I leapt from the stratosphere. Heres how I did it Alan Eustace

So I grew up in Orlando, Florida.

I was the son of an aerospace engineer.

I lived and breathed the Apollo program.

We either saw the launches
from our backyard

or we saw it by driving
in the hour over to the Cape.

I was impressed by, obviously,
space and everything about it,

but I was most impressed
by the engineering that went into it.

Behind me you see an amazing view,

a picture that was taken
from the International Space Station,

and it shows a portion of our planet

that’s rarely seen and rarely studied

and almost never explored.

That place is called the stratosphere.

If you start on the planet
and you go up and up and up,

it gets colder and colder and colder,

until you reach the beginning
of the stratosphere,

and then an amazing thing happens.

It gets colder at a much slower rate,
and then it starts warming up,

and then it gets warmer and warmer

until the point where you can
almost survive without any protection,

about zero degrees,

and then you end up
getting colder and colder,

and that’s the top of the stratosphere.

It is one of the least accessible
places on our planet.

Most often, when it’s visited,

it’s by astronauts
who are blazing up at it

at probably several times
the speed of sound,

and they get a few seconds on the way up,

and then they get this blazing
ball of fire coming back in,

on the way back in.

But the question I asked is, is it
possible to linger in the stratosphere?

Is it possible to experience
the stratosphere?

Is it possible to explore
the stratosphere?

I studied this using
my favorite search engine

for quite a while, about a year,

and then I made a scary phone call.

It was a reference from a friend of mine
to call Taber MacCallum

from Paragon Space
Development Corporation,

and I asked him the question:

is it possible to build

a system to go into the stratosphere?

And he said it was.

And after a period of about three years,
we proceeded to do just that.

And on October 24 of last year,

in this suit,

I started on the ground,

I went up in a balloon to 135,890 feet –

but who’s counting?

(Laughter)

Came back to Earth
at speeds of up to 822 miles an hour.

It was a four-minute
and 27-second descent.

And when I got to 10,000 feet,
I opened a parachute and I landed.

(Applause)

But this is really a science talk,
and it’s really an engineering talk,

and what was amazing to me
about that experience

is that Taber said, yes, I think
we can build a stratospheric suit,

and more than that, come down tomorrow

and let’s talk to the team
that formed the core of the group

that actually built it.

And they did something
which I think is important,

which is they took
the analogy of scuba diving.

So in scuba diving,

you have a self-contained system.

You have everything
that you could ever need.

You have a scuba tank.

You have a wetsuit.

You have visibility.

And that scuba is exactly this system,

and we’re going to launch it
into the stratosphere.

Three years later, this is what we have.

We’ve got an amazing suit
that was made by ILC Dover.

ILC Dover was the company
that made all of the Apollo suits

and all of the extravehicular
activity suits.

They had never sold a suit commercially,

only to the government,

but they sold one to me,
which I am very grateful for.

Up here we have a parachute.
This was all about safety.

Everyone on the team knew

that I have a wife
and two small children –

10 and 15 –

and I wanted to come back safely.

So there’s a main parachute
and a reserve parachute,

and if I do nothing,

the reserve parachute is going to open
because of an automatic opening device.

The suit itself
can protect me from the cold.

This area in the front here
has thermal protection.

It will actually heat water
that will wrap around my body.

It has two redundant oxygen tanks.

Even if I was to get
a quarter-inch hole in this suit,

which is extremely unlikely,

this system would still protect me
from the low pressure of space.

The main advantage of this system
is weight and complexity.

So the system weighs about 500 pounds,

and if you compare it to the other attempt
recently to go up in the stratosphere,

they used a capsule.

And to do a capsule, there’s an amazing
amount of complexity that goes into it,

and it weighed about 3,000 pounds,

and to raise 3,000 pounds
to an altitude of 135,000 feet,

which was my target altitude,

it would have taken a balloon
that was 45 to 50 million cubic feet.

