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Can You Skydive From The International Space Station? 

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While the sight from the International Space Station is a beautiful one, jumping off of it won't be. It will be a deadly journey for any astronaut who jumps off the ISS to reach Earth's surface.
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Following is the transcript of the video:
Most skydivers jump off a plane flying 3.8 km above the ground. But imagine jumping off something even higher, like the International Space Station.
Unless you have a supersuit like Tony Stark, it's not gonna end well. But let's pretend Iron Man lends you one.
Ok, ready? 3 … 2 … 1 … Jump! Wait … what?
That's right, you wouldn't fall straight down. In fact, it'll take you at least 2.5 years before you reach the surface. So what's going on?
Height isn't the main reason your fall takes so long. In fact, if you fell like a normal skydiver, it would only take about 2 hours.
But the thing is, you don't fall straight down. You fall into orbit. The reason is speed. You see, the ISS might be called a station, but it's hardly stationary. It's actually moving 12 times faster than a jet fighter.
If you shot anything at that speed on Earth, by the time it was about to hit the ground, it would miss! In the same way, the ISS isn't floating in space, it's falling towards Earth and missing!
And when you jump off the ISS, you're initially moving at that same speed. So you end up in orbit, too - at least for a while.
Now, even though it's so high up, the ISS is pushing through a very thin atmosphere. And that friction slows it down. So the station fires engines to maintain speed and keep from crashing into the Earth.
But sadly your supersuit doesn't come with engines strapped to your feet. This has two consequences:
First, it means you can't maneuver and have to hope that any of those 13,000 chunks of space debris don't impale you. Second, without rockets to maintain your speed, you'll slow down and spiral toward Earth.
But it won't be quick. The Chinese space station Tiangong 1, for example, about 2 years to fall out of orbit. On the ISS, you're higher up, so you'll take roughly 2.5 years. But once you strike the atmosphere, your long wait is over. And it's go time.
As you re-enter, you have one goal: slow down. You're traveling at hypersonic speeds. So, if you deployed a parachute now, it'll shred to pieces.
And that's not the only problem. Falling through the atmosphere at such break-neck speeds generates a lot of pressure on your suit - at least 8Gs of force - that's 8 times the gravity you feel at sea level.
And if you're falling feet first, that'll push the blood away from your brain and toward your feet. So you'll probably pass out unless you're one of those fighter pilots who train to withstand up to 5Gs.
Now, if you don't pass out, you may worry about the freezing temperatures up here. But, it turns out, your suit's more likely to melt than freeze. You know how you can warm your hands by rubbing them together?
Now imagine your supersuit rubbing against air molecules in the atmosphere at least 6 times the speed of sound. You'll heat up to about 1,650 ºC - hot enough to melt iron!
In fact, the heat is so intense, it strips electrons from their atoms forming a pink plasma around you that will ultimately destroy suit.
If that's not enough of a problem, the drag will rip off your limbs. But thankfully, Tony Stark has your back, and somehow, your supersuit holds with you intact.
At 41 km up you've now reached the world record for highest skydive. In 2014, Alan Eustace wore a pressurized space suit as he rode a balloon up to this height. He broke the sound barrier on his way down before deploying his parachute and landed about 15 minutes after the drop.
But you'll be falling much faster than Eustace - about 3 times the speed of sound. So, in reality, you're not going to slow down enough to safely deploy your chute. That's where Iron Man can help us one last time. By 1 km up you've reached the territory of ordinary skydivers who don't need fancy suits to survive.
And at this point, your parachute can do its thing. And it's finally time to land softly.
Whew, what a ride! What sort of daring feat would you want us to try next? Let us know in the comments below. And thanks for watching.
A special thanks to Shawn R Brueshaber at Western Michigan University and Kunio Sayanagi at Hampton University for their help with this video.

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5 июл 2018

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Комментарии : 2,8 тыс.   
@mr.normalguy69
@mr.normalguy69 5 лет назад
*Has an iron man suit* *Can't do any retrograde burn*
@mr.mr.moremr.7077
@mr.mr.moremr.7077 5 лет назад
Because science
@mr.mr.moremr.7077
@mr.mr.moremr.7077 5 лет назад
Yaayyuyyy
@kelvin3706
@kelvin3706 5 лет назад
@@mr.mr.moremr.7077 Dumbass
@DatHaisAWESOME
@DatHaisAWESOME 5 лет назад
But can do a propulsively assisted landing
@nootaboot7042
@nootaboot7042 5 лет назад
It’s cause inside edition is pulling this out of their asses and don’t even know what retrograde means
@Kelkschiz
@Kelkschiz 5 лет назад
Ehm, Iron Man's suit has propulsion...
@agalianar
@agalianar 5 лет назад
Ikr.
@maxherrera1018
@maxherrera1018 5 лет назад
r/Woooosh jk. Thats true xd
@nachoag8678
@nachoag8678 5 лет назад
That's not the point of the video
@driver4133
@driver4133 5 лет назад
Yeah I know she thinks she's Albert Einstein ._.
