Ronni
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nashville TN
On one of my other threads, someone mentioned concern for me going into Ron's house and the potential for contaminated air and potential covid infection.
I thought I'd posted this information earlier, but I can't find it, so I'm covering this aspect now. We become infected by viral particles remaining on surfaces, aerosols continuing to be suspended in the air etc., which is why we're instructed to sanitize surfaces and wash our hands frequently.
BUT here's the thing. Yes. The virus can linger on surfaces and in the air, and there have been many studies to test HOW LONG the virus remains alive under various conditions. BUT the AMOUNT of the virus that made it that length of time was only a FRACTION of its original potency. Extrapolating from that, immediately after a virus particle was expelled either onto a surface or into the air it's at its most potent, but that potency DEGRADES each minute that the virus remains untouched by cleaning, sanitization etc.
To add to that, the virus doesn't decrease in potency at the same rate for the entirety of its life. Enter HALF-LIFE. Half life is the amount of time required for a quantity to fall to half its value as measured at the beginning of the time period. Or put it another way.....You can calculate the half-life of any substance by the initial quantity of the substance vs the quantity remaining after a measured period of time. The term is most commonly used in relation to atoms undergoing radioactive decay, but can be used to describe other types of decay, whether exponential or not. The half life of Covid-19 has been studied extensively which is how scientists have been able to determine with a relative degree of accuracy how long it remains active.
Why is half life important? Because it enables you to determine when a sample of something is safe(er) to handle, whether it's something radioactive, pathogen, virus, whatever. Studying the half-life of these things helps determine when it's no longer a threat. Enough half life periods of Covid-19 renders it ultimately ineffective because it decays more and more rapidly over each half-life period.
I'm not scientist!!! So this is a very simplistic explanation, for my own understanding and continued educating in this area.
Here are links to some of the science I studied to understand this stuff.
Surface stability of Sars-CoV-2
New England Journal study
NEJM original article
I thought I'd posted this information earlier, but I can't find it, so I'm covering this aspect now. We become infected by viral particles remaining on surfaces, aerosols continuing to be suspended in the air etc., which is why we're instructed to sanitize surfaces and wash our hands frequently.
BUT here's the thing. Yes. The virus can linger on surfaces and in the air, and there have been many studies to test HOW LONG the virus remains alive under various conditions. BUT the AMOUNT of the virus that made it that length of time was only a FRACTION of its original potency. Extrapolating from that, immediately after a virus particle was expelled either onto a surface or into the air it's at its most potent, but that potency DEGRADES each minute that the virus remains untouched by cleaning, sanitization etc.
To add to that, the virus doesn't decrease in potency at the same rate for the entirety of its life. Enter HALF-LIFE. Half life is the amount of time required for a quantity to fall to half its value as measured at the beginning of the time period. Or put it another way.....You can calculate the half-life of any substance by the initial quantity of the substance vs the quantity remaining after a measured period of time. The term is most commonly used in relation to atoms undergoing radioactive decay, but can be used to describe other types of decay, whether exponential or not. The half life of Covid-19 has been studied extensively which is how scientists have been able to determine with a relative degree of accuracy how long it remains active.
Why is half life important? Because it enables you to determine when a sample of something is safe(er) to handle, whether it's something radioactive, pathogen, virus, whatever. Studying the half-life of these things helps determine when it's no longer a threat. Enough half life periods of Covid-19 renders it ultimately ineffective because it decays more and more rapidly over each half-life period.
I'm not scientist!!! So this is a very simplistic explanation, for my own understanding and continued educating in this area.
Here are links to some of the science I studied to understand this stuff.
Surface stability of Sars-CoV-2
New England Journal study
NEJM original article