Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

A frightening new simulation seems to indicate that current social distancing protocols may not be enough to protect joggers from coronavirus -- even if they follow the new rules.

The video, built by simulation technology firm Ansys, shows that droplets can potentially spread more than 6 feet behind you while you are walking, running or cycling.

According to the engineers at the tech company, it may actually be safer to run side-by-side with someone rather than in single file, so that you can avoid coming into direct contact with any droplets.

CORONAVIRUS MAY NOT DIMINISH IN WARMER WEATHER, NEW STUDY FINDS

Health officials have used the 6-feet measure for social distancing as the protocol because when someone sneezes or coughs, droplets typically travel no more than that distance before gravity pulls them to the ground.

During the side-by-side scenario, the droplets travel behind the runners, for the most part. That's what makes the single-file scenario scarier, according to the company.

"If someone coughs, those droplets are suspended in the air and, if you are 6 feet behind, you are going to run right into them and it doesn't give them enough time to fall to the ground," Marc Horner, the principal engineer for health care at Ansys, told The Daily Mail.

GOOGLE TAKES HEAT ABOUT CORONAVIRUS DATA FROM SENATORS

Horner also suggested that if you don't feel safe running directly behind someone, even with 6 feet of distance, it's smarter to run in a staggered pattern.

GET THE FOX NEWS APP

As of Thursday afternoon, the novel coronavirus has infected 1.5 million people worldwide, including more than 451,000 in the United States.