Paper planes launched from space should not be confused with Paper Aircraft Released Into Space.
Several projects have been planned and undertaken to launch paper planes from the stratosphere or higher.
The Guinness World Record for the highest altitude paper plane launch is 35043m (114,970feet).[1]
Japanese scientists and origami masters considered in 2008 launching a flotilla of paper planes from space.[2] The launch was tentatively slated for 2009[3] from the International Space Station[4] 250 miles above Earth. However, the planes' developers, Takuo Toda (see paper plane world records) and fellow enthusiast Shinji Suzuki, an aeronautical engineer and professor at Tokyo University, postponed the attempt after acknowledging it would be all but impossible to track the planes during their week-long journey to Earth, assuming any of them survived the searing descent. The developers continued, in 2009, with hopes that China or Russia will back further efforts on the project.[5]
Some 30 to 100 planes had been considered to make the descent, each gliding downward over what was expected to be the course of a week to several months. If one of the planes survived to Earth, it would have made the longest flight ever by a paper plane, traversing the vertical descent. In a test in Japan in February 2008, a prototype about long and wide (reported by other sources as [5]) survived Mach 7 speeds and temperatures reported to be in a hypersonic wind tunnel for 10 seconds. Materials designed for use in conventional reentry vehicles, including ceramic composites, withstand temperatures on the order of .[6] The planes were to have been made from heat-resistant paper treated with silicon.
As the Japanese/JAXA project was outlined, scientists would have had no way to track the airplanes or to predict where they might land; and as 70% of the Earth's surface is covered in water, the craft would have anticipated a wet reunion with the planet. Each plane, however, would have borne a request in several languages asking its finder to contact the Japanese team. Should one of the airplanes thus have made its way home, its journey would have helped to demonstrate the feasibility of slow-speed, low-friction atmospheric reentry. Critics have suggested that even a successful demonstration would lack probative impact beyond the realm of diminutive sheets of folded paper—they can only fall.[7] Supporters countered that the broadening of knowledge was justification enough.
See also: Paper Aircraft Released Into Space. On 28 October 2010, the PARIS (Paper Aircraft Released Into Space) project launched a paper plane at 90000feet - 17 miles up - at a location about 120miles west of Madrid, Spain, setting a world record recognised by Guinness World Records.[1] The work was undertaken by a team of British space enthusiasts working on behalf of the information technology web site The Register.
The use of the word "space" in the project's name refers to "near space," not "outer space", since it was not planned for the vehicle to ascend to an altitude above the Kármán line.
In February 2011, 200 planes were launched from a net underneath a weather balloon twenty-three miles above Germany. The planes were designed to maintain stable flight even in gusts up to . The planes were equipped with memory chips from which data could be uploaded. Planes were subsequently recovered from Europe, North America and Australia.[8]
On 13 September 2014, a group of Civil Air Patrol cadets from Fox Valley Composite Squadron of the Illinois Wing, announced that it had broken the Guinness World Record for the highest launch of a paper plane by releasing a substantial paper dart at 96563feet.[9] [10]
On 24 June 2015, a secondary school science club from Elsworth, Cambridgeshire, UK, achieved the world record for the highest altitude paper plane launch, reaching an altitude of 35043m (114,970feet).[1]
On 27 July 2019, Japanese startup Interstellar Technologies Inc. launched sounding rocket MOMO-F4 with number of payloads including three origami paper planes made out of heat resistant paper. These paper planes by paper-plane enthusiast, Takuo Toda were supposed to be released at the planned 100 km apogee but due to anomalies the MOMO-F4 sounding rocket could only achieve 13 km altitude and crashed into the ocean.[11] [12] [13]