@10p7
@10p7 5 лет назад
Propulsion won´t work in space, it needs oxygen to burn, there is no oxygen tho.
@sleepyysleep
@sleepyysleep 5 лет назад
“HONEY, WHERES MY SUPER SUIT?!”
@GavinDoesObjectShows
@GavinDoesObjectShows 4 года назад
lol I get it
@davidpurcell9865
@davidpurcell9865 3 года назад
I uh put it away
@0142Jason
@0142Jason 2 года назад
I understood that reference. I think.
@UnknownUser-re6yg
@UnknownUser-re6yg 5 лет назад
1:11 still trying to process the sentence
@umstot3120
@umstot3120 5 лет назад
Its a simple topic horribly explained
@Dive_Me_Crazy
@Dive_Me_Crazy 5 лет назад
Or a horrible topic simply explained.
@TahcoShell
@TahcoShell 5 лет назад
Exactly WTF???
@TahcoShell
@TahcoShell 5 лет назад
@Greninja GoYT o lol I was puzzled
@sbeve779
@sbeve779 5 лет назад
by that we would be moving faster than a jet fighter since all life move at 9000 km/h
@peaktroglodyte
@peaktroglodyte 6 лет назад
*WHERES MY SUPER SUIT?*
@skidplate4749
@skidplate4749 6 лет назад
Frozone from the incredibles
@annoyingguyoninternet1631
@annoyingguyoninternet1631 6 лет назад
Lmao hahahahah
@alexosow
@alexosow 6 лет назад
In orbit
@icushfu732
@icushfu732 5 лет назад
On its way down eith some idiot who thought he could skydive off the iss.
@rajatbasak9703
@rajatbasak9703 5 лет назад
In the Laundry. 😏
@raz0229
@raz0229 5 лет назад
00:28 She Says: *_You Won't Fall Straight Down!_* Hello! Stark Has Also Built Some Nitros On The Back Of The Suit!
@chlochlo4929
@chlochlo4929 5 лет назад
ᖇᗩ乙0229 She means naturally falling, not with any force or anything.
@ianhargis182
@ianhargis182 5 лет назад
Thanks for giving me the answer in the thumbnail. I was still interested enough to click it though.
@blitzkriegss4837
@blitzkriegss4837 5 лет назад
Felix Baumgartner : Hold my beer
@thegorillainvestigationsun7885
Oh I see
@angeloxdmt
@angeloxdmt 4 года назад
He didnt jump from the international space station 🤦‍♂️
@TheElvisnator
@TheElvisnator 4 года назад
Hold my Spacesuit*
@angeloxdmt
@angeloxdmt 4 года назад
@@TheElvisnator hold my helmet*
@tk_on30s99
@tk_on30s99 4 года назад
Umm the iss is 240 miles high from sea level..
@intreoo
@intreoo 6 лет назад
Did anyone notice how the Earth below the International Space Station was actually Earth when all the ice melts
@muddywisconsin
@muddywisconsin 6 лет назад
Pixelized Me 😂
@Heyappleknife27
@Heyappleknife27 6 лет назад
Pixelized Me too
@abrtn00101
@abrtn00101 6 лет назад
Damn.. Great work spotting that. I didn't notice until after I read your comment.
@TheCaptainSplatter
@TheCaptainSplatter 6 лет назад
Lol. Thanks for that spotting.
@SethMethCS
@SethMethCS 5 лет назад
Propaganda anyone?
@aequitas8749
@aequitas8749 6 лет назад
Ironman's suit is not made of iron, it's made out of an alloy of titanium and gold specifically to resist the extreme temperatures at high altitudes.
@PresidentialWinner
@PresidentialWinner 6 лет назад
Gold can't stand high temperatures, tungsten and other elements can tho
@johnmoore1495
@johnmoore1495 6 лет назад
She never said his suit was made from iron, she just said the temperature was hot enough to melt iron.
@pedrolmlkzk
@pedrolmlkzk 6 лет назад
it's an alloy mate it's better than regular gold
@cwg73160
@cwg73160 6 лет назад
Pineapple doesn’t belong on pizza. We’re mentioning things that don’t make sense since they weren’t said in the video, right?
@shabaxbinshabax6921
@shabaxbinshabax6921 6 лет назад
😂
@AcidGlow
@AcidGlow 5 лет назад
*So the only way to survive is if I have an IronMan Suit.. Got it! ✅😁*
@thesily
@thesily 3 года назад
WAIT It won't work! The electrons will split from the atom creating plasma making the suit melt and making you melt!
@thesily
@thesily 3 года назад
btw DO NOT r/wooosh me or you will be a poop
@9736680532
@9736680532 3 года назад
In the avengers movie lron man pass out and he lron man suit stop working so i idk about that
@leearmst
@leearmst 3 года назад
@@thesily Nah, you'd die of thirst and hunger well over 2 years before that happened.
