论文标题
通过唱歌,笑,背诵诗歌和演奏风乐器来测量液滴
Measurements of droplets from singing, laughing, reciting poetry, and playing wind instruments
论文作者
论文摘要
我们在唱歌,说话,笑声和诗歌朗诵期间对两位歌手呼出的液滴的测量结果提出了最初的结果。我们还用长笛,单簧管,大小管和只有大桶的烟嘴进行了测量。为了能够形象和跟踪液滴,我们已经开发并建立了便携式测量设置。我们检测到直径约为50微米及以上的液滴。我们发现,对于单个受试者,唱歌过程中产生的液滴数量最多,但是笑声可以产生可比数量的液滴。诗歌的说话和朗诵不会产生那么多的液滴。我们在不同的距离上重复练习,发现检测到的液滴数量随着距离的增加而迅速减少。我们检测到的大多数液滴都遵循弹道轨迹,并在大约1 m的距离后撞到地面。如果有乐器,我们没有发现从长笛和单簧管上漏出大桶的液滴,只有少量的单滴。单簧管通常向下指向,使得液滴遵循向下的轨迹,并在短距离后撞到地面。当高管在热身过程中仅使用吹嘴(即与塔巴分离)时,情况有所不同,而用手指则部分阻塞开口:在这种情况下,许多液滴从烟嘴中弹出。这些以不同的速度遵循弹道轨迹,一些液滴退出了测量量。这项研究的两个重要局限性是(i)样本量很小,因此统计分析超出了我们的范围; (ii)我们无法得出关于执行任何上述活动时与Covid-19的可能感染风险的结论。
We present initial results from measurements of exhaled droplets by two singers during singing, speaking, laughing, and recitation of poetry. We also conducted measurements with a flute, a clarinet, a tuba, and only the tuba's mouthpiece. To be able to image and track droplets, we have developed and built a portable measurement set-up. We have detected droplets with diameters of approximately 50 micrometre and above. We found that for a single subject, the largest amount of droplets are produced during singing, but that laughing can produce a comparable number of droplets. Speaking and recitation of poetry do not produce as many droplets. We repeated exercises at varying distances and found that the number of detected droplets decreased rapidly with increasing distance. Most droplets we detected follow a ballistic trajectory, and hit the ground after a distance of approximately 1 m. In case of the musical instruments, we did not detect droplets exiting a tuba and only few single droplets from a flute and a clarinet. A clarinet usually points downwards, such that droplets follow a downward trajectory and hit the ground after a short distance. The situation was different when the tubist used only the mouthpiece (that is, detached from the tuba) during warm-up while partially blocking the opening with a finger: in this case, many droplets were ejected from the mouthpiece. These followed ballistic trajectories at different speeds, with some droplets exiting the measurement volume. Two important limitations of this study are that (i) the sample size is very small, such that a statistical analysis is beyond our scope; and (ii) that we cannot draw conclusions about a possible risk of infection with COVID-19 when performing any of the said activities.