Cape Times

Strange sleeping patterns and boredom could bedevil Mars missions

- Steve Connor

GETTING sleep will be one of the biggest challenges facing astronauts in any future manned mission to Mars, according to a study of six men who spent 520 days and nights in a confined “spacecraft” during a simulated trip to the planet.

The Mars500 project began on June 3, 2009 when three Rus- sians, an Italian, a Frenchman and a Chinese man entered a sealed experiment­al facility in Moscow without access to natural light, fresh air or direct face-to-face contact with any other human being.

For the next 18 months they carried out a battery of daily duties to simulate a return mission to Mars, with a 30-day interlude in the middle where they were allowed to explore another enclosed area designed to simulate the surface of the red planet.

A study into how each man coped with the psychologi­cal and physical constraint­s of the mission has found that there were wide difference­s in their wake-sleep patterns.

One man’s circadian rhythm shifted from a 24-hour period to a 25-hour period, which meant that on every 12th day his body was telling him that it was midnight at the same time that it was midday for everyone else.

And while most of the crew began to sleep for longer periods as the mission progressed and boredom set it, one individual slept progressiv­ely less, until towards the end of the mission he had become chronicall­y sleep-deprived.

“One of the biggest surprises was the huge individual difference­s in how they coped with sleep,” said Mathias Bas- ner, a sleep researcher at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia. There was just one member of the crew who was the sort of astronaut we would probably be looking for in terms of sleeping behaviour. He was very active during the day and slept well at night.”

Identifyin­g bad sleepers could be important on a real Mars mission that requires people to be constantly alert even when the days are tediously similar, Basner said. Sleep will be crucial to any future mission to Mars because it will require people to spend a long time together in a confined space without any natural cues for when it is day or night.

“The success of human interplane­tary spacefligh­t… will depend on the ability of astronauts to remain confined and isolated from Earth much longer than previous missions or simulation­s,” said David Dinges of Pennsylvan­ia University.

“This is the first investigat­ion to pinpoint the crucial role that sleep-wake cycles will play in extended space missions,” said Dinges, a co-author of the study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

The Mars500 project attempted to address a range of psychologi­cal and physical issues associated with extended space missions.

Professor Gro Sandal, a psychologi­st at the University of Bergen in Norway who looked at relationsh­ips between the crew members, said there was an overall harmony within the group despite some personal tensions.

“Monotony and boredom may be the biggest stressors on any mission to Mars, exciting as it may seem,” said Sandal.

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