@elm-neo
@elm-neo 3 года назад
@@thesily The suit has thrusters in it. So, most of these problems are solved just by that.
@ThoughtinFlight
@ThoughtinFlight 5 лет назад
The heat is caused by compression of the air when it impacts, the convection actually helps cool it with ablation.
@Zoki4444
@Zoki4444 5 лет назад
Tony Stark can't solve all your problems! Stark: "Hold my beer."
@Aksshay
@Aksshay 5 лет назад
Thor : "Thanks."
@mrboleus8240
@mrboleus8240 6 лет назад
You don’t need to watch for the answer. Play KSP!
@kubulll
@kubulll 5 лет назад
if you smart you can get form moon orbit to earth with only RSC
@masqueraze4449
@masqueraze4449 5 лет назад
Iron mans suit has thrusters and turbines.
@carlosalbertouseche
@carlosalbertouseche 4 года назад
Pure Playz hi
@drunkpixel568
@drunkpixel568 4 года назад
Yes
@averagemorbidenjoyer3902
@averagemorbidenjoyer3902 4 года назад
turbines in space? really?
@sirmh1919
@sirmh1919 4 года назад
The one he gave us is just metal
@ethangasson9965
@ethangasson9965 4 года назад
She's not a true fan
@devyn.n05
@devyn.n05 5 лет назад
So Tony doesn't have ANY form of thrust-makers in orbit, but he does 1 KM above ground?
@Silrak50
@Silrak50 5 лет назад
there is still air over 1 km
@JustinY.
@JustinY. 6 лет назад
He would have to decelerate quite a bit to deorbit
@Reltropolis
@Reltropolis 6 лет назад
Justin Y. I see you everywhere
@dyomel3249
@dyomel3249 6 лет назад
Justin Y. 3rd
@alnashraansari8484
@alnashraansari8484 6 лет назад
The Millennium State Central Business District yes
@rasheruu
@rasheruu 6 лет назад
We meet again
@eddieapo3855
@eddieapo3855 6 лет назад
Justin Y. How can we avoid you?
@Mr.Elliott
@Mr.Elliott 6 лет назад
Hold on, save yourself sometime and dont watch the video cause I have the quick answer for you. No
@supermeat10
@supermeat10 5 лет назад
FUCKA YOU
@Dolphineater200
@Dolphineater200 5 лет назад
Seriously this video is so dumb. Like the iss doesnt have a single rocket engine or even cold gas thrusters it's only way of changing orientation Is by its gyroscopes big spinning hunks of metal change its orientation now in regards towards it slowly losing energy and deorbiting it does get a boost by the space craft that dock with it.
@lurandir8230
@lurandir8230 5 лет назад
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISS_Propulsion_Module
@kepyyy5766
@kepyyy5766 5 лет назад
Lmao it does have truster
@thomaswijgerse723
@thomaswijgerse723 5 лет назад
@@Dolphineater200 you, my friend, are dumb, of course the iss had rcs and small engines!
@bobicabayo
@bobicabayo 4 года назад
I loved the sound effects
@mijoizagas3747
@mijoizagas3747 2 года назад
What an awesome explanation, well done!
@k.a.carson677
@k.a.carson677 5 лет назад
There's so much wrong with this video.
@user-lp7tx1fe6t
@user-lp7tx1fe6t 5 лет назад
The part about the iss orbit was surprisingly right tho
@jaxconf9519
@jaxconf9519 5 лет назад
he's a cadet bro, he must really know aerodynamics and flight. Are you sure? Kenneth?
@k.a.carson677
@k.a.carson677 5 лет назад
Yes, @@jaxconf9519, I am sure.
@DANGJOS
@DANGJOS 5 лет назад
@@k.a.carson677 Wrong like what?
@lewisbarber901
@lewisbarber901 5 лет назад
first off, it depends where you jump and how hard you push ie if you jump in the opposite direction the ids is traveling it won’t take as long as you will decelerate at a constant rate. Not only that if you jumped off the iss it wouldn’t take you long until you were lies away from it no matter what direction you jumped. And by the time you are about 3km up your terminal velocity would’ve decreased no matter what speed you were originally going. This is because the air resistance would be to great to keep you going at that speed unless an external force was acting upon you.
@LaylaAbuser
@LaylaAbuser 6 лет назад
it's really impossible to done this, as you can see.. His palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy There's vomit on his sweater already, mom's spaghetti He's nervous, but on the surface he looks calm and ready To drop bombs, but he keeps on forgettin' What he wrote down, the whole crowd goes so loud He opens his mouth, but the words won't come out He's chokin
@marcellb579
@marcellb579 6 лет назад
Crzy Wisfy 04 "his palms..." That's when you should have known 😂
@Bagunka
@Bagunka 6 лет назад
yes! that's proves that the Earth is flat once and for all!
