Chuck Yeager was inside a box, and was not creating shock waves with his own body. There is a physical difference between what he did, and what this jumper is trying to do.
Diamondeye wrote:
I thought terminal velocity was the most gravity could accelerate you to in the first place if you hadn't already fallen from such a height that you could accelerate to a higher speed before encountering significant air resistance.
It's actually enough to slow you down from 760+ mph to 120?
You might think of it as a cup of coffee sitting in a room. The ambient temperature of the room is terminal velocity, while the cup of coffee is our diver. Any adult should know that the coffee cup will cool down until it's the same temperature as the rest of the room - a diver's speed works the same way.
Terminal velocity is a phenomenon that arises from moving through a fluid environment. (Both gases and liquids qualify as fluids). As you move through a fluid, there are particles striking you, creating mostly elastic collisions that rob you of momentum. Each individual particle doesn't steal much, but there are a lot of particles. The faster you move, the more particles you run into. What this means is that the air resistance you encounter increases with your speed.
There is also friction between your body and the surrounding environment, although friction gets sort of wacky. It increases as your speed increases, but there is also a sharp drop-off at high temperatures as the boundary layer of your body behaves more like a liquid than a solid.
For an object in free-fall, there is only one force causing them to go faster - gravity.
At this point, I feel obligated to bring up the word "decelerate." This is not a useful word. It doesn't actually describe what is happening. We sometimes use it in our day to day language because we think accelerate means "speed up" and that "slow down" should have a different prefix - this is false, despite definitions the two words have in the dictionary. (Remember, dictionaries are written by English majors). Acceleration is defined as the rate of change for velocity with respect to time, and is a vector quantity having both a size and a direction. An object that is slowing down is still accelerating, it just has an acceleration that's pointing in a direction opposite it's velocity. This is an important distinction because acceleration is caused by forces.
Terminal velocity is the equilibrium solution for the speed at which all of the forces (friction, air resistance, and gravity) on your body are equal to zero. If you are above terminal velocity, friction and air resistance are stronger than gravity. There is a net force pushing up, which creates an acceleration upward. If you are below terminal velocity, gravity is stronger, there is a net force pulling down, and thus, an acceleration downward.
Because the atmosphere is thinner at very high altitudes, there is less air resistance regardless of your speed, and therefore a higher terminal velocity. As you plummet toward the Earth, the air gets thicker. Terminal velocity goes down, because now there is more air pushing against you and it's easier for air resistance to overcome gravity. The diver will be slowing down almost the whole way in. This is a good thing, because if he opens his parachute going 700mph, it's likely to rip apart when it creates extra drag for him.