How we'll nap our way to Mars
This is what real suspended animation might look like.
Rise and shine, kiddo. We're home.
Brown Bird Design
Imagine a
road trip that lasts six months—no pit stops, black night the whole
way. That’s how long it would take you, and how monotonous it would be,
to fly to Mars.
To avoid the boredom (and its cousins depression and anxiety), you
could spend part of your trip in artificial hibernation, or torpor, as
it’s medically known. NASA is funding research into this method for
future planet hoppers, and not just to reduce the games of I Spy.
Because metabolism slows during slumber, you would require less food and
water, reducing a mission’s cargo weight, fuel needs, and price tag.
Also, you wouldn’t want to kill your crew mates. Here’s how you might go
nighty-night and save your sanity on your 34-million-mile flight.
Step 1: Pod People
Like peas in a pod.
Brown Bird Design
You
enter the torpor pod. Using an IV placed in a central vein in your
chest, a crew mate injects a sedative similar to propofol to prevent
shivering, then tapes sensors to your skin. These will monitor heart
rhythm, blood pressure, oxygen levels, and other stats.
Step 2: Straight Chillin’
Cold hibernation.
Brown Bird Design
Once the
sedative knocks you out, the pod begins cooling the air around your
body. This lowers your core temperature a few degrees per hour, from a
healthy 98.6°F to below the point of hypothermia. Crew members may also
cool you with gel pads or icy nasal spray.
Step 3: Low Maintenance
How to not die.
Brown Bird Design
The crew
pushes anticoagulants through the central line to prevent blood clots
from forming—if they break free, they can block blood vessels. IV
antibiotics help stave off infection. And robotic systems periodically
stimulate your muscles to prevent atrophy.
Step 4: Food Tube
Nourishment.
Brown Bird Design
In
torpor, the average body needs only about 1,000 calories of daily
nutrient slurry. You “eat” via a feeding tube down your throat or a PEG
tube implanted on the inside of your stomach. Urine- and
fecal-collection systems keep you, and the pod, clean.
Step 5: Up and At ‘Em
Good morning!
Brown Bird Design
Step 6: Get a Move On
Shake it.
Brown Bird Design
You stay
up for two to three days, moving your body and caring for dozing crew
mates (although robots might one day take over this task). Then you go
back under for another few weeks. Repeat until you arrive safe and sane
on the Red Planet.
This article was originally published in the September/October 2017 Mysteries of Time and Space issue of Popular Science.
This article was originally published in the September/October 2017 Mysteries of Time and Space issue of Popular Science.
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