Free fall when jumping from a height of 4000 meters lasts about a minute, i.e. for a whole minute we fell, fell, fell and fell, fell again and continued to fall. The wind whistled in my ears, hit my face, ruffled my hair and knocked out my breath. A minute, damn it, that's quite a lot! You can look around, look at the approaching ground, make faces at the operator who falls nearby, 10 meters away, wave your hands. And all this time – falling down. In 2014, Alan Eustace set the current world record for the highest and longest distance when he jumped from a height of 135,908 feet (41,425 km) and remained in free fall at an altitude of 123,334 feet (37,592 km). Experienced skydivers who make big jumps can jump out of an airplane from an altitude of 19,000 feet.
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