Because I only weighed
500 pounds in this system,

we could do it with a balloon
that was five times smaller than that,

and that allowed us to use a launch system
that was dramatically simpler

than what needs to be done
for a much larger balloon.

So with that, I want to take you
to Roswell, New Mexico, on October 24.

We had an amazing team
that got up in the middle of the night.

And here’s the suit.

Again, this is using the front loader
that you’ll see in a second,

and I want to play you a video
of the actual launch.

Roswell’s a great place
to launch balloons,

but it’s a fantastic place
to land under a parachute,

especially when you’re going to land
70 miles away from the place you started.

That’s a helium truck in the background.

It’s darkness.

I’ve already spent about an hour
and a half pre-breathing.

And then here you see the suit going on.

It takes about an hour to get the suit on.

Astronauts get this really nice
air-conditioned van

to go to the launch pad,
but I got a front loader.

(Laughter)

You can see the top.
You can see the balloon up there.

That’s where the helium is.

This is Dave clearing the airspace
with the FAA for 15 miles.

And there we go.

(Laughter)

That’s me waving with my left hand.

The reason I’m waving with my left hand

is because on the right hand
is the emergency cutaway.

(Laughter)

My team forbade me
from using my right hand.

So the trip up is beautiful.
It’s kind of like Google Earth in reverse.

(Laughter)

It took two hours
and seven minutes to go up,

and it was the most peaceful
two hours and seven minutes.

I was mostly trying to relax.

My heart rate was very low

and I was trying not to use
very much oxygen.

You can see how the fields
in the background

are relatively big at this point,

and you can see me going up and up.

It’s interesting here,
because if you look,

I’m right over the airport,
and I’m probably at 50,000 feet,

but immediately I’m about to go
into a stratospheric wind

of over 120 miles an hour.

This is my flight director telling me
that I had just gone higher

than anybody else
had ever gone in a balloon,

and I was about 4,000 feet from release.

This is what it looks like.

You can see the darkness of space,
the curvature of the Earth,

the fragile planet below.

I’m practicing my emergency procedures
mentally right now.

If anything goes wrong,
I want to be ready.

And the main thing that I want to do here

is to have a release and fall
and stay completely stable.

(Video) Ground control. Everyone ready?

Five. Four. Three. Two. One.

Alan Eustace: There’s the balloon
going by, fully inflated at this point.

And there you can see a drogue parachute,
which I’ll demonstrate in just a second,

because that’s really important.

There’s the balloon
going by a second time.

Right now, I’m about
at the speed of sound.

There’s nothing for me to tell
it’s the speed of sound,

and very soon I will actually be
as fast as I ever get,

822 miles an hour.

(Video) Ground control: We lost the data.

AE: So now I’m down low right now

and you can basically see
the parachute come out right there.

At this point, I’m very happy
that there’s a parachute out.

I thought I was the only one happy,

but it turns out mission control
was really happy as well.

The really nice thing about this
is the moment I opened –

I had a close of friend of mine,
Blikkies, my parachute guy.

He flew in another airplane,
and he actually jumped out

and landed right next to me.

He was my wingman on the descent.

This is my landing, but it’s probably more
properly called a crash.

(Laughter)

I hate to admit it, but this wasn’t
even close to my worst landing.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

(Video) Man: How are you doing?

AE: Hi there!

Yay.

(Laughter)

So I want to tell you one thing

that you might not have seen
in that video,

but one of the most critical parts
of the entire thing was the release

and what happens right after you release.

And what we tried to do was use
something called a drogue parachute,

and a drogue parachute
was there to stabilize me.

And I’ll show you one of those right now.

If any of you have ever
gone tandem skydiving,

you probably used one of these.

But the problem with one of these things

is right when you release,
you’re in zero gravity.

So it’s very easy for this
to just turn right around you.

And before you know it,
you can be tangled up or spinning,

or you can release this drogue late,

in which case what happens
is you’re going down at 800 miles an hour,

and this thing is going to destroy itself

and not be very useful.

