Dear Physics Community,
I would like to call your attention to Pres. Reif’s letter from yesterday. and focus on two key sentences. First, from the third paragraph,
“…we are ready to try something more difficult: bringing back a portion of our undergraduates to live on campus.”
This does not sound like much, but it is huge: In the past week, MIT has stress-tested every aspect of its operations with students back on campus. Our testing capacity, which averaged 200 tests/day over the summer, was a key test because our testing operation needs to operate at 2,000 tests/day for students to return. In the past week, MIT Medical ramped testing and yesterday carried out 1,930 tests. You can read the details here. The average time from test to result is about 20 hours, with all tests being returned within 24 h.
Why is testing so important? The mean time between infection and the appearance of symptoms for COVID-19 is 5 days, so to catch people early, MIT needs to test twice a week. MIT will have about 2,800 students (1,900 grads, 900 undergrads) on-campus in two weeks. Adding about 4,000 faculty and staff (about 30% of normal) coming and going during the week means at least 14,000 tests per week in order to ensure the safety of everyone. If MIT had not been able to carry out 1,930 tests yesterday, Pres. Reif’s sentence above would have been much different.
The other critical sentence is from the sixth paragraph:
“…while we continue to celebrate and learn from each other’s individuality, we cannot afford individualism. I must take care, for your health; you must take care, for mine.”
What does this mean? It certainly means wear your mask, wash your hands, keep six feet apart. It also means being diligent about getting tested if you are coming on campus. The IDSS crew has done a series of studies that show that if 20% of the MIT population “opt-out”, I.e. consistently fail to get tested regularly, COVID-19 will spread at MIT regardless of what the other 80% do. If you are coming on campus in any capacity, getting your COVID-19 test done is a key part of taking care of yourself and each other.
Everyone should read the guidance for returning students here. These are the expectations for our students, but versions of this apply to everyone.
Yes, there may be standing in a long line (but that’s getting better). Or coming at 5 am when they open to avoid lines. But, it is what we need to do to avoid a repeat of last March when we all had to leave MIT and work remotely. The next weeks will be a tough adjustment and there will be some positive tests, but if we all stick with it, it will be okay.
Above the Fold
- Expectations for Fall
- PRISM 2020 is starting TOMORROW! We hope you are as excited as we are.
- Slack workspace dedicated to this conference (https://join.slack.com/t/prism2020/shared_invite/zt-g9uiyofr-7qy9riWa_W11icfJk6JPsg) and familiarize yourself with the various channels.
- Zoom link to join Talk Session 1 (“Particles”), taking place on Thursday, August 20, 2020 (TOMORROW) from 11:00 to 13:00 EDT (08:00 to 10:00 PDT): https://mit.zoom.us/j/99574775725
- Zoom link to join Talk Session 2 (“Quantum”), taking place on Friday, August 21, 2020 (DAY AFTER TOMORROW) from 11:00 to 13:00 EDT (08:00 to 10:00 PDT): https://mit.zoom.us/j/92963301366
- Zoom link to join Talk Session 3 (“Astro”), taking place on Friday, August 21, 2020 (DAY AFTER TOMORROW) from 19:00 to 21:00 EDT (16:00 to 18:00 PDT): https://mit.zoom.us/j/95036080764
Other Announcements
- New course for Fall7.00 COVID-19
- Announcement about Testing of graduate students living off-campus
- Access to other parts of camps: Thunder committee
- Ohter COVID-19 testing at MIT news
- Office Access letter from Maria Zuber
- Cybersecurity workshop from Kevin Fu
Stay Safe,
Peter