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  • Thanks to Brilliant for supporting this episode of SciShow.

  • Go to Brilliant.org/SciShow to learn more.

  • [♩INTRO]

  • Growing up, you may have heard that you can catch a cold in the rain.

  • And it turns out there's some truth to that idea.

  • See, pathogenic organisms

  • stuff like viruses and bacteria that can give plants and animals diseases

  • do rain down on us all the time, with or without the help of water.

  • But the situation isn't so dire that you're likely to get sick from going outsideyet?

  • According to a 2015 study published in

  • the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,

  • we may inhale thousands of microbes per hour when we're breathing infresh air”.

  • These organisms come from almost anything you can think of:

  • the soil, bodies of water, even the surfaces of plants and buildings.

  • And they're not necessarily from the immediate vicinity.

  • Winds, splashing water, rising smoke, and many human activities can dislodge

  • microorganisms from their dwelling places and launch them into the air.

  • Once afloat, they can snag onto small particles like dust

  • and travel way up into the atmosphere,

  • into a region known as the planetary boundary layer.

  • And there, they can move thousands of kilometers

  • with the air masses they're suspended in, across whole continents and oceans.

  • Eventually, though, they fall back down,

  • either in rain or when the particles they're associated with finally settle.

  • And scientists estimate that hundreds of millions of viruses

  • and tens of millions of bacteria rain down in this manner

  • on every square meter of this planet every day.

  • That's... not the worst part.

  • You see, scientists say these globe-trotting microbes

  • can spread diseases around the globe.

  • For example, in 2004, a pathogen that infects plants

  • traveled from Asia to the United States thanks to a hurricane.

  • And a 2003 paper published in BioScience suggested that

  • the global transport of dust could be sprinkling pathogens onto coral reefs.

  • Poor coral reefs just can't catch a break, can they?

  • Luckily, if you're a human, you probably don't have too much to worry about.

  • Most of the microorganisms moving around this way are considered harmless.

  • ...Though, not all of them.

  • Scientists have found potential pathogens like Staph

  • in the dust that settles after storms and during dust events.

  • And in some cases, they think wind patterns can explain disease outbreaks.

  • For example, in 2011, researchers found that epidemics of Kawasaki disease

  • correlated with wind currents that swept from Asia to the north Pacific.

  • Kawasaki disease is an illness that causes inflammation in blood vessels,

  • particularly in kids.

  • And the weird thing is, we don't actually know which pathogen is responsible.

  • So the wind pattern connection, while not definitive, could be an important clue

  • for medical researchers trying to better understand the disease.

  • Also... even if there's no immediate link between

  • human disease-causing pathogens and the billions upon billions of microbes

  • falling from the sky every day, there could be soon.

  • See, this whole situation is probably getting worse with climate change.

  • Scientists think it's likely that even more dust and microbes will float

  • into our atmosphere in the coming decades

  • thanks to things like increased desertification and more intense weather events.

  • So, while you might not catch a cold or any other disease from the rain

  • in the near future, the possibility is only increasing.

  • Researchers have to use a lot of really complex math to figure out how

  • pathogens move around in the clouds and how that might change in the future.

  • And that math is something everyone can learn with Brilliant.org.

  • You see, Brilliant offers dozens of courses that cover topics in science,

  • engineering, computer science, and math.

  • And their Differential Equations 2 course dives into the hardcore math

  • needed to predict weather patterns, as well as other kinds of scientific modeling.

  • With a premium subscription, you'll get access to it and all their other courses,

  • as well as engaging Daily Challenges

  • which help you practice the skills you're learning.

  • And right now, the first two hundred people to sign up at Brilliant.org/SciShow

  • will get 20% off an annual premium subscription.

  • So check it out!

  • And let us know if you learn anything really cool in the comments.

  • [♩OUTRO]

Thanks to Brilliant for supporting this episode of SciShow.

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