Perlan project - high wave flights
"Francisco De Almeida" wrote in message
...
Quite interesting, but I do not think the article leads to such =
conclusion. Think about it: several types of aircraft have been flying =
very high above mountain peaks in the last half century without bursting =
into flames.
If you go still higher, temperatures rise naturally up to about 800 =
Kelvin in the Thermosphere. You run no risk of burning, though: the air =
density by then is so low that any heat gained from collision with air =
molecules cannot even offset the heat lost to outer space through =
radiation. The (accoustically generated) temperature spikes theorised in =
the article are therefore not so exceptional when viewed in context.
I suppose the Perlan people need to be well dressed, indeed, but not =
against the heat.
F.A.
You're right, of course. My posting was just a bit tongue in cheek. The
first scan of the abstract didn't make clear that the temperature spikes
were in the thermosphere (150 Km or so above the stratosphere) but a more
careful reading of the body did.
What IS interesting is that a phenomenon with roots in orographic turbulence
reaches this far above the earth's surface.
Oh what we don't know!
Bill Daniels
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