Skip to main content
UMass Collegiate M The University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Search UMass.edu
College of Natural Sciences

Main navigation

  • Academics
    Undergraduate programsGraduate programsCertificate programsFlexible and online learningAll academic programsCourses
    See all departments
    Degree requirementsInfo for prospective studentsPre-college programs
  • Student Success
    CNS Student Success CenterAcademic AdvisingCareer and Professional DevelopmentGraduate Student ResourcesPre-Med/Pre-Health AdvisingStudent Success and DiversityYour Academic Deans
    First Year OpportunitiesAdvising FAQsScholarshipsStudent Organizations
  • Research
    Research centers & institutesUndergraduate researchGreenhousesIndustry partnershipsResearch supportCNS Bridge and Seed Funding (BSF) programScientific glassblowing laboratory
  • Campus & Outreach
    Diversity, Equity & InclusionStudent Success and DiversityEureka!Community ConnectionsGivingCenter for Agriculture, Food, and the EnvironmentUMass Extension
  • About
    NewsStoriesEventsPeopleMeet the leadershipBuildings and facilitiesContact
    Information for faculty & staffInformation for alumni

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. News

Physics Students Explain Why Six Feet of Social Distancing May Not Be Enough

August 6, 2025 Research

Content

A diagram of aerosol plumes
Image
A 3D-printed models of a human
The study authors created 3D-printed models of humans, complete with windpipes that could sneeze, cough, and exhale. Image Credit: Milo Van Mooy.

We all remember the advice frequently repeated during the COVID pandemic: maintain six feet of distance from every other human when waiting in a line to avoid transmitting the virus. While reasonable, the advice did not take into account the complicated fluid dynamics governing how the airborne particles actually travel through the air if people are also walking and stopping. Now, a team of researchers led by two undergraduate physics majors in the College of Natural Sciences (CNS) has modeled how aerosol plumes spread when people are waiting and walking in a line.

The results, published recently in Science Advances, grew out of a question that many of us may have asked ourselves when standing in marked locations, six feet apart, while waiting for a vaccine, to pay for groceries, or to get a cup of coffee: what’s the science behind the six feet of separation? If you are a physicist, you might even have asked yourself, “what is happening physically to the aerosol plumes we’re all breathing out while waiting in a line, and is the six-foot guideline the best way to design a queue?”

To find answers to these questions, two talented CNS undergrads, Ruixi Lou and Milo Van Mooy, took the lead.

“We wanted to know how the aerosols we breathe out are transported, but it turns out this is very difficult to do in a real waiting line,” says Lou, who is now a graduate student at the University of Chicago.

The ideal situation would be to have real humans standing in a real, moving line to test how their exhalations travel—a far-too-risky proposition. Instead, Lou and Van Mooy decided to 3D-print a set of cylinders and human-shaped models and put them on a conveyor belt to see how the plumes moved. Their models “exhaled” colored dyes mimicking sneezes, coughs, and regular breathing. They also ran computer simulations in collaboration with the group of Rodolfo Ostilla at the University of Cadiz in Spain.

“What we found was really surprising,” says Van Mooy.

A diagram of aerosol plumes
The green plume represents the aerosol plume coming from a model human walking in a line. Image Credit: Lou et al., 10.1126/sciadv.adw0985.

Since warm air rises, there is a slight updraft surrounding our bodies—and so the team expected to see the aerosol plumes rising. But instead, they observed a “downwash” effect, where the simple act of walking and waiting in a line caused the plumes to sink. Even more surprising was that, if the ambient temperature is close to our body temperature, as would be the case in a non-air-conditioned room in summer, those aerosols could be pushed toward the floor due to air currents. However, in a climate-controlled room, the difference in temperature between what we exhale and the ambient conditions are enough to drive those plumes aloft. If the temperature is in an intermediate range, it is quite possible that the aerosols can hover at just the right height for the next person in the line to inhale them as the line moves forward.

“Ultimately, there are no hard-and-fast rules about social distancing that will keep us safe or unsafe,” says senior author Varghese Mathai, assistant professor of physics at CNS. “The fluid dynamics of air are marvelously complex and general intuition often misleads, even for something as simple as standing in a line. We need to take space and time into account as we come up with our public health guidelines.”

Read more: IFL Science


This story was originally published by the UMass News Office.

Article posted in Research for Faculty , Prospective students , Current students , and Public

Related programs

  • Physics

Related departments

  • Physics

Contact

Daegan Miller

Associate News Editor, Science
Email: drmiller [at] umass [dot] edu
Phone: (413) 545-0445

Site footer

College of Natural Sciences
  • X
  • Find us on Facebook
  • Find us on YouTube
  • Find us on LinkedIn
  • Find us on Instagram
Address

101 Stockbridge Hall
80 Campus Center Way
Amherst, MA 01003-9248
United States

Phone number
(413) 545-2766

Info for...

  • Current students
  • Faculty and staff
  • Alumni

Academics

  • Explore our programs
  • Departments

The college

  • About CNS
  • News
  • Events

Contact

  • Contact CNS
  • Directory

Global footer

  • ©2025 University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Site policies
  • Privacy
  • Non-discrimination notice
  • Accessibility
  • Terms of use