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Forum:Space Explorers & Workers
Topic:Kathy Sullivan's dive to Challenger Deep
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SkyMan1958Congratulations to KS!

In talking with Charlie Walker some years ago, he was very impressed with KS' ability to work (and talk) her way into programs/missions. He mentioned that KS had to help an oceanographer. Somehow she managed to wangle her way aboard an SR-71 flight to "observe the ocean" to "help" this oceanographer.

Personally I didn't think the SR-71 instrument package had much in the way of instruments that could pull information with significant data from the ocean's surface (much less sub-surface), so it must have been an interesting wangle.

Robert PearlmanFrom Kathy Sullivan (via Facebook):
This day in history: The number of people who have dived to the deepest point in the ocean finally equals the number who have walked on the Moon — 12. It only took 51 years. Small victory: 2 of the 12 were women (myself and Vanessa O'Brien).

The 12 people who have dove to the botom of the Mariana Trench are:

  1. Jacques Piccard (Jan. 23, 1960)
  2. Don Walsh (Jan. 23, 1960)
  3. James Cameron (March 26, 2012)
  4. Victor Vescovo (April 28, 2019, May 1, 2019, May 7, 2019, June 6, 2020, June 11, 2020, June 13, 2020, June 20, 2020)
  5. Patrick Lahey (May 3, 2019, May 5, 2019)
  6. Jonathan Struwe (May 3, 2019)
  7. John Ramsay (May 5, 2019)
  8. Alan Jamieson (May 7, 2019)
  9. Kathy Sullivan (June 6, 2020)
  10. Vanessa O'Brien (June 11, 2020)
  11. John Rost (June 13, 2020)
  12. Kelly Walsh (June 20, 2020)
(Note: Of the 12, 11 dove to Challenger Deep; Jamieson dove to the slightly shallower Sirena Deep, accompanied by Vescovo.)

Sullivan's dive was accompanied by an Omega chronograph, though not on her wrist. From Victor Vescovo (via Twitter):

During our dive to the bottom of Challenger Deep Sunday (June 7), there was another passenger outside: Omega's Seamaster Planet Ocean Ultra Deep Professional. It is now the only watch in history to have visited the bottom of the ocean more than once, and it came back working perfectly.
Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
Astronaut-aquanaut connects with space station after deep sea dive

When astronauts aboard the International Space Station call down to Earth, they refer to it as "space to ground."

For a call they made on June 7, however, a slightly different term was merited.

"This is Chris Cassidy, Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley on the International Space Station, wonderful to hear you and connect from space to the surface," the NASA astronauts radioed to the DSSV Pressure Drop, the support ship for the world's first and only commercially-certified, full-ocean-depth deep submergence vehicle, or DSV.

"It's great to connect with you," replied Kathy Sullivan, who only hours earlier had returned from diving to Challenger Deep, the deepest point on Earth. "Victor Vescovo, the pilot of the [DSV] Limiting Factor, and I are back on the surface ship at this point."

Robert PearlmanKathy Sullivan's dive has qualified her for three Guinness World Records:
...her voyages to space and, more recently in June 2020, the most extreme depths of the ocean, would make history, earning her three Guinness World Records titles:
  • First woman to reach the Challenger Deep
  • Greatest vertical extent travelled by an individual (within Earth’s exosphere)
  • First person to visit space and the deepest point on Earth

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