How many Hours Of Sleep Would We Need On Each Of The Planets In The Solar System?



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In some space travel films, it is shown that the trips are so long that most of the time the crew spends sleeping, or rather, hibernating, so as not to spend energy while they arrive at their destination.
But in real life, is it possible to hibernate for so long? And if possible, how many hours would we need to sleep on each planet?
Get ready to discover it!

Before embarking on our journey through each of the solar system planets, we must clarify a doubt.
Why do we need to sleep?
Mercury
We begin our journey on Mercury, the planet’s most minor and the closest to the sun.
Venus
We leave behind the minor planet and move on to the hottest planet, Venus. This planet is the most hostile in the solar system; it has an atmosphere with powerful winds and gases lethal to any life form.
Mars
Things would be much simpler for settlements on the red planet since a day on Mars lasts almost the same as on earth, 24 hours and 40 minutes.
Jupiter
We arrived at the largest planet of all, the gas giant Jupiter. From here, things will get tough for humans.
Saturn
Saturn, like Jupiter, is characterized by being a gas giant, only this one does not have such strong gravity, and it would not cost us so much work to adapt.
Uranus
Approaching the limits of the solar system, we reach Uranus, the most inclined planet of all; here something extraordinary would happen, and that is that this planet has an axis of inclination of 91 degrees concerning the rest of the planets.
Neptune
We arrive at the last planet in the solar system, Neptune, the blue planet.

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Credits: Ron Miller, Mark A. Garlick / MarkGarlick.com
Credits: Nasa/Shutterstock/Storyblocks/Elon Musk/SpaceX/ESA/ESO/ Flickr

00:00 Intro
00:41 Why do we need to sleep?
1:32 Mercury
3.40 Venus
6:07 Mars
9:05 Saturn
9:45 Uranus
11:20 Neptune

#insanecuriosity #solarsystem #sleeping

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33 thoughts on “How many Hours Of Sleep Would We Need On Each Of The Planets In The Solar System?”

  1. Why does it matter!? According to you, humanity will be confined to Earth forever and we will NEVER colonise other planets or stars so stop with the pointless meaningless videos like this crap!

    Reply
  2. Love the author's voice. But the music is too "epic". I'm struggling to chill out and listen to what's being told.
    i'm just imagining some knights riding on horses into an epic battle for the king in the 1200 era shouting FREEEEDOOOM

    Reply
  3. Sorry, those gas giants are not surfaceless. They have cores, they have to because of all the tens of thousands of rocky meteors and more that they captured. We just don't the tech to penetrate the gases to see how big the core is

    Reply
  4. Hi, great video again. How about a video about teleportation on earth & around universe please. Also a video about advantages & disadvantages of hibernation long time for deep space travel. All the best to this channel, keep humanity updated and informed. :–))

    Reply
  5. I suspect that our bodies are developed for Earth 🌍 so it's likely we'd still need what we need on Earth but maybe given a long time we'd adapt to another planet?But the most likely planet we'd get to, although it does not appear likely in the near future despite what certain grasping plutocrats say,is Mars which has a pretty similar day/night cycle as Earth 🌎.

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  6. We have EVOLVED for sleeping 8 hours every 24 hours. Evolution is SLOW and I doubt we will be able to sleep a significantly different length of time just because of different length of day.

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  7. In regards to Venus, it appears not even equipment can withstand the harsh environment for long, as all probes and observation tools sent to the surface of Venus have only been operational for about 1-1.5 hours and then shut down due to the climate (likely the extreme temperatures).

    Reply

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