But the guys at United Parachute
Technologies came up with this idea,

and it was a roll that looks like that,

but watch what happens when I pull it out.

It’s forming a pipe.

This pipe is so solid

that you can take this drogue parachute
and wrap it around,

and there’s no way
it will ever tangle with you.

And that prevented
a very serious potential problem.

So nothing is possible
without an amazing team of people.

The core of this was about 20 people

that worked on this for the three years,

and they were incredible.

People asked me what the best part
of this whole thing was,

and it was a chance
to work with the best experts

in meteorology and ballooning
and parachute technology

and environmental systems
and high altitude medicine.

It was fantastic. It’s an engineer’s dream
to work with that group of people.

And I also at the same time
wanted to thank my friends at Google,

both for supporting me during this effort

and also covering for me
in the times that I was away.

But there’s one other group
I wanted to thank, and that’s my family.

Yay.

(Applause)

I would constantly give them speeches
about the safety of technology,

and they weren’t hearing any of it.

It was super hard on them,

and the only reason
that my wife put up with it

was because I came back incredibly happy
after each of the 250 tests,

and she didn’t want
to take that away from me.

So I want to close with a story.

My daughter Katelyn, my 15-year-old,
she and I were in the car,

and we were driving down the road,
and she was sitting there,

and she had this idea, and she goes,
“Dad, I’ve got this idea.”

And so I listened to her idea
and I said, “Katelyn, that’s impossible.”

And she looks at me

and she goes, “Dad,
after what you just did,

how can you call anything impossible?”

And I laughed, and I said,
“OK, it’s not impossible,

it’s just very, very hard.”

And then I paused for a second,
and I said, “Katelyn,

it may not be impossible,
it may not even be very, very hard,

it’s just that I don’t know how to do it.”

Thank you.

(Applause)

所以我在佛罗里达州的奥兰多长大。

我是一位航空工程师的儿子。

我在阿波罗计划中生活和呼吸。

我们要么从后院看到发射,要么

在一小时内开车到开普敦看到它。

显然,
空间及其相关的一切都给

我留下了深刻的印象,但其中
的工程给我留下了最深刻的印象。

在我身后,你看到了一幅令人惊叹的景象

,这张照片是
从国际空间站拍摄的

,它展示了我们星球

上很少看到、很少研究

、几乎从未探索过的一部分。

那个地方叫做平流层。

如果你从地球上开始,
然后不断地上升,

它会变得越来越冷,越来越冷,

直到你到达
平流层的起点,

然后会发生一件令人惊奇的事情。

它以慢得多的速度变冷,
然后开始变暖,

然后越来越暖和,

直到你
几乎可以在没有任何保护的情况下生存,

大约为零度,

然后你最终
变得越来越冷,

并且 那是平流层的顶部。

它是
我们星球上最难到达的地方之一。

大多数情况下,当它被访问时,

宇航员

以可能数倍
于音速的速度冲向它,

他们在上升的过程中持续了几秒钟,

然后他们又得到了这个炽热
的火球,

继续 回去的路。

但我问的问题是,有
可能在平流层逗留吗?

可以
体验平流层吗?

可以
探索平流层吗?

我用
我最喜欢的搜索引擎研究

了很长一段时间,大约一年,

然后我打了一个可怕的电话。

我的一个朋友
给 Paragon Space Development Corporation 的 Taber MacCallum 打了电话

,我问他一个问题:

是否有可能建立

一个进入平流层的系统?

他说是的。

大约三年后,
我们开始这样做。

去年 10 月 24 日

,我穿着这套衣服,

从地面开始,

我乘气球上升到 135,890 英尺——

但谁在数呢?

