartner's mind before lift-off.

Once Baumgartner's mind was at ease, Gervais had to convince the Stratos team the problem had been solved. Because his ascent, in a space capsule dangling beneath a 55-story helium balloon, would take about 3.5 hours, and the descent about 20 minutes, he had to demonstrate 4.5 to five hours of proficiency in the suit.

"Then they would feel comfortable that Felix as a man and an athlete could manage himself in a space where no one else has been," Gervais said.

We already know Baumgartner passed the test, because he made successful test jumps from 13 miles up in March and 18 miles up in July. That said, the repeated weather delays — the jump has been twice delayed by high wind — can't be helping the mental strain, but Gervais is confident that Baumgartner has what it takes to stay focused on the task at hand.

"He's somebody that is willing to commit everything to his vision," added Gervais. "Everything is on the line. It's a great emblem for all of us to find value and fully commit to a vision."

Skydiver aims for supersonic jump from the edge of space

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