August 30, 2023
2 mins read

Indian-American Scientist Aims to Skydive from Stratosphere, Break Four Records

The project will include educational programmes for schools to increase interest in science and technology among girls, especially from minority groups…reports Asian Lite News

An Indian-American scientist is hoping to become the first woman to skydive from the stratosphere at an altitude of 42.5 km above the Earth, and shatter four records.

Swati Varshney is one of the three candidates selected by the Hera Project of Rising United that seeks to empower women in science and technology, the organisation has announced.

If she makes it to the skydive in 2025, Hera Project expects her to break four current records: The free fall record by 1.1 km from the highest altitude, endure the longest free fall time, break the sound barrier unaided by 264 kph, and the highest crewed balloon flight by over 1 km.

“At Rising United, we’re embarking on a historic journey, shattering records and ceilings to advance women’s equality and inspire young women’s interest in STEAM education,” the organisation said.

Varshney has a PhD in materials science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has made over 1,200 jumps with a speciality in vertical freefall, according to Space.com.

Billed as the “First Female Mission to the Edge of Space”, the project seeks to have minority women smash the records, and the other two contenders are of Latino descent, Eliana Rodriquez and Diana Valerin Jimenez.

The project will include educational programmes for schools to increase interest in science and technology among girls, especially from minority groups.

Varshney told Space.com that for her skydiving “is a lot more similar to my scientific training than I ever thought it would have been in the first place. It was just another avenue for me to pursue this goal of lifelong learning”.

Varshney, who has spent a decade skydiving, told the media outlet: “My academic progression and my career trajectory has been really intertwined with skydiving as it went along. So I started skydiving.”

She tried tandem jumping and found it such a “blast”, that she took it up as a hobby.

“I really just wanted something that was totally different, and as a release to — this is a really cliche way to say it —  cut away right from what I was doing in my day-to-day life,” she told Space.com.

“It became this never-ending journey of another pursuit of knowledge that went alongside my academic career,” she added.

The stratosphere is from about 6 km to 50 km above the Earth where it gives way to the mesosphere.

ALSO READ-IAF rescues stranded mountaineers from Kashmir glacier

Previous Story

Drone Attack Hits Pskov Airport, Damaging Transport Aircraft

Next Story

Trump Considers Skipping Court Appearance in Georgia Election Case

Latest from -Top News

Taipei Gets Tough on Beijing

The new move marks one of the most comprehensive efforts in recent years to strengthen Taiwan’s legal defences against Beijing’s covert attempts…reports Asian Lite News Taiwanese lawmakers from both the ruling and

Pakistan Warns Afghanistan War

Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif warned that Islamabad could enter an “open war” with Kabul if peace talks in Istanbul fail to ease rising Afghan border tensions…reports Asian Lite News Pakistan’s Defence

UN Signs Landmark Cybercrime Treaty

Malaysia’s foreign minister warned ASEAN is losing neutrality amid rising global power competition, ahead of the bloc’s annual summit….reports Asian Lite News Sixty-five nations have signed a landmark United Nations convention in

Malaysia Warns ASEAN Neutrality Eroding

Malaysia’s foreign minister warned ASEAN is losing neutrality amid rising global power competition, ahead of the bloc’s annual summit….reports Asian Lite News  Malaysia’s foreign minister has warned Southeast Asian counterparts that the
Go toTop

Don't Miss

General Bipin Rawat Dies in Chopper Crash

The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Bipin Rawat was

‘Centre negating federalism’: AAP to SC

Counsel pointed out that earlier five-judge bench verdicts did not