@Bagunka
@Bagunka 6 лет назад
It's called a joke mate :)
@fryncyaryorvjink2140
@fryncyaryorvjink2140 6 лет назад
Jokes and jokes and jokes, ahahahaha, spaghetti spaghetti
@ray-Bolantah
@ray-Bolantah 6 лет назад
@2:59 wrong. If you fall feet first, your blood will be pushed towards your head and from your feet. Not the other way around
@Seam_n
@Seam_n 5 лет назад
Did anyone notice that the earth they used is from the video where they asked “what if all the ice on earth melted?” And the continents are damaged with water???
@warriorspacedude-lennonwsd3789
I noticed it too
@kuromifan10
@kuromifan10 4 года назад
I assume continuity
@funnyfacekong5308
@funnyfacekong5308 4 года назад
Yup I noticed it too
@tonigather9685
@tonigather9685 3 года назад
Finally I'm not alone
@tomasmicek2306
@tomasmicek2306 3 года назад
I saw caucaus and nothing else so i thought it was a mkstake
@SpaceAndroidz
@SpaceAndroidz 5 лет назад
You did a good job explaining and love the animation
@eepruls
@eepruls 5 лет назад
Very nicely explained. Great job.
@tvgyt1559
@tvgyt1559 5 лет назад
Wait, so you don't have any means of controlling your orbit using the thrusters in your suit, but 2.5 years later when you are about to crash into the surface, your thrusters work to slow you down enough to deploy a parachute?
@violetyg2626
@violetyg2626 4 года назад
Imagine jumping off, waiting 2.5 years and then landing into the middle of the ocean
@AANGELESASECINOSA
@AANGELESASECINOSA 4 года назад
Finally this is the answer that I was looking for
@thequillster
@thequillster 5 лет назад
This video makes a lot of assumptions based on comic logic.
@anthonynye1747
@anthonynye1747 5 лет назад
I wouldn’t even say logic
@BelieveOneGod
@BelieveOneGod 5 лет назад
Comics bs to be more exact
@Plaonux
@Plaonux 5 лет назад
*iron man suit in space* Me and iron-man:HOW DID U SOLVE THE ICING PROBLEM?!
@reginalechleitner6685
@reginalechleitner6685 2 года назад
Thanks for the best laugh I have had in a long time!!!😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
@dreababygillylan2011
@dreababygillylan2011 4 года назад
Great info!
@masterimbecile
@masterimbecile 6 лет назад
Honeeeyyy??? WHERE'S MA SUPA-SUIT?
@annoyingguyoninternet1631
@annoyingguyoninternet1631 6 лет назад
😂
@hongpingmike
@hongpingmike 6 лет назад
Try to explain how to enter Uranus.
@txtpeer5179
@txtpeer5179 6 лет назад
Do you know Uranus actually smell like poop for real !
@hjtheobserver5590
@hjtheobserver5590 5 лет назад
Wow haha so original
@moki2093
@moki2093 5 лет назад
You a freak freak👀👀😥😥🍆💦🍆💦
@Thenotfunnyperson
@Thenotfunnyperson 5 лет назад
I usually just try normal sex then "accidentally" put it in there.
@darkbird2724
@darkbird2724 5 лет назад
With some cold cream
@scottl.1568
@scottl.1568 3 года назад
A Hampton Pirate collaborated on this? Respect...👍
@jodyspiegel73
@jodyspiegel73 5 лет назад
Great video and explanation. What if a a cable where lowered from space station to the ground could a person grab ahold of it and be taken for a ride? How fast would this cable be moving?
@michaelszczys8316
@michaelszczys8316 Год назад
The cable would be traveling at the speed of the space station and would not go straight down to earth, it would simply stay right along with the station falling around the earth like the rest of it. The cable would more likely swing outward away from the earth due to centripetal force.
@mr.nguyen3403
@mr.nguyen3403 5 лет назад
3:16 “You might worry about the cold temperatures up here!” you were in frickin space
@astromec6303
@astromec6303 5 лет назад
3:31 Actually, friction alone doesn’t cause the heat (scientists calculated that). The heating is mostly due to the compression of air under a falling body!
@nihadasadli2642
@nihadasadli2642 4 года назад
Yep, that's a common myth.
@acerlmt
@acerlmt 4 года назад
Link plz
@woswasdenni1914
@woswasdenni1914 4 года назад
yep, thats why this video is wrong. you would not burn up, thats why baumgartner survived his jump from 42km. 42km or 240km doenst make that much of a difference. he entered the amtosphere at about 1300kmh. so yea with a sepcial suite and training and some luck you might be able to jump from the iss (trusters needed ofc)
@AnimMouse
@AnimMouse 3 года назад
Would rather call it compression and friction.
@sagrunge9732
@sagrunge9732 3 года назад
@@woswasdenni1914 You wrong.First of all Baumgartner was not from space,he was 42km above earth which is still in earth's atmosphere(atmosphere ends at 100km above earth). Secondly Baumgartner started at 0km/s speed when he made the fall while spacecrafts enter atmosphere(assuming it was orbiting earth) at approximately 10km/s,which is more than 20times the speed of sound meaning the craft will burn up due to friction and compression of air and its the reason why Baumgartner DIDNT burn up because he wasnt fast enough. The only wrong thing about this video is that friction is not the only way things burn up in re-entry,compression of air is another reason
@jpmusictv6090
@jpmusictv6090 3 года назад
You convinced me: I wanna try!
