Silent spread of virus keeps scientists grasping for clues

San Diego Metropolitan Transit System worker Chache Rolison wears a Fitbit Thursday, July 9, 2020, in San Diego. The device is part of a Scripps Research “DETECT” study to monitor a person's heart rate and allow participants to record symptoms like fever or coughing to share with scientists, in an attempt to see if they can spot COVID-19. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Jessie Cornwell, a resident of the Ida Culver House Ravenna, right, poses for a photo with the Rev. Jane Pauw, in Seattle on May 21, 2020. Cornwell tested positive for the coronavirus but never became ill, and may have been infectious when she shared a ride to Bible study with Pauw, who later got sick with COVID-19. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this June 23, 2020 photo provided by UC Berkeley, a student provides saliva for an experimental COVID-19 coronavirus test for asymptomatic people. Scientists at the university are collecting samples from volunteers in hopes of finding asymptomatic people to stop them from unknowingly spreading the COVID-19 coronavirus. (Irene Yi/UC Berkeley via AP)

One of the great mysteries of the coronavirus is how quickly it rocketed around the world.