Good ideas and conversation. No ads, no tracking. Login or Take a Tour!
There's a LOT of ground covered in this article on how to put humans into hibernation for long-term spaceflight, but this part - the reduced damage from cosmic rays - really caught my attention and surprised me:
- "...One of the great unknowns about the mission to Mars, for example, is whether humans can endure the ravages of galactic cosmic rays, the remnants of the Milky Way's celestial violence. Once a spacecraft travels beyond Earth's protective magnetosphere—which orbiting craft like the International Space Station stay well within—there's no real way to dodge these cancer-causing particles, and scientists have yet to find a malleable, lightweight material that can shield against them. But if human cells can be made less active, they may develop significant resistance to radiation. In a 1972 experiment, for example, scientists found that ground squirrels that were irradiated while hibernating had a much higher survival rate than their fully conscious peers..."