The Science of Jet Lag Recovery
Jet lag occurs because your circadian rhythm is entrained to your home time zone while your destination operates on a different schedule. The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in your hypothalamus acts as a master clock, and it adjusts at roughly 1 hour per day eastward and 1.5 hours per day westward under normal conditions — meaning a 9-hour eastward shift takes about 9 days without intervention.
Light is the most powerful resetting tool. Bright light (1000+ lux) stimulates melanopsin-containing retinal ganglion cells that directly signal the SCN. For eastward travel, morning light at the destination phase-advances the clock. For westward travel, evening light phase-delays it. Strategic light avoidance is equally important — blue-light blocking glasses or blackout curtains during the avoidance window dramatically improve outcomes.
Melatonin (0.5–3mg taken at destination bedtime) works synergistically with light exposure. Research by Eastman and Burgess shows that combining light therapy with melatonin reduces adaptation time by 30–50% compared to either alone. Meal timing, exercise, and caffeine use are secondary zeitgebers — eating at destination meal times from Day 1 helps anchor the peripheral clocks in the liver and digestive system.