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warpedskydiver

Base Jumps From Olympia Mons

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I have not figured out the atmospheric effects on a human body falling through the atmosphere of Mars yet.

But considering Olympia Mons is 27K from the floor of the Tharis, I calculated that it would take approximately 121 minutes to reach the bottom.

Any thoughts?

And remember only the Intergalactic Police could arrest you for it since it is beyond the jurisdiction of Earth.

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>Any thoughts?

With a terminal velocity of around 900 feet per second, it would be close to about 60 seconds (including time to accelerate to that speed, which would take around 45 seconds.) You'd need a rocket to stop the freefall, since a parachute that could slow you to a landing speed of even 30mph would be far too large to carry.

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You'd need a rocket to stop the freefall, since a parachute that could slow you to a landing speed of even 30mph would be far too large to carry.



Nah. You'd just need to scratch up the sponsorship to move Jeb's giant waterslide contraption from Vegas.
-- Tom Aiello

Tom@SnakeRiverBASE.com
SnakeRiverBASE.com

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Remember that Mars doesn't have an atmosphere that resembles Earth's. It is much much thinner. I think BillVon's answer is more accurate than yours.
"Mediocre people don't like high achievers, and high achievers don't like mediocre people." - SIX TIME National Champion coach Nick Saban

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>any thoughts?

Down to Earth, maybe, and possibly feasible, how about a skydive from Space Ship 2?

Planned max altitude is 68mls/110,000mts.
Cost for one passenger:- $200,000.
6 seats available, plus two pilots.

Speed at altitude will be approx mach3, so the suit used would have to take care of some friction heating, but nowhere near the heat of orbital re-entry.

6-way, anyone?

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>Something around 2000sq feet?

If it scales linearly (and it generally doesn't) you'd need a 37,500 sq ft parachute to give you the same sort of speed a Sabre 150 gives you here on Earth. I think the largest ram-air ever built was around 10,000 sq ft. That's one reason that the latest Mars landers don't just use parachutes; they use somewhat Rube Goldberg heatshield/parachute/winch/rocket/airbag systems.

>I calculated for a near vacuum.

For a true vacuum:

distance = 1/2 A T^2

so for 27K ft, 20fps^2 acceleration:

52 seconds total freefall

Speed at impact: 710mph

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>Something around 2000sq feet?

If it scales linearly (and it generally doesn't) you'd need a 37,500 sq ft parachute to give you the same sort of speed a Sabre 150 gives you here on Earth. I think the largest ram-air ever built was around 10,000 sq ft. That's one reason that the latest Mars landers don't just use parachutes; they use somewhat Rube Goldberg heatshield/parachute/winch/rocket/airbag systems.

>I calculated for a near vacuum.

For a true vacuum:

distance = 1/2 A T^2

so for 27K ft, 20fps^2 acceleration:

52 seconds total freefall

Speed at impact: 710mph



It is 27Km tall, not feet

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