The World's Fastest Passenger Jets


Gulfstream G500

Mach 0.885

The G500 has a 50-foot-long, eight-passenger cabin and can fly for nearly 6,000 miles without stopping for gas. It reaches 673 miles per hour, and there's a master control for lighting, entertainment and cabin temperature, as well as two LCD monitors and dual shade electronic windows.

The World’s Fastest Train

The World’s Fastest Train

Color photograph of a silver and blue TGV train at the platform

France is known for many things, but one of its better-kept secrets is that it is a world leader in rail transport technology. (Railfans know this, but most of the general public does not.) The flagship of French rail technology is the TGV or Train à Grande Vitesse (“High-Speed Train”), the world’s fastest train. TGVs regularly run at 300 km/h in normal service on some lines. And even this high speed is well below the TGV’s limits: the TGV holds the world’s record for speed on rails of574.8 km/h (357.2 mph), or roughly half the speed of sound.

In this photograph, you see an example of the most recent TGV Duplex trainset. This trainset, which is part of the Paris Sud-Est portion of the TGV network that serves cities such as Lyons, was parked at the Gare de Lyon railway station in eastern Paris. This third-generation TGV, first built around 1998, differs from its predecessors in that it has two levels, substantially increasing capacity.

Behind the TGV Duplex, you can see a trainset of the first TGV generation, originally put into service around 1980.

Passenger train service is alive and well in Europe, and quite obviously in France. In this station and several other stations around Paris (there are six major railway stations), TGVs depart and arrive literally every few minutes, and they are often fully loaded. At Christmas, these stations are busier than many U.S. airports, with thousands of people per hour arriving and departing for family reunions.

There is nothing quite like a ride in a TGV, and every visitor to France should try to take at least a brief ride in one, if possible (and rides in TGVs tend to be brief!). This is the only train I have encountered that can accelerate so fast that you have to hold on if you aren’t seated. When leaving stations just off the main line, a departing TGV may already be flying along at 100 km/h by the time it clears the platform. This is no surprise when you consider that TGV trainsets with second sections (two complete trainsets coupled together—a common arrangement on French TGV lines) have a total of nearly 36,000 horsepower. In fact, the maximum speed of a TGV is about twice the speed of a 747 at takeoff—if the train had wings, it could fly.

TGVs are very comfortable, quiet, and smooth-running trains. At speeds below 100 km/h, it is often hard to tell that the train is moving at all from the inside, unless you look out a window. At cruising speed, scenery streaks past the windows so quickly that you cannot become bored. At points where the TGV line parallels major highways, it’s amusing to watch expensive sports cars moving at close to two hundred kilometres per hour backwards with respect to the train!

TGVs are the state of the art in rail transport, and the French are justifiably proud of them. Contrary to what you might think, getting a train to move at over 320 km/h is more than just putting in a bigger motor—the engineering problems are huge. Nevertheless, France has been doing exactly this for nearly two decades, and in fact, it first broke the 200-mph (320-km/h) barrier a half-century ago, setting a record that stood unbroken until France itself again broke the record with the TGV.

Of course, in France, TGVs are commonplace. Some people even live in Paris and commute to Lyons to work (or vice versa) each day by TGV; the distance of over 500 km can be covered in less than two hours (some people spend more time than that just driving in from the suburbs!). The TGV is faster, cheaper, and more practical than aircraft for distances of less than 1000 km (and that covers just about every destination in France). Unlike aircraft, TGVs travel from city center to city center, you can board them immediately, and they are always on time (to the second—I’ve verified this several times).

I recall arriving in a rush to board a TGV that was scheduled to depart at 5:05 PM. I had carefully set my watch, and I arrived at the platform with only about 30 seconds to spare. I scrambled aboard the train at 5:04:57 PM; exactly three seconds later, the buzzer sounded, the doors closed automatically, and the train rolled. By the time I found my seat and flopped into it, the train was already flashing past the Paris city limit (I noticed this by looking out a window—it’s hard to feel any movement inside a TGV). Try that in an airport!

I have photos of some other types of TGVs, if you’re a railfan, including the first-generation TGV Paris-Sud Est, the second-generation TGV Atlantique, the Eurostar, and the Thalys, which serves places like Brussels. I also have awallpaper image showing a classic “nose shot” of a TGV Atlantique at the Montparnasse station, if you’d like some desktop wallpaper.

Some people have objected that China's magnetic levitation train is faster in normal service (460 kph). That's true, but it's a novelty train that goes only between city and airport, whereas the TGV has been in nationwide service over thousands of miles of right-of-way for twenty-five years. And the TGV can still top 574 kph, even though it stays below that in regular service. When I see a maglev train providing similar regular service, then I'll be impressed, but the occasional small showcase line doesn't impress me, and it's really not in the same league as a day-to-day, nationwide commercial network.

List of billionaires (2009)

Top billionaires

The following list is the ranking of the world's richest billionaires as of February 13, 2009, and does not reflect changes since then.

