Another potential consequence besides the risk to human health is the degradation of exposed materials. Ionizing radiation is going to damage more than just DNA. Some plastics are especially vulnerable. UV can also bleach colors. Replacing furniture and carpet and so forth would cost a lot of money.
Yes, but global virus pandemics cost an amount of money that’s almost unfathomably large, so hardening the indoor environment in certain places would likely be a trivial cost.
I agree, the damage to materials would likely be worth it in the short term due to the current pandemic. And most of this damage would be merely cosmetic. But degraded plastic also becomes more brittle, so there could be functional damage as well. I can’t think of a safety-critical example, but I can’t dismiss that possibility either.
In the longer term, I’m not sure if it’s worth the cost. Once the UVC lamps are deployed in public spaces, there is the option to leave them on permanently to combat threats like the seasonal flu or the next unknown virus. But the cost could perhaps be mitigated by replacing the damaged material with more durable alternatives.
Another potential consequence besides the risk to human health is the degradation of exposed materials. Ionizing radiation is going to damage more than just DNA. Some plastics are especially vulnerable. UV can also bleach colors. Replacing furniture and carpet and so forth would cost a lot of money.
Yes, but global virus pandemics cost an amount of money that’s almost unfathomably large, so hardening the indoor environment in certain places would likely be a trivial cost.
I agree, the damage to materials would likely be worth it in the short term due to the current pandemic. And most of this damage would be merely cosmetic. But degraded plastic also becomes more brittle, so there could be functional damage as well. I can’t think of a safety-critical example, but I can’t dismiss that possibility either.
In the longer term, I’m not sure if it’s worth the cost. Once the UVC lamps are deployed in public spaces, there is the option to leave them on permanently to combat threats like the seasonal flu or the next unknown virus. But the cost could perhaps be mitigated by replacing the damaged material with more durable alternatives.
There are definitely some materials that will resist it. There would be a one-off cost to replace materials, then mostly not much change.