Aerosols and Instruments

A trumpet laid atop music.

Although COVID has disrupted all of our lives, orchestras saw particular disruption, as little was known about how instruments spread aerosol droplets. In this recent study, a team looked at many wind instruments, as played by professional musicians, for the aerosol load and air flow each instrument creates. They found that, on the whole, wind instruments — like flutes, clarinets, trumpets, and others — create aerosol loads comparable to normal speech. The air flow from each instrument comes primarily from the bell (for brass instruments) or tone holes (for woodwinds) and has a much lower velocity than coughing or sneezing. As a result, the flow decays away to the background air-flow after about 2 meters. (Image credit: trumpet – E. Awuy, trombone – Q. Brosseau et al.; research credit: Q. Brosseau et al.)

Flow from the bell of a trombone disrupts artificial fog.
As a musician plays a scale on their trombone, flow from the bell is revealed through artificial fog and laser illumination.

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