On 18 August 1934, Cosyns together with his student Nérée van der Elst piloted a balloon to an altitude of 52,952 feet. Following a take-off from Hour-Havenne in Belgium, they flew over Germany and Austria before landing near the village of Ženavlje (now in Slovenia). They were unsuccessful in maintaining satisfactory radio communication with ground, but were able to make observations of the currents in the stratosphere as well as investigate the nature of the cosmic rays. They failed to beat the height record, but stated on landing that they were fully satisfied with their discoveries.[2][3][4] A large bronze monument in the shape of a balloon was erected in 1997 on the spot of their landing in Ženavlje to commemorate the event.[5]
In 1952, he was in charge of the speleological expedition to the Gouffre de La Pierre Saint-Martin cave system in the Pyrenees. The French speleologist Marcel Loubens, died in an accident with an electric hoist during the ascent after spending four days in the cave when the steel cable snapped. Cosyns as head of the expedition and due to his involvement in the design of the winch was considered responsible for the accident.[6][7][8]
Personal life
Cosyns married fellow Belgian resistance member and lawyer Andrée Grandjean.[9]
^Occhialini and the Università Libre de Bruxelles. An interview by L. Gariboldi in The Scientific Legacy of Beppo Occhialini, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006, ISBN978-3-540-37353-7