Even after completing one year anniversary, the ongoing Coronavirus continues to fear the world. On top of the pandemic outbreak, the Coronavirus is changing its forms, raising many fears.
A noted maths expert has worked on the virus spread and the particles of SARS-CoV2 across the globe. His study found that the virus that causes Covid-19 could be fit inside a single cola can.
Kit Yates, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mathematical Sciences and co-director of the Centre for Mathematical Biology at the University of Bath has estimated that the virus could be fit into a can.
The math expert took to the microblogging site Twitter to share his observations on the size of the pandemic. To carry out the study, Yates has used SARS-CoV-2 as the diameter. He used 100 nanometers of a meter at an average.
âYou can read more details about how I calculated that "What's the total volume of SARS-CoV-2 in the world?" in this @ConversationUK article. Is it an Olympic swimming pool or is it a teaspoon?. The answer might surprise you," the expert's tweet reads.
Looking at the global cases of the ongoing pandemic, the data collected by the Johns Hopkins University has found out that around 107 million people were infected with the virus, while over 2.34 million people have succumbed to the pandemic.
A noted maths expert has worked on the virus spread and the particles of SARS-CoV2 across the globe. His study found that the virus that causes Covid-19 could be fit inside a single cola can.
Kit Yates, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mathematical Sciences and co-director of the Centre for Mathematical Biology at the University of Bath has estimated that the virus could be fit into a can.
The math expert took to the microblogging site Twitter to share his observations on the size of the pandemic. To carry out the study, Yates has used SARS-CoV-2 as the diameter. He used 100 nanometers of a meter at an average.
âYou can read more details about how I calculated that "What's the total volume of SARS-CoV-2 in the world?" in this @ConversationUK article. Is it an Olympic swimming pool or is it a teaspoon?. The answer might surprise you," the expert's tweet reads.
Looking at the global cases of the ongoing pandemic, the data collected by the Johns Hopkins University has found out that around 107 million people were infected with the virus, while over 2.34 million people have succumbed to the pandemic.