Ask HN: Why there are no infinite number of flies in a room?
Imagine a room on a sunny day, and flies (insects) in that room. You kill all the flies. Next day, new flies are back. Why there are that many flies in the room, not more or less?
If there was a constant inflow of flies into the room, after some time you would have an infinite number of flies. I never heard of this happening!
One could argue that there is a constant number of flies per volume outside the room and when you kill all the files in the room, there is a negative gradient of flies and the insects will "naturally" move to the room. But such a "fly pressure" would require the flies to bounce from each other, like atoms, which does not seem to happen.
Or maybe flies are territorial animals?
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 26.2 ms ] threadThis reminds me of the other day when my son and I were standing close to several beehives and watching the bees work. I asked him, "How long do you think we have to stand here to get stung?" and he said "a week". A few minutes later one of the bees had gotten stuck in his hair and was working it's way in deeper before stinging him.
Regarding territory, sort of: "In urban areas, where people live in close proximity and there is garbage, flies have small territories and may only fly 1,000 meters or so. Rural house flies roam far in search of manure, covering up to 7 miles over time." Via: https://www.thoughtco.com/fascinating-facts-about-house-flie...
With a constant finite inflow, you’d only have infinitely many after infinite time.
As to why they don’t keep amassing: flies need food, water (moisture), warmth and oxygen. Stuff too many in a room, and conditions elsewhere will be better for them.