
.
.Auguste
PICCARD
Auguste Antoine Piccard
(28 January 1884 – 24 March 1962) was a Swiss physicist, inventor
and explorer. Piccard and his twin brother Jean Felix were born in
Basel, Switzerland.
Showing an intense interest in science as a
child, he attended the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in
Zurich, and became a professor of physics in Brussels at the Free
University of Brussels in 1922, the same year his son Jacques
Piccard was born.
He was a member of the Solvay Congress of 1927.
Career
In 1930, an interest in
ballooning, and a curiosity about the upper atmosphere led him to
design a spherical, pressurized aluminum gondola that would allow
ascent to great altitude without requiring a pressure suit.
Supported by the Belgian Fonds National de la Recherche
Scientifique (FNRS) Piccard constructed his gondola.
On 27 May 1931, Auguste Piccard and
Paul Kipfer took off from Augsburg, Germany, and reached a record
altitude of 15,785 m (51,775 ft). During this flight, Piccard was
able to gather substantial data on the upper atmosphere, as well
as measure cosmic rays.
On 18 August 1932, launched from
Dübendorf, Switzerland, Piccard and Max Cosyns made a second record-breaking ascent to 16,200 m
(53,152 ft). He ultimately made a total of twenty-seven balloon
flights setting a final record of 23,000 m (72,177 ft).
In the mid-1930s, Piccard's interests shifted when he realized
that a modification of his high altitude balloon cockpit would
allow descent into the deep ocean.
By 1937, he had designed a
small steel gondola to withstand great external pressure.
Construction began, but was interrupted by the outbreak of
World War II. Resuming work in 1945, he completed the
bubble-shaped cockpit that maintained normal air pressure for a
person inside the capsule even as the water pressure outside
increased to over 46 MPa (6,800 pounds per square inch).
Above the
heavy steel capsule, a large flotation tank was attached and
filled with a low density liquid for buoyancy. Liquids are
relatively incompressible and can provide buoyancy that does not
change as the pressure increases. And so, the huge tank was filled
with gasoline, not as a fuel, but as flotation.
To make the now
floating craft sink, tons of iron were attached to the float with
a release mechanism to allow resurfacing. This craft was named
FNRS-2 and made a number of unmanned dives in 1948 before
being given to the
French navy in 1950.
There, it was redesigned, and in 1954, it took a man safely down
4,176 m (13,700 ft).
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