The spreading of viruses by airborne aerosols: lessons from a first-passage-time problem for tracers in turbulent flows

Abstract

We study the spreading of viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2, by airborne aerosols, via a new first-passage-time problem for Lagrangian tracers that are advected by a turbulent flow: By direct numerical simulations of the three-dimensional (3D) incompressible, Navier-Stokes equation, we obtain the time tR at which a tracer, initially at the origin of a sphere of radius R, crosses the surface of the sphere for the first time. We obtain the probability distribution function P(R,tR) and show that it displays two qualitatively different behaviors: (a) for R L I, P(R,tR) has a power-law tail tR-α, with the exponent α = 4 and L I the integral scale of the turbulent flow; (b) for l I R , the tail of P(R,tR) decays exponentially. We develop models that allow us to obtain these asymptotic behaviors analytically. We show how to use P(R,tR) to develop social-distancing guidelines for the mitigation of the spreading of airborne aerosols with viruses such as SARS-CoV-2.

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