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How Supersonic Skydiver Will Freefall Through Earth's Atmosphere

Endeavour Silhouette
In this image, taken of the space shuttle Endeavour in 2010 by an astronaut on the ISS, the orange layer is the troposphere, the whitish layer is the stratosphere and the black layer is the mesosphere.
(Image credit: NASA/Crew of Expedition 22)

Veteran skydiver Felix Baumgartner plans to take a supersonic tour of Earth's atmospheric layers on Tuesday (Oct 9). The Austrian daredevil will attempt the world's highest skydive, a daring leap from 23 miles up that will send him plummeting earthward faster than the speed of sound.

On the way down, Baumgartner, 43, will pass through the stratosphere and troposphere, two of the four gaseous layers that enshroud and protect our planet. Each of these layers has unique properties.

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