Unbeknownst to most of the earth , the former super rich adventurer Steve Fossett had started piece of work on an awing fly submergible that would one twenty-four hour period theoretically touch the star . More importantly , however , was that the pattern would have allowed explorer and scientists alike ( and most importantly Fossett himself , of course of action ) to embark into the deadly depth of the Mariana Trench , some 36,000 foot below the sea ’s open . Sadly , the design was put on hold immediately after Fossett go missing about one yr ago , but that has n’t bar San Anselmo inventor Graham Hawkes from detailing the project that Fossett tapped him to make two year before his death .
Called theDeep Flight Challenger , the submersible would have been “ part ballistic capsule , part airplane and part hoagie , ” Hawkes say . And somehow , thanks to the material street automobile driver use to trick out their dashboards , the Challenger would have been capable of hold up atmospheric pressure of 20,000 Ezra Pound per straightforward inch , ( approximately 15,000 times the atmospherical atmospheric pressure ) , he said . The “ clobber ” we ’re mention to is carbon character , and Hawkes said he opted for that fabric over conventional technologies , which use titanium .
“ The skillful and strongest material such as atomic number 22 will only get you about halfway down to the ocean storey . We used carbon vulcanized fiber that ’s laid down filum by filament under computer control condition , the same as what ’s used on rocket motor nozzles , ” he said . Fossett ’s remains were found amidst his plane ’s wreckage last week , confirming what many people had already suspected about the doomed billionaire explorer . The fate of the submersible is unknown . Currently , the design belongs to Fossett ’s demesne . [ Marinij ]

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