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From Discover Magazine:

Mars has an ever-so-slightly longer day than we do: 24 hours and 39
minutes, to be exact. To control solar-powered rovers like Phoenix and Curiosity,
NASA teams must shift their sleeping cycles to match, and it's a lot
harder than it sounds: that fraction of an hour extra means that their
sleep schedules creep every day, so while 1 pm might be the middle of
the night one week, say, it will have become breakfast time by the next.
Staying on Mars time is so grueling that staff for the Sojourner rover
in 1997 bailed on the schedule a third of the way through the mission.
But there may be ways of making the shift more graceful. In a recently published study
following personnel of the Phoenix rover mission in 2008, a team of
researchers provided training sessions to facilitate the switch to Mars
time, including tips on when to drink coffee and when to nap, and
then explored whether exposure to blue light, which works on
photosensitive cells in the eye involved in circadian management,
resulted in better adjustment.
Sixteen subjects turned on a blue light at their desks at the
beginning of each work "day" and provided a log of their activities and
fatigue level and frequent samples of urine to the researchers, who used
the levels of a hormone in the urine to evaluate whether the subjects
were fitting themselves biologically to Martian time.
Read the whole article
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