Felix Baumgartner set five world records during his supersonic freefall jump from the edge of space on October 14, 2012. He broke the records for the highest jump, highest manned balloon flight, longest freefall distance, highest freefall speed, and highest vertical velocity in freefall.
Skydiving height-Felix Baumgartner, over 24 miles
Felix Baumgartner free fell from a height of approximately 128,100 feet (39,045 meters) during his historic jump on October 14, 2012. This stratospheric leap, part of the Red Bull Stratos project, set a world record for the highest free fall. During the descent, he reached speeds of up to 843.6 mph (1,357.6 km/h), becoming the first person to break the sound barrier without the aid of a vehicle.
He has flown from and into the greatest heights and depths the globe has to offer. On April 15, 1999, Baumgartner leaped from the 88th floor of Kuala Lumpur's Petronas Twin Towers, setting a world BASE jumping record of 1,479feet.
Mary Baumgartner has written: 'Wonderful world of watercolor'
Allyson Felix holds the WR of the 200m and the 400m
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by beating the recent record.
The Burj Khalifa broke 14 records
Guinness World Records do not pay any money to those who break or set records. However, they do award an official certificate of the achievement free of charge.
Guinness World Records do not pay any money to those who break or set records. However, they do award an official certificate of the achievement free of charge.
There are none. All world records are hard to break unless you think of a new category that no one has even tried yet. Then, you can create your own record.
Felix Baumgartner set the world record for fastest flight without an aircraft on October 14, 2012, when he jumped from an airplane 24-miles above the earth. He reached a speed of 833.9 miles-per-hour.