31 Objekte
(RM) 14930398
ITALIEN TIEFSEETAUCHEN PICCARD 1953
Aufnahme des Unterseebootes Bathyscaphe Trieste rieste auf Hoher See im Jahre 1953. Am 30. September 1953 gelang dem Schweizer Physiker Auguste Piccard und seinem Sohn Jacques mit ihrer Tauchkugel Trieste im Thyrennischen Meer vor der Insel Ponza ein neuer Rekord im Tiefseetauchen mit einer erreichten Tiefe von 3150 m. (KEYSTONE/Len Sirman-Archiv/Str) Picture of the submarine Bathyscaphe Trieste at sea, pictured in 1953. Swiss scientist Auguste Piccard and his son Jacques Piccard reached a record depth of 3'150 m with their Bathyscaphe Trieste near the island Ponza in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Auguste Piccard (1884-1962) was a physicist, inventor and explorer. An interest in ballooning and a curiosity about the upper atmosphere led him to design and construct a spherical, pressurized aluminum gondola which would allow him to ascend to great altitude without requiring a pressure suit in 1930. Piccard and a Belgian engineer reached a record altitude of 15'785 m on May 27, 1931. During this flight, Piccard was able to gather substantial data on the stratosphere. Piccard and a Belgian physicist made a second record-breaking ascent to 16'200 m on August 18, 1932. In the mid-1930s, Piccard's interests shifted when he realized that a modification of some of his atmospheric balloon concepts would allow to descend into the deep ocean and he designed a small steel gondola to withstand great external pressure. Jacques Piccard and his team reached a record depth of 10'911 m in the Mariana Trench on January 23, 1960. (KEYSTONE/Len Sirman-Archiv/Str)
(RM) 9515930
SCHWEIZ TIEFSEETAUCHEN BATHYSCAPH
MILESTONES CATALOGUE - The deep sea Bathyscaphe Trieste is launched, pictured on January 23, 1960. The submarine was designed and constructed by Swiss scientist Auguste Piccard and his son Jacques, a deep sea explorer. The crew occupied a small pressure sphere for two men, attached to the underside of the floats and accessed from the deck of the vessel by a vertical tunnel which penetrated the float and ran down to the sphere hatch. Jacques Piccard and his team reached a record depth of 10'911 m in the Mariana Trench on January 23, 1960. Auguste Piccard (1884-1962) was a physicist, inventor and explorer. An interest in ballooning and a curiosity about the upper atmosphere led him to design and construct a spherical, pressurized aluminum gondola which would allow him to ascend to great altitude without requiring a pressure suit in 1930. Piccard and a Belgian engineer reached a record altitude of 15'785 m on May 27, 1931. During this flight, Piccard was able to gather substantial data on the stratosphere. Piccard and a Belgian physicist made a second record-breaking ascent to 16'200 m on August 18, 1932. In the mid-1930s, Piccard's interests shifted when he realized that a modification of some of his atmospheric balloon concepts would allow to descend into the deep ocean and he designed a small steel gondola to withstand great external pressure. (KEYSTONE/PHOTOPRESS-ARCHIV/Str) MILESTONES KATALOG - Das Tiefenseeboot Trieste von Piccard wird zu Wasser gelassen. Der Schweizer Physiker Auguste Piccard baut mit seinem Sohn Jacques Piccard, Tiefenseeforscher, das Tiefenseeboot "Trieste". Als ihnen das Geld ausgeht wird das Boot von der US Navy aufgekauft und Jacques als wissenschaftlicher Berater eingestellt. Am 23. Januar 1960 taucht die "Trieste" mit Jacques Piccard und dem Amerikaner Don Walsh im Marianengraben 10911 m tief. Dieser Tiefenrekord ist bis heute ungebrochen. Der Bathyscaphe Trieste besteht aus einer Kapsel, die fuer zwei Maenner Platz bietet und einem Schwimmkoerper, der wie eine Zeppelinhuelle geformt und mit Flugbenzin gefuellt ist. (KEYSTONE/PHOTOPRESS-ARCHIV/Str)
(RM) 24176070
ITALIEN TIEFSEETAUCHEN PICCARD WALSH 1953
Der Schweizer Tiefsee- und Stratosphaerenforscher Auguste Piccard, Mitte mit Hut, und sein Sohn Jacques Piccard, rechts, am 13. August 1953 in der Bucht von Neapel, wo sie mit ihrem neuen Tiefseetauchgeraet "Bathyscape", das den Namen "Trieste" traegt, den ersten Tauchversuch unternehmen. Jacques Piccard erreichte 1960 zusammen mit dem Amerikaner Don Walsh mit dem von seinem Vater entwickelten Bathyscaph-Tiefseetauchgeraet "Trieste" den bis heute gueltigen Tiefenweltrekord von 10911 Metern. (KEYSTONE/PHOTOPRESS-ARCHIV/Str) Swiss deep sea and stratosphere explorer Auguste Piccard, center with hat, and his son Jacques Piccard, right, test their deep sea submarine Bathyscape Trieste in the bay of Naples, Italy, pictured on August 13, 1953. Jacques Piccard and his team reached a record depth of 10'911 m in the Mariana Trench on January 23, 1960. Auguste Piccard (1884-1962) was a physicist, inventor and explorer. An interest in ballooning and a curiosity about the upper atmosphere led him to design and construct a spherical, pressurized aluminum gondola which would allow him to ascend to great altitude without requiring a pressure suit in 1930. Piccard and a Belgian engineer reached a record altitude of 15'785 m on May 27, 1931. During this flight, Piccard was able to gather substantial data on the stratosphere. Piccard and a Belgian physicist made a second record-breaking ascent to 16'200 m on August 18, 1932. In the mid-1930s, Piccard's interests shifted when he realized that a modification of some of his atmospheric balloon concepts would allow to descend into the deep ocean and he designed a small steel gondola to withstand great external pressure. (KEYSTONE/PHOTOPRESS-ARCHIV/Str)
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