Penn Humanities Forum on Sleep and
Dreams, Opening Event
The Penn Humanities Forum and Penn’s Center
for Sleep and Respiratory Neurobiology present
Space-Lag: Tomorrow’s Tired
Astronaut
Jay Buckey, MD 1998 Space Shuttle Columbia Astronaut (Neurolab)
Associate Professor of Medicine
Dartmouth Medical School
Tuesday September 14, 2004
5:00 pm
Dunlop Auditorium, Stemmler
Hall
How do you sleep when there’s no sunrise or sunset—and
your body is floating in zero gravity? Former astronaut Jay Buckey,
MD, discusses the challenges of sleeping in space, where rest is
essential to a mission’s success, but where astronauts also must
be continuously on call.
Could Mars explorers spend 6 months in space and still
arrive on the Red Planet rested and ready to go? Find out what scientists
are discovering about the body’s ability to adapt to space—and how
their research relates to sleepless nights on earth.
Jay Buckey was a payload specialist astronaut
on the Neurolab
STS-90 mission which flew for 16 days in 1998 on the Space Shuttle Columbia.
That flight orbited the Earth 256 times, covered 6.3 million miles, and logged
him over 381 hours in space. Its mission was to study how the human nervous
system adapts to the absence of gravity. As one of seven crewmembers, Dr.
Buckey studied how melatonin (a naturally occuring hormone) aided sleep.
An expert in space physiology and medicine, notably the
physiological challenges of extended space travel, Dr. Buckey's research
interests include decompression sickness, motion sickness, psychological
adaptation to isolation and confinement, and calcium loss in space.
Dr. Buckey received his B.S. in electrical
engineering from Cornell University where he also took his M.D.
He completed his internship in internal medicine at The New York
Hospital–Cornell Medical Center and his medicine residency
at the Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center.
He began his space career as a NASA
Space Biology Research Fellow at the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center. While
there, he was a co-investigator and project manager for an experiment
that flew on the Spacelab Life Sciences-1 and 2 missions (SLS-1 and SLS-2).
He also was an alternate payload specialist for the SLS-2 mission. He
received two certificates of recognition from NASA for hardware developed
for
SLS-1.
Dr. Buckey is former president of the
American Society for Gravitational and Space Biology, an organization
of scientists devoted to understanding the effects of gravity on living
things. He is also a flight surgeon in the U.S. Air Force Reserve, 457th
Tactical Fighter Squadron.