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What time is it on Mars?

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    So many of you have probably seen
    the movie "The Martian."
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    But for those of you who did not,
    it's a movie about an astronaut
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    who is stranded on Mars
    and his efforts to stay alive
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    until the Earth can send a rescue mission
    to bring him back to Earth.
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    Gladly, they do re-establish communication
    with the character, astronaut Watney,
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    at some point, so that he's not as alone
    on Mars until he can be rescued.
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    So while you're watching the movie,
    and even if you haven't,
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    when you think about Mars,
    you're probably thinking about
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    how far away it is and how distant.
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    And, what might not
    have occurred to you is,
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    what are the logistics really like
    of working on another planet?
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    Of living on two planets when
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    there are people on the Earth and
    there are rovers or people on Mars?
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    So think about when you have friends,
    families and co-workers in California,
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    on the West Coast
    or in other parts of the world.
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    When you're trying to communicate
    with them, one of the things
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    you probably first think about is --
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    Wait, what time is it in California?
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    Will I wake them up? Is it okay to call?
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    So even if you're interacting
    with colleagues who are in Europe,
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    you're immediately thinking about,
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    what does it take to coordinate
    communication when people are far away?
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    So we don't have people on Mars right now,
    but we do have rovers.
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    And actually right now, on Curiosity,
    it is 6:10 in the morning on Mars.
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    We have four rovers on Mars.
    The United States has put four rovers
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    on Mars since the mid-1990s,
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    and I have been privileged enough
    to work on three of them.
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    So, I am a spacecraft engineer,
    a spacecraft operations engineer,
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    at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    in Los Angeles, California.
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    And these rovers are robotic emissaries.
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    So, they are our eyes and our ears
    and they see the planet for us
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    until we can send people.
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    So we learn how to operate
    on other planets through these rovers.
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    So before we send people, we send robots.
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    So the reason there's a time difference
    on Mars right now,
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    from the time that we're at
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    is because the Martian day
    is longer than the Earth day.
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    Our Earth day is 24 hours because that's
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    how long it takes the Earth to rotate,
    how long it takes to go around once.
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    So our day is 24 hours.
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    It takes Mars 24 hours and
    approximately 40 minutes to rotate once.
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    So that means that the Martian day
    is 40 minutes longer than the Earth day.
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    So teams of people who are operating
    the rovers on Mars, like this one,
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    what we are doing is we are
    living on Earth, but working on Mars.
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    So we have to think as if we are actually
    on Mars with the Rover.
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    Our job, the job of this team,
    of which I'm a part of
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    is to send commands to the rover
    to tell it what to do the next day.
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    To tell it to drive or drill or
    tell her whatever she's supposed to do.
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    So while she's sleeping --
    and the rover does sleep at night
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    because she needs
    to re-charge her batteries
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    and she needs to weather
    the cold Martian night.
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    And so she sleeps.
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    So while she sleeps, we work
    on her program for the next day.
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    So I work the Martian night shift.
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    So in order to come to work on the Earth
    at the same time every day on Mars --
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    like, let's say I need to be
    at work at 5:00 pm,
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    this team needs to be at work
    at 5:00 pm Mars time every day,
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    then we have to come to work
    on the Earth 40 minutes later every day,
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    in order to stay in sync with Mars.
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    That's like moving a time zone every day.
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    So one day you come in at 8:00,
    the next day 40 minutes later at 8:40,
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    the next day 40 minutes later at 9:20,
    the next day at 10:00,
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    so you keep moving 40 minutes every day,
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    until soon you're coming to work
    in the middle of the night --
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    the middle of the Earth night.
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    Right? So you can imagine
    how confusing that is.
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    Hence, the Mars watch.
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    This watch has been mechanically --
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    the weights have been mechanically
    adjusted so that it runs more slowly.
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    When I got this watch in 2004
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    with Spirit and Opportunity,
    the rovers back then,
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    we didn't start out thinking
    that we were going to need Mars watches.
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    Right? We thought, okay,
    we'll just have the time on our computers
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    and on the mission control screens
    and that would be enough.
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    Yeah, not so much.
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    Because we weren't just
    working on Mars time,
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    we were actually living on Mars time.
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    And we got just instantaneously confused
    about what time it was.
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    So you really needed something
    on your wrist to tell you, alright,
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    what time is it on the Earth,
    what time is it on Mars.
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    And it wasn't just the time on Mars
    that was confusing,
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    we also needed to be able
    to talk to each other about it.
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    So a "sol" is a Martian day --