Legend
IconDescription
Has not changed from the list for 2008.
Has increased from the list for 2008.
Has decreased from the list for 2008.
No. ↓Name ↓Net worth(USD) ↓Age ↓Citizenship ↓Residence ↓Sources of wealth ↓Ref.
1Bill Gates$40.0 billion 53 United States United StatesMicrosoft[3]
2Warren Buffett$37.0 billion 78 United States United StatesBerkshire Hathaway[3]
3Carlos Slim Helú$35.0 billion 69 Mexico
Lebanon
MexicoTelmex, América Móvil[3]
4Lawrence Ellison$22.5 billion 64 United States United StatesOracle Corporation[3]
5Ingvar Kamprad and family$22.0 billion 83 Sweden SwitzerlandIKEA[4]
6Karl Albrecht$21.5 billion 89 Germany GermanyAldi Süd[4]
7Mukesh Ambani$19.5 billion 51 India IndiaReliance Industries[4]
8Lakshmi Mittal$19.3 billion 58 India United KingdomArcelor Mittal[4]
9Theo Albrecht$18.8 billion 87 Germany GermanyAldi Nord, Trader Joe's[5]
10Amancio Ortega$18.3 billion 73 Spain SpainInditex Group[6]
11Jim Walton$17.8 billion 61 United States United StatesWal-Mart[7]
12Alice Walton$17.6 billion 59 United States United StatesWal-Mart[7]
12Christy Walton$17.6 billion 54 United States United StatesWal-Mart[7]
12S. Robson Walton$17.6 billion 65 United States United StatesWal-Mart[7]
15Bernard Arnault$16.5 billion 60 France FranceLVMH Moët Hennessy • Louis Vuitton[8]
16Li Ka-shing$16.2 billion 80 Hong Kong Hong KongCheung Kong Holdings,Hutchison Whampoa[9]
17Michael Bloomberg$16.0 billion 67 United States United StatesBloomberg L.P.[6]
18Stefan Persson$14.5 billion 61 Sweden SwedenHennes & Mauritz
19Charles Koch$14.0 billion 73 United States United StatesKoch Industries[10]
19David H. Koch$14.0 billion 68 United States United StatesKoch Industries[10]
21Liliane Bettencourt$13.4 billion 86 France FranceL'Oréal[3]
22Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud$13.3 billion 54 Saudi Arabia
Lebanon
Saudi ArabiaKingdom Holding Company, Citigroup[11]
23Michael Otto and family$13.2 billion 65 Germany GermanyOtto GmbH
24David Thomson and family$13.0 billion 51 Canada CanadaThe Thomson Corporation[12]
25Michael Dell$12.3 billion 44 United States United StatesDell
26Donald Bren$12.0 billion 76 United States United StatesIrvine Company
26Sergey Brin$12.0 billion 35 United States United StatesGoogle[3]
26Larry Page$12.0 billion 36 United States United StatesGoogle[3]
29Steven Ballmer$11.0 billion 53 United States United StatesMicrosoft[13]
29The Duke of Westminster and family$11.0 billion 57 United Kingdom United KingdomGrosvenor Group[14]
29George Soros$11.0 billion 78 United States United StatesSoros Fund Management
32Paul Allen$10.5 billion 56 United States United StatesMicrosoft[11]
32Raymond Kwok, Thomas Kwok, and Walter Kwok$10.5 billion 57, 58, and 59 Hong Kong Hong KongSun Hung Kai
34Anil Ambani$10.1 billion 49 India IndiaAnil Dhirubhai Ambani Group[4]
35Abigail Johnson$10.0 billion 47 United States United StatesFidelity Investments
35Susanne Klatten$10.0 billion 46 Germany GermanyBMW
35Ronald Perelman$10.0 billion 66 United States United StatesRevlon
35Hans Rausing$10.0 billion 83 Sweden United KingdomTetra Laval[14]
39Birgit Rausing and family$9.9 billion 85 Sweden SwitzerlandTetra Laval
40Michele Ferrero and family$9.5 billion 82 Italy MonacoFerrero SpA
40Mikhail Prokhorov$9.5 billion 43 Russia RussiaInterros[15]
40Jack C. Taylor and family$9.5 billion 86 United States United StatesEnterprise Rent-A-Car
43Mohammed Al Amoudi$9.0 billion 63 Saudi Arabia Saudi ArabiaCorral Petroleum Holdings
43Anne Cox Chambers$9.0 billion 89 United States United StatesCox Enterprises
43Carl Icahn$9.0 billion 73 United States United StatesAmerican Car and Foundry Company[16]
43George Kaiser$9.0 billion 66 United States United StatesBOK Financial Corporation
43Lee Shau Kee$9.0 billion 81 Hong Kong Hong KongHenderson Land Development
43Forrest Edward Mars, Jr.$9.0 billion 77 United States United StatesMars, Incorporated[16]
43Jacqueline Mars$9.0 billion 69 United States United StatesMars, Incorporated[16]
43John Mars$9.0 billion 72 United States United StatesMars, Incorporated[16]
