COVID-19 has introduced several new terms to the national lexicon. In addition to phrases like social distancing, self-quarantine, and N95 respirator, you may have seen the word airborne popping up more in recent weeks. It usually appears in discussions concerning how the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 is transmitted—a question that's still debated by health experts. So what exactly does it mean when a pathogen is airborne, what do droplets and aerosol have to do with it, and which of these terms apply to the new coronavirus?
WHAT ARE DROPLETS?
We know that there are at least two ways to catch the new coronavirus: by coming in close contact with infected individuals and touching contaminated objects and surfaces. In both cases, the root of the transmission is often a cough or sneeze. When someone with COVID-19 coughs—which is a hallmark symptom of the disease—they send a spray of mucus and saliva droplets flying from their mouths. These tiny, sometimes invisible droplets, measuring between five and 10 micrometers in diameter, contain particles of the virus. Coughing into a shirt sleeve or mask can catch a lot of these droplets, but with nothing to block them, many will land on objects and people in the immediate vicinity. This is why a sick person is more likely to infect more people standing elbow-to-elbow with them in crowded subway car than they are keeping a 6-foot distance from others in a spacious park.
You don't need to be touching someone to contract coronavirus from them. If someone is standing directly behind you in line at the grocery store, they can infect you through the droplets in a sneeze or cough. But while these droplets technically travel through the air, that doesn't automatically make COVID-19 an airborne disease—at least not according to the definition of the word used by health officials. In order to understand what airborne really means, you need to know about aerosols.
WHAT ARE AEROSOLS?
Saliva and mucous droplets are heavier than air, which means gravity starts pulling them—and whatever viral particles they contain—towards the ground as soon as they leave someone’s body. By the time someone walks out of a room, any droplets they may have emitted have likely already settled on the floor or nearby surfaces—so usually, you don’t need to worry about breathing in those droplets if you’re social distancing correctly.
Aerosols are a different story. They form when smaller droplets evaporate faster than they fall to the ground, leaving nuclei measuring less than five micrometers in diameter. Without heavy liquids dragging them down, virus particles from these evaporated droplets are able to float through the air for up to half an hour. When a virus travels via aerosols, it’s possible to contract it by entering an empty room that a sick person was in several minutes earlier. This transmission via free-drifting aerosols is how the World Health Organization defines an airborne disease.
IS THE NEW CORONAVIRUS AIRBORNE?
If the novel coronavirus is capable of spreading this way, it would mean that social distancing guidelines are only addressing part of the threat. But as of now, there’s little data to suggest that aerosol transmission is a real concern with COVID-19. “According to current evidence, COVID-19 virus is primarily transmitted between people through respiratory droplets and contact routes,” WHO says. “In an analysis of 75,465 COVID-19 cases in China, airborne transmission was not reported.”
The virus still very new, and while airborne transmission has yet to be confirmed, that doesn’t mean it can be ruled out completely. Some health experts have expressed concern over discounting aerosol spread so early and believe it’s a possibility we should be paying closer attention to.
Though there may be a small chance of the novel coronavirus wafting in ambient air, it
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