???ENUM_LANGUAGE_JA???
 
???mainMenu_lnkPrivacyPolicy??? ???mainMenu_lnkPolicy???

???ViewItemPage???


???ENUM_STATE_RELEASED???

???ENUM_GENRE_BOOK_ITEM???

On the Spreading of Epidemics and Percolation Theory

???ViewItemOverview_lblSpecificAuthorsSection???

Bunde,  Armin
External Organizations;

Havlin,  Shlomo
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Josef.Ludescher

Ludescher,  Josef
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

???ViewItemOverview_lblExternalResourceSection???
???ViewItemOverview_noExternalResourcesAvailable???
???ViewItemOverview_lblRestrictedFulltextSection???
???ViewItemOverview_noRestrictedFullTextsAvailable???
???ViewItemOverview_lblFulltextSection???
???ViewItemOverview_noFullTextsAvailable???
???ViewItemOverview_lblSupplementaryMaterialSection???
???ViewItemOverview_noSupplementaryMaterialAvailable???
???ViewItemOverview_lblCitationSection???

Bunde, A., Havlin, S., Ludescher, J. (2023): On the Spreading of Epidemics and Percolation Theory. - In: Bunde, A., Caro, J., Chmelik, C., Kärger, J., Vogl, G. (Eds.), Diffusive Spreading in Nature, Technology and Society, Cham : Springer, 2. ed., 427-451.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-05946-9_21


???ViewItemOverview_lblCiteAs???: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_29174
???ViewItemOverview_lblAbstractSection???
In a typical epidemic like COVID-19, infected individuals are contagious over a certain time span before they get immunized either by recovering or dying. During this contagion period which for COVID-19 typically ranges between one and two weeks, an infected individual can infect other individuals. When more individuals are infected than recover, the net reproductive ratio is greater than one and the epidemic spreads; otherwise, it tends to die out.