Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

close
 

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Step into the Twilight Zone: Day 11 on Mars Time, in Which I Give Myself Cancer

    Editor's note: Researchers exploring Mars via rover and satellite have to adapt to the longer day on the Red Planet. Katie Worth, whose
    Can Earthlings Adapt to the Longer Day on Mars? for Scientific American describes the consequences of sleep-pattern changes, is trying it out herself. Follow her experiences in living on "Mars time" at this blog to see how it affects her sleep and behavior. This post is the fourth in a series.

    The past few days have been pretty brutal. As my bedtime has sprinted past dawn, my wake-up time has stood its ground. It's like the opposite of a curfew. Instead of my carriage turning into a pumpkin after midnight, my eyes are turning into pumpkin-colored unblinking demons of sleeplessness after noon. Not problematic when I was falling asleep at 5 A.M., but now that my bedtime is past 9 A.M., I'm beginning to fret.

    The lack of sleep is leading to what I have dubbed "Mars moments." Like last night, when I took the subway home, and absentmindedly got off one stop too soon. Jumped on the next train but zoned out and missed my stop. Had to get off at the following stop and take the next train back, willing myself to pay attention for 60 whole seconds until I could get off. I mean, I'm kind of a space cadet on a good day, but this is ridiculous.

    Despite my near-perpetual drowsiness, most nights I've managed to stay awake until my Martian bedtime, with the exception of day 9, when I was so tired that I decided to "take a quick nap" at 4 A.M. and woke up fully dressed and teeth unbrushed eight hours later. One part of my brain felt guilty about cheating on my experiment, but it was drowned out by the raucous cheering of every other neuron in my body.

    One of my most effective methods of staying awake through the long nights is to spend time feeding my inner hypochondriac by researching all the ways living on Mars time may be hastening my demise. Here's the list of terrible things I could be doing to myself this very second:

    Giving myself cancer. People who routinely stay up all night working and sleep during the day are considerably more susceptible to cancer than their diurnal counterparts. There have been hundreds of studies correlating night shift work with breast cancer, but a growing pile of evidence indicates that shift work is an equal-opportunity carcinogen, happy to help you grow tumors virtually anywhere in your body.

    Accelerating my future case of diabetes. People who do shift work or who suffer problems like sleep apnea or the not-as-fun-as-it-sounds restless leg syndrome develop more Type 2 diabetes than normies. This analysis compared people's quality and quantity of sleep with the rate they developed diabetes over time. People who slept less than 6 hours a night had 28 percent more relative risk of diabetes--although people sleeping more than 9 hours were even worse off. Those who had trouble staying asleep (inner hypochondriac alert: This means me!) had an 84 percent higher risk of developing the disease than their well-rested counterparts.

    Adding wrinkles and gray hairs prematurely. This study found that mice exposed to constant light experienced accelerated aging. Rats living in constant light from the age of 25 days until their natural death met that natural death much sooner than rats kept in darkness 12 or 24 hours a day. The good news: A supplement of melatonin nixed this effect. "Procure melatonin tablets" hereby appended to my to-do list.

    Hurrying down the path toward obesity, mental distress, asthma, arthritis, stroke, and coronary heart disease. In an analysis of 375,000 American adults surveyed in 2009, people who reported themselves most sleep-deprived also had the highest incidences of these other problems. Since eating is my primary defense against falling asleep at 6 A.M., I can personally attest to the relationship between drowsiness and obesity.

    A bunch of stuff we don't even know about yet. Last June, the American Medical Association recommended that more research be done on the effect of artificial light at night on human health, and more technologies be developed to reduce those health risks. We are engaging in a "man-made self-experiment" by constantly exposing itself to light at night, and as yet we don't fully understand the effects of this exposure, the report stated. And that's just living on Earth time. What about the woman-made self-experiment of living on Mars time?

    Stay tuned for my next update on Friday. Assuming I survive that long.

     

    Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs.

    Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.

    © 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

    9 comments

    • DouglasL  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      I don't get it. A Martian day is longer than a day on Earth by 39 minutes. Why is she forcing herself to stay awake at 4 AM?
      • T 2 days 7 hrs ago
        From Staying up for 40 minutes extra each day, as Harvard sleep scientist Laura Barger points out, doesn't sound like much. "When you first think about it, it even sounds like a good thing, having a little extra time," she says. But not for long:" "Pathfinder mission, which initially was expected to last seven days but ultimately endured 85. Nobody had planned for it."

        Let's see. We start at 8:00am to star a day. After a week(7days), you'd have to start your day at 12:35pm(39,5 x 7 = 276mins/4.6hr). Next week, you'd have to start at 5pm, and so on for 85 days.
        Maybe that's why they extended their human experiment when they saw the people were messing up.
    • Joseph  •  2 days 7 hrs ago
      Wouldn't it be more prudent to just keep an Earth sleep schedule instead of trying to adapt? We are a product of THIS environment.
    • jeff  •  1 day 7 hrs ago
      This "study" is down right stupid... its common knowledge that people need to sleep 6-8 hrs a night minimum for proper health, if you were on Mars you would not just adhere to the sunrise and sunset. You'd sleep for 8 hrs like someone working a third shift sleeps through the day or sleeping in till 12 on your day off. people in Alaska don't die when the winter months are only dark and summer are only light, they compensate.

