The mass ratio of people to flies is 1000:1 and, since they are in the same room it may be safe to assume that the force of gravity remains the same so that the weight ratio is also 1000:1.
There is insufficient information to answer the question about the numbers ratio.
There are four interrelated elements of aircraft performance: lift, weight, thrust, and drag. While the number of people, per se, wouldn't affect the performance of an aircraft, the weight of those people would. --- Also, the position of those people would matter in terms of aircraft performance.
Flies themselves don't kill people, but some flies may carry diseases that do.
lift acts upward, and weight acts downward
no! flies are really not an ideal snack for people. and i wouldn't want a fly in my stomach
Weight does, however I'm not sure what you mean by accuracy. Typically on a commercial aircraft, an aircraft with a MTOW (Maximum take-off weight) only flies half the distance of a zero payload, fully-fuelled aircraft of the same model. Consequentially, some flights limit the number of passengers or decrease the number of seats to increase the needed range, plus reserves if the pilot must make a go-around or divert.
The reason that flies always land on people is because to a fly, a human is a food source. Flies eat dead skin, salt, oils, and anything else that they can.
Tse tse flies kills 31 people every year.
Flies do not typically directly cause death in humans. However, they can contribute to the transmission of diseases such as malaria, typhoid fever, and cholera, which can result in fatalities. The number of deaths caused by diseases transmitted by flies varies each year and is dependent on factors such as healthcare access and disease prevention measures.
with a fly swatter
No..Most don't like flies.
There is about 17 quadrillion flies in the world.That number would be beyond the human capacity to count.
Jack could represent the pig's head, and the flies could represent Jack's followers, how they are practically "swarming" around him.