NASA's Spirit Rover Crew Are 'Slaves To Mars' 46
Quirk writes "The Telegraph has a bit on the challenge faced by the 280 team members who have had to leave Earth time behind and attune their circadian clock to the Mars solar day or 'sol'. '...the team's wake-up times and meal times two weeks after the landing will have shifted by nine hours.'"
Mars Time (Score:4, Funny)
After all, it's not like my caffeine addiction could be affecting me.
Re:Mars Time (Score:2)
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:1)
Funny thing is, you'd rather they starve than get to work for a living.
And as to the "slave wages" they are paid, this shows serious ignorance-- when you ignore cost of living adjustments and currency adjustments, you make it look like they are getting paid less than they need to survive.
The reason sweatshops are popular is that they offer a BETTER DEAL than the employment alternatives.
But american liberals, determined to make everyone
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:1)
Wealth breeds complacency, but as long as they get what they want out of life, why worry? Once it doesn't work anymore, their children will start taking education more seriously again because they'
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:2)
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:1)
Jesus, its like you're channeling the little red book.
Please go learn some economics. Austrian economics is consistant with history, while socialist economists are always going around trying to justify why history doesn't fit their theories.
According to you, the USSR was a paradise!
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:2)
Re:Challenge, huh? (Score:2)
Liberals are leftist whackjobs
Restricting thought (Score:3, Insightful)
Further, I can't be "hungry," "tired," "sad," or "lonely"... think of the famine victims, the sufferes of sleep-deprivation torture
Damn Lag! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:2, Interesting)
ITYM 8 light-MINUTES. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ITYM 8 light-MINUTES. (Score:2)
D.
Re:ITYM 8 light-MINUTES. (Score:1)
rtfm?
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:2)
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:2, Informative)
AU: Astronomical Unit, defined as the radius of the Earth's orbit, appprox 93M miles. Used for convenience and because when you get such large values that change all the time, people get sloppy. :)
Mars' orbit is ~1.6 AU from the sun. (See Bode's Law [encyclopedia.com].) This means that Mars can be as little as 0.6 AU's or as much as 2.6 AU's depending on where the planets are in their orbits relative to one another. Communication times therefore would range from about 4-
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:2)
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:2)
Mars Needs Gamers [gamespy.com] - 3 part series with 2 pages each
Very good read! Funny as hell.
Excerpt:
Re:Damn Lag! (Score:1)
Mars24 utility [nasa.gov]
Oh, the invasion from Mars has begun! (Score:1)
Not quite like Vonnegut predicted...
Lag Cures. (Score:2)
"Mars"? (Score:3, Funny)
I wanna Mars Watch! (Score:5, Funny)
"There are some things I only know in Mars time," said Townsend, a mission avionics engineer.
Time to write another note to the folks at ThinkGeek: please add the Mars Watch to your Gadgets
And please, be sure to have it modelled by Ms. Townsend [chron.com]. For me, she's a great role model for my daughters. For the rest of Slashdot: she's a girl geek! Cool!
Re:I wanna Mars Watch! (Score:1, Informative)
Not as handy as a watch, but there is a MarsClock written for PalmOS.
Open source, too.--
Eeyore
Re:I wanna Mars Watch! (Score:2)
Thinking about how difficult it is even to get a watch with the right date format here (i.e. not "m/d/y"), I'd be interested to see if anyone makes a watch configurable enough to use mars time. Can you even buy a 2004-01-13 format clock/calendar in any stores?
That said, I've just remembered the microwave in our kitchen (at work) might qualify... it's certainly not using
Definitions, people... (Score:4, Interesting)
Now why in gods name did they name the martian day AND the Sun the same damn thing?
That's why stardate was put in place (Score:1)
Shift workers are used to this (Score:3, Informative)
Ehm... How voluntary is this? And how legal? (Score:2)
As an engineer, I can very well understand that many of these people are living Mars Sols voluntarily; If I were one such a rover team, I would.
But exactly how voluntary is this? Or even legal? In the Netherlands, labour law [ggznederland.nl] (in Dutch, I'm afraid, articles 4.7:1 and 5.8) states that one cannot be forced to perform more than 28 night-shifts in 13 consequetive weeks under normal circumstances. Under special circumstances, I which work cannot reasonably be performed during normal working hours (which would
Re:Ehm... How voluntary is this? And how legal? (Score:2)
Re:Ehm... How voluntary is this? And how legal? (Score:2, Insightful)
Last I checked, there was no Local 427 of the Allied Brotherhood of Rocket Scientists and Affiliated Pointy-Heads at CalTech.
I suppose the folks doing this are doing it because they want to, of course... it's very likely that they view this as a once-in-a-lifetime experience. 90 days of messed up sleep is nothing if you're doing what you love.
Re:Ehm... How voluntary is this? And how legal? (Score:2)
Yes we have rights in the US. However they are different. We also have a work ethic unlike some counties (France in particular, we sent our cheif engineer to France to explain something, for one day, and they all left at 4:00. A one time deal and nobody was willing to work late).
They can make you work any hours they want. However you don't have to agree, there are other jobs. Typically people working the night shift are paid extra money in turn. And we consider it better for someone working nights
As Recently Noted Elsewhere (Score:2)
They're not really adjusting their body clocks. The human body clock is aready set to 25 hours on average, same as the Martian day. They're just not resetting their body clock to adjust to Earth time.
I'm telling you, if you buy into this evolution stuff, you have to conclude that humans originated on Mars. Why else would we be trying so hard to get back?
The more important question is, why were we sent here anyway? What'd we
Better not... (Score:2)