(笑声)

以每小时 822 英里的速度返回地球。

这是一个 4
分 27 秒的下降过程。

当我到达 10,000 英尺时
,我打开降落伞降落。

(掌声)

但这真的是一场科学演讲,
而且真的是一场工程演讲

,让我感到惊奇的

是,泰伯说,是的,我认为
我们可以制造平流层套装

,不仅如此,下来 明天

,让我们与构成实际构建它的团队核心的团队交谈

他们做了
一些我认为很重要的事情,

那就是他们
把水肺潜水做类比。

所以在水肺潜水中,

你有一个独立的系统。

你拥有
你可能需要的一切。

你有一个潜水罐。

你有一件潜水衣。

你有知名度。

而那个水肺正是这个系统

,我们将把它发射
到平流层。

三年后,这就是我们所拥有的。

我们有一件由 ILC Dover 制作的令人惊叹的西装

ILC Dover
是制造所有 Apollo 套装

和所有舱外
活动套装的公司。

他们从来没有在商业上卖过一套西装,

只卖给了政府,

但他们卖给了我一件
,我非常感激。

在这里,我们有一个降落伞。
这都是关于安全的。

团队中的每个人都

知道我有一个妻子
和两个小孩——10 岁

和 15 岁

——我想安全回来。

所以有一个主降落伞
和一个备用降落伞

,如果我什么都不做

,备用降落伞会
因为自动打开装置而打开。

西装本身
可以保护我免受寒冷。

前面的这个区域
有热保护。

它实际上会加热
环绕我身体的水。

它有两个多余的氧气罐。

即使我
在这套衣服上打了一个四分之一英寸的洞,

这是极不可能的,

这个系统仍然可以保护我
免受太空低压的影响。

该系统的主要优点
是重量和复杂性。

因此,该系统重约 500 磅

,如果将其与最近尝试进入平流层的另一次尝试进行比较

他们使用了太空舱。

做一个胶囊,里面有
惊人的复杂性

,它重约 3,000 磅

,要把 3,000 磅提升
到 135,000 英尺的高度,

这是我的目标高度,

它需要一个
气球 45 到 5000 万立方英尺。

因为我
在这个系统中的重量只有 500 磅,所以

我们可以用一个比那个小五倍的气球来做这件事

,这让我们可以使用一个


一个更大的气球需要做的发射系统要简单得多的发射系统。

因此,我想
在 10 月 24 日带你去新墨西哥州的罗斯威尔。

我们有一支很棒的
团队在半夜起床。

这是西装。

同样,这是使用
您稍后会看到的前端加载器

,我想给您播放一段
实际发射的视频。

罗斯威尔是
发射气球的好地方,

但它是降落伞下降落的好地方

尤其是当你要在
距离起点 70 英里的地方降落时。

背景是一辆氦气卡车。

这是黑暗。

我已经进行了大约
一个半小时的预呼吸。

然后在这里你看到西装正在进行中。

穿上西装大约需要一个小时。

宇航员乘坐这辆非常漂亮
的空调货车

前往发射台,
但我有一个前置装载机。

(笑声)

你可以看到顶部。
你可以看到上面的气球。

那就是氦气所在的地方。

这是戴夫
与美国联邦航空局清理空域 15 英里。

我们开始了。

(笑声)

那是我用左手挥手。

我用左手挥手的原因

是因为右手
是紧急切入点。

(笑声)

我的团队禁止
我使用右手。

所以这次旅行是美丽的。
这有点像反向的谷歌地球。

(笑声

) 上去花了两
小时七分钟

,最平静的
两小时七分钟。

我主要是想放松一下。

我的心率非常低

,我尽量不使用
太多氧气。

你可以看到
背景

中的字段在这一点上是如何比较大的

,你可以看到我在向上和向上。

这里很有趣,
因为如果你看,

我就在机场上方
,我可能在 50,000 英尺处,

但我马上就要进入

每小时超过 120 英里的平流层风中。

这是我的飞行指挥告诉我
,我刚刚

比其他任何
人乘坐气球飞得更高,

离释放大约 4,000 英尺。

这就是它的样子。

你可以看到太空的黑暗,
地球的曲率,

下方脆弱的星球。

我现在正在精神上练习我的紧急程序

如果出现任何问题,
我想做好准备。

我在这里要做的主要事情

是释放和下降
并保持完全稳定。

(视频)地面控制。 大家准备好了吗?