@AKshay_47
@AKshay_47 5 лет назад
Your voice is awesome....Loved it
@milkywegian
@milkywegian 6 лет назад
3:38 this is so wrong....reentry heating is mainly caused by fast air compression...friction isn’t the main reason...research more before making a video please, this is a science channel videos are supposed to be well researched.
@giovannifrrri5495
@giovannifrrri5495 6 лет назад
NafiuGamer what you're saying is air resistance, it is already slowing you down, you slow down because you encounter more air molecules but this comes with a lot of friction = heat
@milkywegian
@milkywegian 6 лет назад
But if you have something not very aerodynamic during reentry let’s say a heatshield in this case the heatshield gets hot by air compression (because it’s not very aerodynamic and friction slows it down,it means friction can’t create that flamey plasma around it) and because usually spacecrafts reenter the atmosphere with really high speed (relative to the surface) air starts to compress faster and faster and that causes the air to get warm and also the space craft.
@milkywegian
@milkywegian 6 лет назад
Heyyy a quora post explains it better than me “The reason why objects without a heat shield or entering the atmosphere uncontrolled incinerate is simply due to the fact air can't get out of their way fast enough. The Space Shuttle strikes the atmosphere at 25 times the speed of sound, and objects coming in from deep space can be moving three or four times faster. As an object encounters the atmosphere, air cannot move out of the way due to the hypersonic velocity, and instead it piles up ahead of the object and compresses into a shock wave. The gases there are compressed rapidly enough to heat up to 20,000 degrees or more, and because of that the radiant heat from the shock wave starts to heat up the incoming object. The heat will either melt or vaporize any material exposed to the shock wave, and since aluminum is used heavily in the construction of spacecraft, the spacecraft tears apart and the pieces melt or vaporize. The shock wave also creates drag upon the object, which slows it down as well and created immense pressures on it as well. If the object has a heat shield, it either melts and burns away, taking the heat with it, or like the Space Shuttle's simply insulates the skin from the heat. This is possible because instead of just diving in like a nuclear bomb or skipping along the atmosphere like a rock off a pond as the Apollo lunar missions did, the Shuttle rides the upper atmosphere like a surfer. That keeps the temperatures low enough for thermal tiles to protect the spacecraft during re-entry. Other spacecraft make a ballistic re-entry, which not only creates hull temperatures of 6,000 degrees and higher, it also treats the crew to severe and sometimes near bone crushing deceleration too. The spacecraft require a very heavy heat shield that cannot be reused, and it burns away to save the spacecraft. The re-entry must be made at a precise angle, or the spacecraft will burn up like a meteorite, or even skip off the atmosphere to careen off into space again. A spacecraft must make a controlled entry no only to avoid breaking apart and burning up, it's also to keep the gee forces from killing the crew.”
@milkywegian
@milkywegian 6 лет назад
But friction plays a part too
@milkywegian
@milkywegian 6 лет назад
TheCosmoBros nice catch
@alski200
@alski200 5 лет назад
This is probably the most inaccurate video I've ever seen
@alski200
@alski200 5 лет назад
Judging by that statement, I can tell that Physics and Science were not your best subjects in school. Plus I don't think a person who's in there mid 30's is a kid. Third of all watch the Felix Baumgartner video of him skydiving from the end of the stratosphere before you put your two cents in and know what you're talking about.
@Lithobrake0
@Lithobrake0 5 лет назад
Illkid1200 Could you clarify what sort of inaccuracies you found? I saw a few mild ones, (like the time given at 0:50, or the oversimplified explanation of reentry heat) but nothing too major. PS and im pretty sure Auntie only called you a kid in quotation marks, because its in your username :)
@alski200
@alski200 5 лет назад
At 5:07 it states that the ISS is moving through a very thin atmosphere, its actually is moving just above the edge of the Ionosphere and the only reason why it slow down is because of the friction of the ionosphere and the space station is what slow it down. My point was even if you were was enough to jump, your body would go in the direction of whatever is the greatest force acting on your body since there is no gravity in a vacuum. I'm not saying there are major inaccuracies, it's just most of what this video says is to over simplistic.
@Lithobrake0
@Lithobrake0 5 лет назад
Well the video was very simplistic, ill give you that. I know it's made for people who don't know much about space, but I feel it's still too oversimplified. As per the rest though, the ionosphere IS par of the atmosphere, so their statement is completely correct. And there is gravity in vacuum, the iss has to stay in orbit, that's why you cant just jump towards Earth to return, that's what this video spent a lot of time explaining.
