logo
How it worksCoursesResearch CommunitiesBenefitsAbout Us
Schedule Demo
Learn Before
  • Meteorological parameters, humidity, temperature, and solar radiation, were evaluated to determine significant relationships with COVID-19 transmission.

    Concept icon
Relation

COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in different U.S cities

  • New Orleans, LA
  • Albany, GA
  • Chicago, IL
  • NYC, NY
  • Seattle, WA

0

1

Updated 2020-07-22

Contributors are:

Kallan Roan
Kallan Roan
🏆 2

Who are from:

University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
🏆 2

Tags

SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19)

Biomedical Sciences

Related
  • Table 2: quasi-AIC values demonstrating model fit for DLNM and CCO models for each city.

    Concept icon
  • Humidity seems to be the strongest predictor for COVID-19 cases

    Concept icon
  • Temperature and solar radiation are not strongly associated with the number of COVID-19 cases.

    Concept icon
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in different U.S cities

Learn After
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in New Orleans, LA

    Concept icon
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in Albany, GA

    Concept icon
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in Chicago, IL

    Concept icon
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in New York City, NY

    Concept icon
  • COVID-19 morbidity vs. temperature, humidity, and solar radiation in Seattle, WA

    Concept icon
logo 1cademy1Cademy

Optimize Scalable Learning and Teaching

How it worksCoursesResearch CommunitiesBenefitsAbout Us
TermsPrivacyCookieGDPR

Contact Us

iman@honor.education

Follow Us




© 1Cademy 2026

We're committed to OpenSource on

Github