Infrared video shows the risks of airborne coronavirus spread, Visual Forensics
Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube: As winter approaches, the United States is grappling with a jawdropping surge in the number of novel coronavirus infections. More than 288, 000 Americans have been killed by a virus that public health officials now say can be spread through airborne transmission. The virus spreads most commonly through close contact, scientists say. But under certain conditions, people farther than six feet apart can become infected by exposure to tiny droplets and particles exhaled by an infected person, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in October. Those droplets and particles can linger in the air for minutes to hours. To visually illustrate the risk of airborne transmission in real time, The Washington Post used a militarygrade infrared camera capable of detecting exhaled breath. Numerous experts epidemiologists, virologists and engineers supported the notion of using exhalation as a conservative proxy to show potential transmiss
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