@alski200
@alski200 5 лет назад
Oh crap totally forgot about micro gravity which is gravity in a vacuum.When I took meteorology and astronomy, I was taught that in the ionosphere kinda really is not considered part of the atmosphere since the gases at that height aren't that much to be a part of the atmosphere. It's just the outer layer of it of the earth atmosphere. My point was even if you were to jump from it per se, what ever forces that are acting on your body would be the direction you would go in
@Zaturn_
@Zaturn_ 5 лет назад
What a ride indeed!
@annbell6453
@annbell6453 3 года назад
Well, guess I'll take that off my bucket list : )
@alyx1a
@alyx1a 5 лет назад
Kittinger jumped from like 123,000 feet I recall
@p-n-subrahmanya
@p-n-subrahmanya 6 лет назад
Diving into Mariana Trench
@McDudes
@McDudes 3 года назад
When you quit the job with no warning
@spongehead1354
@spongehead1354 4 года назад
World's highest skydive, Felix Buamgarner 120,000 feet! Congats Felix for proving the earth is round!
@kingm3llo
@kingm3llo 6 лет назад
1:50 Well if u don't have engines on your feet use your hands like this clip --} 4:39
@vijeykrishnaa2230
@vijeykrishnaa2230 5 лет назад
Polo Exactly what I thought!
@Isaac-lb1gl
@Isaac-lb1gl 5 лет назад
Yep
@Kilroy.6644
@Kilroy.6644 6 лет назад
Is anyone else bothered by the fact that they showed the ISS in a retrograde equatorial orbit? And yes I know I'm being nitpicky.
@andrewpast1959
@andrewpast1959 6 лет назад
Jordan McDonald I'm bothered by the way the panels are placed on the ends and not the sides.
@tuckerdoolan8830
@tuckerdoolan8830 5 лет назад
I am also bothered
@larrytruelove7112
@larrytruelove7112 5 лет назад
Blame it on the computer graphics guy.
@greghumphreys3397
@greghumphreys3397 5 лет назад
3:31 atmospheric heating isn't so much from friction, it's from the air compressing in front of the spacecraft
@juanmanumanudice8848
@juanmanumanudice8848 2 года назад
Finaly understood that theory for the shooting stars burning on their entry to atmosphere. Not the falling speed but have to count the orbitating speed🖒 so its about 30000 km/h right? This thing has been bothering me for long time. Nice explanation!
@symbionictitan4074
@symbionictitan4074 5 лет назад
Now fall into a black hole in the most explainable way
@AaaA-uc4nr
@AaaA-uc4nr 5 лет назад
You will turn black
@seldomstudios6351
@seldomstudios6351 5 лет назад
4:00 *tony stark you lied to me!* That suit DOES have boosters!
@zhongjie6287
@zhongjie6287 4 года назад
There's two types of thruster One need oxygen to start, like every plane's engines has... It can't gone out of the atmosphere... Just like people, they will pass out then awake Two is the thruster that needs liquid oxygen... Which every rocket use it... Or it was Rocket Fuel
@tuckerdoolan8830
@tuckerdoolan8830 5 лет назад
The majority of of the heat during reentery isn't generated from friction, it's generated when air in front of the re-entering object is compressed and thus heats up due to adiabatic compression.
@jmister28
@jmister28 4 года назад
Re-entry heating is only slightly caused by friction and more by compression heating
@engrtun
@engrtun 5 лет назад
3:00 _”And if you are falling feet first, that will push the blood away from your brain?”_ Umm no.
@basisTermium
@basisTermium 5 лет назад
The graphic is right at "red out" tho.
@Mr_Happy_Face
@Mr_Happy_Face 5 лет назад
engrtun it would push the blood to your feet because the blood has wants to go down at a faster speed than you
@engrtun
@engrtun 5 лет назад
Zoasis, know*
@9999rav
@9999rav 5 лет назад
You are falling very fast, but air tries to slow you down... It acts on your skin, but not on your blood, so blood is going down faster than you, causing you to pass out
@DANGJOS
@DANGJOS 5 лет назад
+engrtun Actually, yeah. Why are there so many people in the comment section claiming the video gets the physics wrong, but when you hear their explanation, it's clear that *they* are the ones that don't understand the physics?
@chelsea-rosewilliams9762
@chelsea-rosewilliams9762 4 года назад
I’ve been wondering this said no one, ever yet here we are .. I love these videos 🤣
@st0n3p0ny
@st0n3p0ny 5 лет назад
You should redo this and subtract the orbital velocity. If you went up on a Falcon-9 and it didn't roll for orbit, it just goes straight up. How high could you go before burning in starts to become a problem?
@miguelrodriguezcimino1674
@miguelrodriguezcimino1674 5 лет назад
Master Chief did skydive from space and landed without a parachute.