    again, 24 hours and 40 minutes.
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    So when we're talking about something
    that's happening on the earth,
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    we will say, today.
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    So, for Mars, we say, "tosol."
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    Yesterday became 'yestersol' for Mars.
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    Again, we didn't start out thinking,
    "oh let's invent a language."
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    It was just very confusing.
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    I remember someone
    walked up to me and said,
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    "I would like to do this activity
    on the vehicle tomorrow, on the rover."
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    And I said, "tomorrow, tomorrow,
    or Mars tomorrow?" Right?
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    We started this terminology because
    we needed a way to talk to each other.
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    Tomorrow became "nextersol" or "solorrow"
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    because people had different preferences
    for the words they use.
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    Some of you might say soda
    and some of you might say pop.
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    So we have people who say
    nextersol or solorrow.
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    And then something that I noticed after
    a few years of working on these missions,
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    was that the people who work
    on the rovers, we say "tosol."
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    The people who work on the
    landing missions that don't rove around,
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    they say "tosol."
    [Different vowel sound]
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    So I could actually tell what mission
    you worked on from your Martian accent.
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    [Laughter]
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    So we have the watches and the language
    and you're detecting a theme here, right?.
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    So that we don't get confused.
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    But even the Earth daylight
    could confuse us.
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    If you think that right now,
    you've come to work
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    and it's the middle of the Martian night
    and there's light streaming in
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    from the windows,
    that's confusing as well.
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    So you can see from
    this image of the control room
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    that all of the blinds are down.
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    So that there's no light to distract us.
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    The blinds went down all over the building
    about a week before landing
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    and they didn't go up
    until we went off Mars time.
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    So this also works
    for the house, for at home.
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    So I've been on Mars time three times,
    and my husband is like, okay,
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    we're getting ready for Mars time.
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    And so he'll put foil all over the windows
    and dark curtains and shades
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    because it also affects your families.
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    And so here I was living in kind of
    his darkened environment but so was he,
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    and he'd gotten used to it,
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    but then I would get these plaintive
    emails from him when he was at work.
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    Should I come home? Are you awake?
    What time is it on Mars?
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    And I decided, okay,
    so he needs a Mars watch.
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    [Laughter]
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    But of course, it's 2016,
    so there's an app for that.
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    So now instead of the watches,
    we can also use our phones.
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    But the impact on families
    was just across the board,
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    it wasn't just those of us
    who were working on the rovers
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    but our families as well.
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    This is David O,
    one of our flight directors,
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    and he's at the beach in Los Angeles
    with his family at 1:00 in the morning.
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    So because we landed in August
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    and his kids didn't have to
    go back to school until September,
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    they actually went on to Mars time
    with him for one month.
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    They got up 40 minutes later every day
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    and they were on dad's work schedule.
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    So they lived on Mars time for a month
    and had these great adventures,
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    like going bowling
    in the middle of the night
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    or going to the beach.
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    And one of the things
    that we all discovered
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    is that you can get
    anywhere in Los Angeles
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    at 3:00 in the morning
    when there's no traffic.
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    So we would get off work and --
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    you know we didn't want to go home
    and bother our families --
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    and we were hungry,
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    so instead of going locally
    to eat something, we'd go,
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    "wait, there's this great
    all-night deli in Long Beach,
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    and we can get there in 10 minutes."
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    It was like the 60s, no traffic.
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    So we would drive down there,
    and the restaurant owners would go,.
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    "who are you people ,and why are you
    at my restaurant at 3:00 in the morning?"
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    So they came to realize that
    there were these packs of Martians,
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    roaming the LA freeways,
    in the middle of the night,
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    in the middle of the Earth night.
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    And we did actually
    start calling ourselves Martians.
    So those of us who were on Mars time
    would refer to ourselves as Martians
    and everyone else as Earthlings.
    And that's because when you're moving
    a time-zone every day,
    you start to really feel separated
    from everyone else.
    You're literally in your own world.
    So I have this button on that says,
    "I survived Mars time. Sol 0-90"
    and there's a picture of it up on the screen.
    So the reason we got these buttons
    is because we work on Mars time
    in order to be as efficient as possible
    with the rover on Mars,
    to make the best use of our time.
    But we don't stay on Mars time
    for more than three to four months.
    Eventually, we'll move to a modified Mars time, which is what we're working now. And that's because it's hard on your bodies, it's hard on your families -- in fact, there were sleep researchers who actually were studying us because it was so unusual for humans to try to extend their day. And they had about 30 of us that they would do sleep deprivation experiments on us. So I would come in and take the test and I fell asleep in each one, and that was because again, this was so, eventually it becomes hard on your body.
Title:
What time is it on Mars?
Speaker:
Nagin Cox
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:47

English subtitles

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