COURTESY LYDIA BOUROUIBA, PHD, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
2
The largest droplets
(illustrated in green)
rocket out of the
sneezer’s mouth and rapidly
plummet under their own
weight within a few seconds.
Average distance travelled:
one to two metres.
3
In the ‘puff phase’
of a sneeze
(illustrated in red),
a turbulent cloud of warm,
moist air swirls through
the air, carrying the
sneeze droplets with it.
4
The cloud grows
and slows as it pulls
in air from the
environment, carrying the
smallest droplets up to
eight metres from their
point of origin.^5
Buoyed by the cloud,
small droplets can
easily stay airborne
long enough to reach
overhead vents (and thus
anywhere in a building).
It’s a big problem. But there’s
a solution an arm’s length
away: coversneezes with a
sleeve or tissue, wash your
hands regularly, and keep
those germs to yourself.
April• 2018 | 73