Olympic swimmers race about 0.39 seconds faster in the evening than in the morning, and as insignificant as that fraction of a second may seem, gold medals are routinely won by slimmer margins.

“The magnitude of the effect is pretty big,” said Renske Lok, PhD, a Stanford postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry and a circadian biologist. “The difference was amazing, considering that athletes train at all times of the day.”

An article about her research was published this month in Scientific Reports.

Best results at 5 p.m.

Lok, who conducted the study with colleagues when she was at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, analyzed the swim times of athletes who reached the finals during the Athens, Beijing, London and Rio de Janeiro Olympic games.

They focused on swimming because it presents fewer variables than other sports. Pools are kept at a consistent temperature; wind is not an issue; and there is no equipment, such as bicycles or shoes, that could affect an athlete’s performance.

Their mathematical analysis of the Olympians’ finish times showed a pattern: Times were slower in the morning and faster in the evening, with the best results around 5 p.m.

As to why the athletes swam their best in the late afternoon, Lok said, “There are many possible factors. One idea is core body temperature — it peaks in the evening. But it could also be a function of glucose, oxygen saturation levels, insulin, cortisol, testosterone — lots of things.”

Scope Blog at Stanford
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Production engineer and certified swim coach. Full-time IT consultant, spare-time swimming aficionado. 2 sons, 2 daughters and a wife. President of the Faroe Islands Aquatics Federation. Likes to run :-)

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