@tpyou1640
@tpyou1640 5 лет назад
no, you cant slow from 3x speed of sound to 60 mph (maybe higher) that quick
@leonardoaraujo8364
@leonardoaraujo8364 5 лет назад
I thought the world Record was Félix baumgartner
@DANCEPARTY59
@DANCEPARTY59 4 года назад
Leonardo Araujo Ted talk on you tube stratosphere jump 135,000 feet
@eriellegarcellano9289
@eriellegarcellano9289 4 года назад
Yes..
@littlemeanat9891
@littlemeanat9891 5 лет назад
Can that suit save u from stepping on a LEGO dun Dun DUUuUuuUNnN
@sushantakarmakar9982
@sushantakarmakar9982 5 лет назад
I think the stimulation at 0:38 may be wrong because as soon you jump out of iss you would not stick to iss; it will follow a trajectory just like a ball dropping from high speed jet will do. Correct me if i am wrong somewhere
@JordanBergstrom
@JordanBergstrom 4 года назад
I don't know why so many people get this wrong.... When you are moving supersonic (Mach 1 to Mach 6), friction is indeed the cause of the aerodynamic heating an object experiences. BUT, if you are moving HYPERSONIC (greater than Mach 6), the air simply can't get out of the way fast enough, so it undergoes extreme compression. Chemistry 101: compressing a gas increases the temperature. It's why the back of your AC unit gets hot. But when you're moving 5 miles per second or more, you get temperatures of 3,000 to 5,000 (that's what the temperature is at the leading edge of your heat shield; the leading edge of the plasma is about 20,000)
@michaelszczys8316
@michaelszczys8316 Год назад
Right. You would do fine until you dropped down to the air and then at that incredible speed you would burn up. The guy skydiving from space was not ' in orbit ' , he simply went straight up and came straight down. He only had to deal with the speed of gravity pulling on him for that distance
@nlo114
@nlo114 5 лет назад
Useful advice. Next time I'm doing a spacewalk from the ISS, I'll make a point of attaching my safety line! ;-)
@keanukea-kamehameha3812
@keanukea-kamehameha3812 5 лет назад
Awesome video
@historiasona184
@historiasona184 5 лет назад
You could just position yourself to the point where you are pointed directly towards the ground and then kick off.
@Reltropolis
@Reltropolis 6 лет назад
Try to do on the moon due to no atmosphere 🔼
@ClockworkRBLX
@ClockworkRBLX 6 лет назад
unless you propel yourself out of orbit, you'd stay up there virtually forever
@MrBruh-nd9gt
@MrBruh-nd9gt 6 лет назад
That iron man suit doesn’t have a chin
@whyisitstillpossibletogetm9390
Finally a channel that knows what their are talking about...
@marcusbaker830
@marcusbaker830 2 года назад
the iss engines come form the zvezda module you see, the zvezda has 2 propulsion engines and incase it goes under 400km it uses the hohmann transfer to go back to 400km or higher
@astronulla
@astronulla 4 года назад
Thing is, you can't land on earth from jumping off the ISS at all. Yes, you would orbit and miss every time, but even if you got out of orbit, you would die; you would burn to death by the re-entry of the Earth's atmosphere. You would have to be in an Apollo-like capsule with a parachute to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere safely. Oh and I am not trying to be a smart-Alec, so please don't tell me I am.
@michaelszczys8316
@michaelszczys8316 Год назад
Sounds about right to me.
@mundyy
@mundyy 5 лет назад
Did you really have to call it a “Jet Fighter”? Just call it a fighter jet smh 🤦‍♂️
@stayafk5601
@stayafk5601 3 года назад
Now I need to try
@soniadowney7427
@soniadowney7427 4 года назад
Well done
@rickypandit1299
@rickypandit1299 5 лет назад
Nah..Thank you..I love my ground...
@patrycjapawlowska1468
@patrycjapawlowska1468 5 лет назад
1:50 sadly your suit doesn't come withe engines. 4:40 I thought you didn't have engines
@jnegamingsson3294
@jnegamingsson3294 3 года назад
Taken out of context
@tonigather9685
@tonigather9685 3 года назад
She said "on your feet"
@Pyrpyr_2017
@Pyrpyr_2017 3 года назад
@@tonigather9685 this doesnt make any difference, she could use engines on her hands as well.
@Dive_Me_Crazy
@Dive_Me_Crazy 5 лет назад
Two and a half years waiting, I'm gonna be really hungry. Well, actually I'm gonna be really dead.
@gregmark1688
@gregmark1688 5 лет назад
Pretty sure that 8 Gs from the velocity is inverse to the direction of travel -- so if you're falling feet first, the blood should rush TO your head, not away from it.
@TheNextBlackSamurai
@TheNextBlackSamurai 3 года назад
Inverse to the direction of ACCELERATION. Same as breaking in a car, inertia always acts inverse to acceleration
@utkarshmishra7416
@utkarshmishra7416 5 лет назад
3:49 super saiyan god spotted
@PanzerKingWarThunder
@PanzerKingWarThunder 5 лет назад
5:05 how is she still alive she didnt drink or eat
@raihanaufall
@raihanaufall 4 года назад
She hibernate
@thatguy7091
@thatguy7091 5 лет назад
I think you forgot about maximum velocity you could pull a parachute and still live
@fratermunky4336
@fratermunky4336 5 лет назад
This is like a science channel where the content is written by a middle schooler.