51Roman Abramovich$8.5 billion 42 Russia RussiaMillhouse Capital[17]
52Ernesto Bertarelli$8.2 billion 43 Switzerland SwitzerlandSerono
52Philip Knight$8.2 billion 71 United States United StatesNike
54Nasser Al-Kharafi and family$8.1 billion 65 Kuwait KuwaitM. A. Kharafi & Sons
55James Simons$8.0 billion 70 United States United StatesRenaissance Technologies
55Alain Wertheimer and Gerard Wertheimer$8.0 billion 60 and 59 France United States
Switzerland
Chanel
57Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair & family$7.8 billion 55 United Arab Emirates United Arab EmiratesMashreq Bank
57Vahid Alakbarov$7.8 billion 58 Russia RussiaLUKoil
59Sunil Mittal and family$7.7 billion 51 India IndiaBharti Airtel
60François Pinault and family$7.6 billion 72 France FrancePPR
61Eike Batista$7.5 billion 51 Brazil BrazilEBX Group
62Mohamed Bin Issa Al Jaber$7.0 billion 50 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
62Maan Al-Sanea$7.0 billion 54 Saudi Arabia Saudi ArabiaSaad Group
62Edward Johnson, III$7.0 billion 78 United States United StatesFidelity Investments
62Ananda Krishnan$7.0 billion 70 Malaysia MalaysiaMaxis, Astro
62Robert Kuok$7.0 billion 85 Malaysia Hong KongPerlis Plantations Bhd
62Joseph Safra$7.0 billion 70 Brazil BrazilSafra Group
68Jeffrey Bezos$6.8 billion 45 United States United StatesAmazon.com
69August von Finck, Jr.$6.7 billion 79 Germany SwitzerlandAllianz
70Silvio Berlusconi and family$6.5 billion 72 Italy ItalyFininvest
71Leonardo Del Vecchio$6.3 billion 73 Italy ItalyLuxottica
71Curt Engelhorn$6.3 billion 82 Germany SwitzerlandRoche
71Mikhail Fridman$6.3 billion 44 Russia RussiaAlfa Group
74Sulaiman Al Rajhi$6.2 billion 89 Saudi Arabia Saudi ArabiaAl-Rajhi Bank
75James Goodnight$6.1 billion 66 United States United StatesSAS Institute
76[[Iris Fontbona widow of Andronico Luksic|Iris Fontbona widow of Andronico Luksic]] and family$6.0 billion Chile ChileAntofagasta PLC,Quiñenco
76Petr Kellner$6.0 billion 44 Czech Republic Czech RepublicPPF Group
76John Kluge$6.0 billion 94 United States United StatesMetromedia[6]
76John Paulson$6.0 billion 53 United States United States
76Tadashi Yanai & family$6.0 billion 60 Japan JapanFast Retailing
81Dan Duncan$5.9 billion 76 United States United StatesEnterprise Products
81Eliodoro Matte & family$5.9 billion 63 Chile ChileCompañía Manufacturera de Papeles y Cartones
83Alberto Bailleres & family$5.7 billion 76 Mexico MexicoGrupo Bal
83Azim Premji$5.7 billion 63 India IndiaWipro Technologies
83Hansjorg Wyss$5.7 billion 74 Switzerland United StatesSynthes
86Shashi Ruia and Ravi Ruia$5.6 billion 65 India IndiaEssar
87Steven A. Cohen$5.5 billion 53 United States United StatesSAC Capital Partners
87Ng Teng Fong$5.5 billion 80 Singapore SingaporeSino Group
87Patrick Soon-Shiong$5.5 billion 57 United States United StatesAmerican Pharmaceutical Partners
90Serge Dassault and family$5.4 billion 83 France FranceDassault Group
90Erivan Haub & family$5.4 billion 76 Germany GermanyTengelmann Group
92Jorge Paulo Lemann$5.3 billion 69 Brazil BrazilInvestment Bank &Anheuser-Busch InBev
93Eli Broad$5.2 billion 75 United States United StatesKB Home
93Kunio Busujima & family$5.2 billion 83 Japan JapanSankyo
93Karl-Heinz Kipp$5.2 billion 85 Germany SwitzerlandMassa
93Vladimir Lisin$5.2 billion 52 Russia RussiaNovolipetsk Steel[15]
93Reinhold Wurth$5.2 billion 73 Germany GermanyWurth Group
98Philip Anschutz$5.0 billion 69 United States United StatesThe Anschutz Corporation
98Kirk Kerkorian$5.0 billion 91 United States United StatesTracinda Corporation[16]
98Nicky Oppenheimer & family$5.0 billion 63 South Africa South AfricaDe Beers & Anglo American
98David and Simon Reuben$5.0 billion NA United Kingdom United Kingdomreal estate
98Kushal Pal Singh$5.0 billion 77 India IndiaDLF Group[4]
98Galen Weston & family$5.0 billion 68 Canada CanadaGeorge Weston Limited,Associated British Foods
99Mian Mohammad Mansha$4.4 billion NA Pakistan PakistanNishat Group, Muslim Commercial Bank