We've all been there: You're an hour into a meeting in a crowded conference room. The air is thick with hot breath and getting thicker by the minute. You're trying to pay attention, but you're so, so tired. If only you could just close your eyes for one brief second …
But just as you're about to doze off, the boss says it's time to wrap up and the attendees jump out of their chairs. Someone yanks the door open, and the cool, fresh air washes over you, and suddenly you're back to yourself again.
That stuffy, sweltering, smothering feeling? It's not just in your head, a fact underscored this week when an astronomer took a carbon dioxide monitor to an academic conference where 100 people were crammed into a stuffy lecture hall. The monitor's output tells a wonderful little story about what happens to the air quality in a room when you stick a bunch of exhaling humans into it.
Our story begins at 9:05 am Tuesday, when astronomer Adam Ginsburg of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory took his seat for a session during the "Linking the Milky Way and Nearby Galaxies" conference in Helsinki. Ginsburg said in an email that he takes a portable carbon dioxide monitor "everywhere," particularly, "crowded meeting rooms."
Ginsburg flipped the monitor on. Ambient indoor air tends to contain about 800 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide. But carbon dioxide levels rise rapidly in poorly ventilated rooms, because exhaled air is about 4 per cent carbon dioxide by volume. In the lecture hall in Helsinki, the monitor showed the concentration quickly reaching 1,000 ppm — the threshold at which a room starts feeling stuffy for most people, according to the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Engineers.