By TOMOYUKI SUZUKI/ Staff Writer
December 12, 2022 at 17:47 JST
An image shows how virus-laden droplets remain floating for around 10 seconds after a person at the front on an ascending escalator coughs. Fewer droplets adhere to people when they stand about three steps apart. (Provided by Masashi Yamakawa, professor of computation fluid dynamics at Kyoto Institute of Technology)
Proper or lucky positioning on crowded escalators can help people significantly lower the risk of novel coronavirus infections caused by coughing maskless individuals, a study showed. [Read More]
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