@potfdron
@potfdron 3 года назад
1:08 *Bangladesh has left the chat**** Hello, I am under Dee water 🌊🌊
@Leugim010
@Leugim010 6 лет назад
You guys used the wrong globe model, climate change hasnt changed the continents that much yet
@Bagunka
@Bagunka 6 лет назад
we all know that the Earth is actually a disk shape
@johnmoore1495
@johnmoore1495 6 лет назад
First of all, the earth is flat. Second, the Mexicans made up global warming so they could flee to the U.S.
@ClockworkRBLX
@ClockworkRBLX 6 лет назад
@John wrong. climate change is a result of the chinese new world order.
@firenationfiles2063
@firenationfiles2063 6 лет назад
No. THE EARTH IS A DONUT!!! Wait what are we talking about again?
@ClockworkRBLX
@ClockworkRBLX 5 лет назад
and except for mine (of course)
@charbelnakad7668
@charbelnakad7668 5 лет назад
1:49 Your super suit doesn't come with engines 4:01 _shows a suit with an engine_
@ArielMK1
@ArielMK1 2 года назад
engines..with your feet! but this suit does have them on their hands!
@ehsansiam3123
@ehsansiam3123 5 лет назад
So all I need is an Iron man suit. Let's goo.
@chronicvibezzz
@chronicvibezzz 5 лет назад
Do you even Avenger?
@Powertampa
@Powertampa 5 лет назад
Holy shit that is throwing so much thermodynamics and orbital physics out the window it's offensive
@DANGJOS
@DANGJOS 5 лет назад
I noticed a few things wrong. What did you notice?
@ct92404
@ct92404 5 лет назад
And care to list *specifically* where those "offensive" errors are? Or are you just a neckbeard Millennial trying to sound intellectual and edgy?
@omgitsmsj7150
@omgitsmsj7150 5 лет назад
1000 degree my parachute will be gone while intact to my back
@kinori6295
@kinori6295 3 года назад
Please check your scripts 3.00 while falling feet first your body would experience -8G's which would probably cause a red out (too much blood in your head), and not a black out which would be caused if you fell head first. The safest possibility would probably be to streche out and reenter with your back facing prograde since this would slow you down the fastest and leave you with the least chance of a black- or redout
@KLingS-rk6dt
@KLingS-rk6dt 5 лет назад
4:43 umm, it has thrusters... but at the beggining you said no thrusters
@zhongjie6287
@zhongjie6287 4 года назад
There's two types of Thruster
@zhongjie6287
@zhongjie6287 4 года назад
One need oxygen pure air... Like we breath now. The thruster only used on planes Two need liquid oxygen, like every rocket used
@Wolfiyeethegranddukecerberus17
Iron Man's suits aren't made of iron. That would be dumb for the line of duty he's in.
@TheCaptainSplatter
@TheCaptainSplatter 6 лет назад
Probably made up of the same stuff as Captain America's shield. Which is the strongest stuff in the known universe.
@cruzada07
@cruzada07 5 лет назад
What Stuff a Stuff bear?
@E9X330
@E9X330 5 лет назад
Alucard Hellsing nope, it's a titanium gold alloy
@moki2093
@moki2093 5 лет назад
boboprime2000 gold is soft and malleable but can be work hardened.. gold softens when it's hot and Titanium goes crazy when it's hot so re-entry wouldn't save you and as well as any insulator can't do you very well
@mr.jakirhosenronnyronny4705
@mr.jakirhosenronnyronny4705 5 лет назад
Nice, thanks a lot, I don't understand completely
@rithvikyagnamurthy6560
@rithvikyagnamurthy6560 5 лет назад
Good explanation
@ahoymoy
@ahoymoy 6 лет назад
when ironman was in space, couldn't he just use his rockets/thrusts to propel him out of the orbit and/or the space debris lol
@johnmoore1495
@johnmoore1495 6 лет назад
ahoymoy she stated that he didn’t have rockets to help him. But otherwise yes he could.
@ahoymoy
@ahoymoy 6 лет назад
@ 4:39 he uses his thrusts/rockets.. @ 0:29 he jumps but is in orbit, he can use the thrusts/rockets to get out of orbit.......
@cruzada07
@cruzada07 5 лет назад
He could use the bleeding edge armor bro!
@kxayak9234
@kxayak9234 5 лет назад
I was looking for your comment
@Tethmes
@Tethmes 5 лет назад
I feel like I've lost brain cells watching this video.
@clintford6716
@clintford6716 3 года назад
How fast would you have to go and what angle would you need to jump the Grand Canyon on a motorcycle?
@popcornegg4405
@popcornegg4405 5 лет назад
Hey, you’re forgetting almost every iron man suit has had thrusters.
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