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Living on Mars Time

Roland Piquepaille writes "When NASA's rovers, 'Spirit' and 'Opportunity,' touch down on Mars next January, scientists and engineers in charge of the missions at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), will start to experiment with a 90-day period of jet lag. Why? Because, as reports Astrobiology Magazine, 'a day on Mars is 39.5 minutes longer than a day on Earth.' To accommodate the requirements of interplanetary communication, during the mission the Spirit science and engineering teams will have to live on Mars time, in synch with the red planet's cycle of light and dark. This means that, here on Earth, they'll sometimes be working during daylight hours, and at other times they'll be working through the night. This summary contains more details and a screenshot of the Mars24 application, a Java program which gives you the time on Mars."

9 of 234 comments (clear)

  1. does it matter all that much? by kurosawdust · · Score: 5, Funny
    "Hey, what time is it?"

    "Time to scoop up dust, analyze it and try to forget the fact that we pee through a tube."

    "Oh."

  2. Oh, those poor guys by The+Wing+Lover · · Score: 5, Funny
    This means that, here on Earth, they'll sometimes be working during daylight hours, and at other times they'll be working through the night

    Which is, of course, totally and completely different from what we do as computer people.

    --

    - In Capitalist America, law violates YOU!

  3. 25 hour cycle? by Tomahawk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I once heard that, in test, the human body operates on a 25 hour cycle anyway, and we 'reset' our internal clocks ever day to fit in with the 24 hours of a day.

    IIRC, tests were carried out where volunteers lived underground with no access to the outside world - no TV, windows, etc. They could call up to the surface to request books, games, food, but nothing that would allow them to work out any sence of time (no clocks either!). It was found that they reverted to a 25 hour day...

    Shouldn't be too difficult for the scientists, or for colonization...

  4. Sounds like a crazy idea by zhenlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why? Changing the length of such a fundemental unit of time (other than one Planck unit of time) without changing its name is sure to cause confusion.

    Not to mention, each measure of time will have to multiplied by a number not very much greater or smaller than 1, possibly causing precision problems, in order to convert it between Earth seconds and Mars seconds.

    While I applaud the effort to make it easier to count time on Mars - I think, that in the bigger picture, it is not a good idea to use different fundemental units of time.

    Even in the Clarke's 3001, the Ganymedes ignored the local time and measured the time in Earth units. If I recall correctly, they measured time with respect to UTC on Earth, completely ignoring local time.

  5. Now theres a fuckup waiting to happen? by baadfood · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A day thats still 24 hours long, but 39 minutes longer than an earth day? Is that Earth or Mars minutes now? We have enough problems (rockets blowing up etc.) caused by converting between the dissimilar metric and imperial units - who exactly thought redefining minutes and seconds to be slightly longer on mars was a good idea? Thats going to lead to something very expensive.

  6. Well now... by freidog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A day on Mars, which is known as a "sol," consists of 24 hours, just like a day on Earth. Each hour contains 60 minutes; each minute 60 seconds. There's nothing magical about that. Scientists simply got together and declared it to be so. But there's a catch. A martian second is a smidge longer than what you're used to on Earth. Think of it this way: Instead of counting, "One Mississippi, two Mississippi" count "One Mississippis, two Mississippis."

    yes, because redefining the basic elements by which we measure time is SOOOOO much simpler than making a Martian day 24 hours and 40 minutes long...

    A meter is defined as distanced traveled by light in a vaccum in an amount of time, is a meter longer on mars now?

  7. Re:25-26 Hour Sleep Cycle by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > our natural body clock cycle is 25-26 hours,
    > making the adjustment to "Mars time" rather
    > painless.

    Painless - assuming, that is, that NASA have the technology to produce a localized variation in the hours of daylight...

    And have you ever tried to order out for pizza at 9am (Earth time)? Not even Stephen Hawking has a fix for that one. :)

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  8. 24/7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, that dratted "24/7" slogan is definitely doomed on Mars.

  9. Re:well..... by AllUsernamesAreGone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Which bit of "exam week" implies fun? ;)