Around the world in 45 hours in a Gulfstream jet

As a veteran of three spaceflights, former NASA astronaut Terry Virts has orbited the planet more than 3,400 times. Now Virts plans to make “one more orbit” around the planet and possibly set a world record in the process. Virts and the founder of a consultancy business named Action Aviation (Hamish Harding) are leading an effort to travel around planet Earth, via both poles, from July 9 through July 11. The current speed record was set in 2008 when a Bombardier Global Express jet made the journey at an average ground speed of 511mph.

… The present-day record attempt will be attempted in a smaller jet: the Gulfstream G650ER aircraft has a range of more than 7,500 miles before needing to be refueled.

… The aircraft will depart with a crew of four pilots from the Shuttle Landing Facility and Kennedy Space Center on July 9 at the same time the Saturn V rocket launched from Kennedy Space Center on July 16, 1969, carrying the crew of the Apollo 11 mission. The first leg of the 22,422 nautical-mile journey will travel from Florida across the North Pole and land in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, to refuel. There, Virts’ former crew mate on the space station, Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, will join the flight “in the spirit of international cooperation.”

… From there, the mission will progress to a stop in Mauritius in East Africa. After that, longest leg will be from Africa over the South Pole to Punta Arenas, Chile, before finally returning to Florida. Including the brief 45-minute fueling stops, Virts hopes to average 516 mph for the journey, breaking the current record by around 23 minutes.

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