      Furthermore changing your circadian rhythm isn't easy no matter where you are at.. going from falling asleep at mid night all of your life then trying to switch to a later time or an unusual time will always cause the body to resist. this is not new information sleep deprivation causes many ailments, she only mentioned the long term effects not the short term like temporary insanity and nervous breakdowns, along with strokes and an increase risk of heart attacks ...
    • Adam  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      The day night cycle is the real issue, and you cannot replicate that.
    • Kraken  •  2 days 11 hrs ago
      Not too healthy stress factors.
    • jjetrek79  •  20 hrs ago
      Space time runs much faster in Space and it is slowing down on MARS Plus It takes MARS to circular the Mars planet to study the surfaces Because MARS moves slowly around the sun For reasons MAR may have longer Winters about 7 to 9 months Fall to last 3 to 5 months and for Summer It's like 6 to 8 months So instead of having seven days It is more like eight thee/ quarter days
    • Tom  •  1 day 4 hrs ago
      What am I missing? Why would this be compared to shift work? What shift work? Wouldn't you switch to local time rather than maintain the day/night cycle you left behind? This experiment is absurd...well, I guess it gets her a paycheck and, boy, is she milking it; day 11? Give me a break.

      Seems to me 39 minutes would be easily absorbed into your life pattern over time. All the research suggests that 7-8 hours of sleep per day or 1/3 of a 24hr day is the sweet spot for adequate sleep; so either sleep an extra 13 minutes or slip in a 30-45 minute mid-day nap which, by the way, is also medically encouraged on Earth...Mars nights last from 16hrs 37min in winter to 8 hrs in the summer so 'nightime' is not even a factor unless your on 2nd shift I suppose, lol. I doubt if Mars shelters will offer much for incoming light anyway.

      Hundreds of thousands of people on Earth adapt every year in the northern hemispheres from nearly 24 hours of daylight to zero. Those populations have thrived for thousands of years. There are also hundreds of thousands of people who move from one side of the Earth to another and completely reverse their sleep cycles....they don't get sick and die from cancer; they adapt.

      There are way more things to worry about on Mars than a 39 minute longer day; gravity, radiation, isolation, extreme temperatures, the unknown.....
    • Redmonkeyfur  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      She's nuts. A sidereal day on Mars lasts 24 hours 37 minutes and 22 seconds. The solar day is how long it takes the Sun to return to the meridian. This position changes slightly each day, but a solar day on Mars lasts 24 hours 39 minutes and 35 seconds. Big deal.
    • Kevin  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      Totally ridiculous exercise. She'll be long gone by the time we put someone on Mars.
    • Julianne Hough On Shaving Her Head, Disastrous First Date & Covering Ryan Seacrest's Eyes During Safe …

      Julianne Hough made headlines this week over her confession that "one day" she plans to shave her head. However, don't mourn the blonde's locks just yet - she won't be going the way of Miley's pixie cut anytime soon!

    • Obama, first lady out on Valentine's dinner date

      WASHINGTON (AP) — Flowers? Check. A gift? Check. President Barack Obama said he had both and was ready for a Valentine's Day date with the first lady.

    • Jenny McCarthy: Josh Groban Left My Talk Show Because Of Go-Go Dancers

      This doesn't sound like the Josh Groban we here at Access Hollywood know and love, but according to Jenny McCarthy, the singer was scheduled as a guest on the first episode of her talk show, but bailed upon his team's sight of sexy dancers on her set.

    • Sister In Open Marriage Takes Sharing Too Far

      DEAR ABBY: My daughters are attractive young women, both doing well in their professional careers. "Melanie," who is 27, is married to "Sam," an extremely attractive and successful man.My 30-year-old daughter, "Alicia," has been divorced for a year. Her marriage failed two years ago because she and her husband had an appetite for sex outside their marriage. While I was disturbed about that, I was horrified to learn that Melanie allows her sister to occasionally have sex with Sam.Melanie's argument is that Sam is less likely to cheat given this situation. ...

    • Finola Hughes Talks General Hospital's 50th Anniversary, Her Love Of Dancing With The Stars

      Finola Hughes has called the upcoming 50th anniversary of "General Hospital" a "really sweet" moment."I think the fact that we, at 'GH,' are doing so well right now, and to enter into our 50th anniversary on such a high, it feels really sweet," the actress, who plays Port Charles Police Chief Anna Devane, told Access Hollywood, when asked about the daytime drama's impending anniversary.

    • Kris Humphries' lawyer wants out of divorce case

      LOS ANGELES (AP) — A lawyer for Kim Kardashian's estranged husband wants to end his involvement in the former couple's divorce proceedings.

    • Mickelson a huge Riviera fan after long learning curve

      PACIFIC PALISADES, California (Reuters) - Phil Mickelson ranks Riviera Country Club as one of his favorite venues on the PGA Tour, even though it took him almost a decade to discover the art of playing the par-71 layout. Known as a classic shot-maker's course, Riviera continually vexed Mickelson as he missed four cuts in eight PGA Tour appearances here between 1988 and 2001. He then skipped the event until 2007 when he made a last-minute decision to compete and ended up losing to fellow American Charles Howell III in a playoff for the title. ...

    • Teen's Hilarious Jeopardy Answer Wins Him $75K

      Leonard Cooper was sitting in last place as the ”Jeopardy! Teen Tournament” was winding down, but the teen, dressed casual with a giant afro, pulled off an epic comeback to take home the win. Cooper’s comeback began with the question, “Clavicle is another name for this...

    Follow Yahoo! News