五。 四。 三。 二。 一。

Alan Eustace:气球
经过,此时已完全充气。

在那里你可以看到一个减速伞降落伞
,我将在稍后演示,

因为这非常重要。

气球第二次飞了。

现在,我正
处于音速。

对我来说没有什么可以
说它是音速,

而且很快我就会真正
达到我所获得的速度,

每小时 822 英里。

(视频)地面控制:我们丢失了数据。

AE:所以现在我现在处于低位

,你基本上可以
看到降落伞从那里出来。

在这一点上,我很
高兴有一个降落伞出来。

我以为只有我一个人很开心,

但事实证明,任务控制中心
也很开心。

关于这一点的真正好处
是我打开的那一刻——

我有一个亲密的朋友,
Blikkies,我的降落伞人。

他乘坐另一架飞机
,他真的跳了出来

,降落在我旁边。

他是我下降的僚机。

这是我的着陆,但它可能更
恰当地称为坠机。

(笑声)

我不想承认,但这还
没有接近我最糟糕的着陆。

(笑声)

(掌声)

(视频) 男:你好吗?

AE:你好!

耶。

(笑声)

所以我想告诉你一件事

,你可能没有
在那个视频中看到,

但整个事情中最关键的部分
之一是发布

以及发布后会发生什么。

我们试图做的是使用
一种叫做减速伞降落伞的东西,那里有

一个减速伞
降落伞来稳定我。

我现在就给你看其中之一。

如果你们中的任何人曾经参加
过双人跳伞,

那么您可能使用过其中的一种。

但是其中一件事情的问题

是当你释放时,
你处于零重力状态。

所以这很容易
绕着你转。

在不知不觉中,
你可能会被缠住或旋转,

或者你可以延迟释放这个锥套,

在这种情况下,
你会以每小时 800 英里的速度下降

,这东西会自毁

而不是 很有用。

但是 United Parachute
Technologies 的人提出了这个想法

,它看起来像这样,

但是当我把它拉出来时,看看会发生什么。

它正在形成一个管道。

这根管子太结实了

,你可以拿着这个锥壳
降落伞把它包起来,

它永远不会和你纠缠在一起。

这避免
了一个非常严重的潜在问题。

因此,
如果没有一个了不起的团队,一切都是不可能的。

核心是大约 20 个人

在这方面工作了三年

,他们令人难以置信。

人们问我这整件事中最好的部分是什么

,这是一个

气象学、气球
和降落伞技术

、环境系统
和高海拔医学领域最优秀的专家合作的机会。

太棒了。
与这群人一起工作是工程师的梦想。

同时,
我还要感谢我在 Google 的朋友们,

他们在我的努力中支持我,


在我不在的时候为我提供帮助。


我还想感谢另一群人,那就是我的家人。

耶。

(掌声)

我会不断地给他们
讲技术的安全性

,他们根本听不见。

这对他们来说太难了

,我妻子忍受它的唯一原因

是因为我
在 250 次测试后都非常高兴地回来了

,她不想
把它从我身边夺走。

所以我想用一个故事来结束。

我的女儿凯特琳,我 15 岁的孩子,
她和我在车里

,我们在路上开车
,她坐在那里

,她有了这个想法,然后她说,
“爸爸,我有 这个想法。”

所以我听了她的想法
,我说,“凯特琳,那是不可能的。”

她看着

我说:“爸爸,
在你刚刚做了之后,

你怎么能说任何事情都是不可能的呢?”

我笑了,我说,
“好吧,这不是不可能的,

只是非常非常难。”

然后我停顿了一下
,我说,“凯特琳

,这可能不是不可能,
甚至可能不是非常非常难

,只是我不知道该怎么做。”

谢谢你。

(掌声)