The concept of putting astronauts into a state of artificial anabiosis (or stasis) for multi-month or multi-year interplanetary missions has long moved from the pages of science fiction to serious research programs by NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA), and private companies (such as SpaceX). This idea is no longer considered a plot device but a potentially decisive technology for manned missions to Mars and other planets, allowing to overcome key physiological, psychological, and logistical barriers.
Traveling to Mars under the classic scenario with an active crew takes 6-9 months one way. This creates a complex of problems:
Resource consumption: The crew consumes oxygen, water, food, generates waste. For a long-duration mission, this requires an enormous mass of cargo, making it economically and technically unfeasible.
Organism degradation in weightlessness: Despite the exercise system, astronauts develop muscle atrophy, bone demineralization (up to 1-2% per month), cardiovascular changes, and vision impairments.
Psychological stress: Long-term stay in a confined space, monotony, distance from Earth, social isolation, and potential interpersonal conflicts pose a serious risk to mental health.
Radiation exposure: In deep space, outside the protection of Earth's magnetosphere, the crew is exposed to galactic cosmic rays and solar proton events, increasing the risks of oncological diseases and CNS damage.
The state of controlled stasis theoretically can mitigate all these problems.
Scientists are not inventing anabiosis from scratch but strive to reproduce and improve mechanisms that exist in nature:
True hibernation in squirrels, ground squirrels, and bats: radical reduction of metabolism by 85-99%, body temperature to levels close to zero, heart rate and breathing rate. The key drawback is the cycles of spontaneous awakening, which are energetically costly for the organism.
Winter sleep in bears: Less deep but longer (up to 6 months) state with moderate reduction of body temperature and metabolism, without food, drinking, and waste excretion, with the preservation of muscle and bone mass due to unique biochemical adaptations (urea recycling).
Torpor (oцепенение) in hummingbirds and small mammals: short-term daily reduction of temperature and metabolism for energy conservation.
The ideal prototype for humans is the bear's state, as more manageable and safe for a large mammal.
Modern research focuses on several directions:
Pharmacological hibernation: Search for and synthesis of substances capable of "switching" human metabolism to a conservation mode. A promising direction is the study of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and adenosine, which can induce a state of torpor in animals. In 2005, American scientists managed to induce reversible metabolic anabiosis in mice by inhaling air with a small addition of hydrogen sulfide, reducing oxygen consumption by 90%.
Therapeutic hypothermia (targeted controlled cooling): This is an existing clinical practice used after cardiac arrest or cranial-cerebral trauma to protect the brain. The patient's body temperature is reduced to 32-34°C for several days. For space stasis, much more prolonged and deeper cooling (to 32°C, and in the future even lower) with the use of complex systems of external heat exchange and monitoring will be required.
Stimulation of the centers of hibernation in the brain: In 2020, Japanese scientists from the University of Tsukuba, stimulating certain neurons (Q neurons) in the hypothalamus of mice, induced them into a state similar to hibernation for several days with reversible reduction of body temperature and metabolism. This breakthrough discovery indicates the possibility of direct neural control of this state.
Interesting fact: In 2014, SpaceWorks Enterprises received a grant from NASA to develop the concept of "torpor for Mars travel" (Torpor Inducing Transfer Habitat). Their project proposes to put the crew into a state of therapeutic hypothermia (32-34°C) for 14-day cycles with short periods of awakening for food intake and system checks. According to calculations, this could reduce the mass of the spacecraft by 30-50% due to the reduction in life support volume.
Advantages of stasis:
Reduction of crew needs: A sharp reduction in resource consumption, minimalization of waste.
Protection from weightlessness: In a state of hypothermia and reduced metabolism, the processes of muscle and bone atrophy should slow down significantly.
Reduction of radiation risk: Metabolically inactive cells are less susceptible to radiation damage.
Resolution of psychological problems: Time flies subjectively for the crew, the stress from isolation is minimized.
Long-term muscle atrophy and osteoporosis: Even in stasis, these processes, although slowed down, will progress. Technologies for muscle electrical stimulation in a unconscious state are needed.
Nutrition and hydration: How to deliver nutrients and maintain water-electrolyte balance? Full parenteral (intravenous) nutrition or periodic awakenings are being considered.
Risks of thrombosis and infections: The risk of thrombosis and immunosuppression increases dramatically in conditions of hypothermia and immobility.
Long-term impact on the brain: Are there irreversible cognitive impairments after months in a hypometabolic state? The protective effect of hypothermia for the brain is known, but not studied in such scales.
Reliability of systems: A technical failure of the life support system of the stasis capsule will be fatal. Absolutely reliable, redundant systems with artificial intelligence for monitoring are required.
The state of anabiosis for astronauts is no longer pure science fiction but a multidisciplinary scientific and technical task of extreme complexity. Its solution lies at the intersection of neurobiology, cryobiology, life support systems, and space engineering. Although practical implementation is still decades away, with intense research and testing, the first steps have already been made. Success in this field will not only be a breakthrough in cosmonautics but also the greatest achievement in medicine, capable of saving lives on Earth by managing metabolism in critical states. Pioneers here will not only be engineers and astronauts but also biologists who have studied the sleeping bear in the den and the ground squirrel in the frozen den for years.
New publications: |
Popular with readers: |
News from other countries: |
![]() |
Editorial Contacts |
About · News · For Advertisers |
Digital Library of Pakistan ® All rights reserved.
2023-2026, ELIB.PK is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map) Preserving Pakistan's heritage |
US-Great Britain
Sweden
Serbia
Russia
Belarus
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Tajikistan
Estonia
Russia-2
Belarus-2