Is a box full of flying bees heavier than an empty box?

I stinging your dog!

My mailman was NOT happy about delivering boxes of bees to us. She would honk so that we would come and get them from the truck. The queens come in an envelope, which she didn’t mind. I don’t remember if it has LIVE BEES stamped on it.

While Sears doesn’t sell them, plenty of other place will ship bees.

PSXer, tell your “friend” that what the box weighs is not terribly important as long as the carrying is consensual and your “friend” and the bees (and the box) are all of age and having fun. Just be careful not to carry that box across state lines…

But can it be, philosophically, that, ipso facto, the bees will half not be?

Back to a serious answer.

I think it would be correct to say that a box of flying bees is not only heavier than an empty box, but that it would also be heavier (very slightly) than the same box now full of dead bees.

Just scanned the thread so sorry if this has already been pointed out.

No, it would be - on average - exactly the same mass if it were full of dead bees.

Think about one bee. It can be in one of four states:
[ol]
[li]On the floor[/li][li]Going up[/li][li]Hovering[/li][li]Falling[/li][/ol]
That’s it. What is the effect of each of these?

On the floor: The same as a dead bee, clearly.
Going up: Slightly more than a dead bee. The bee is moving upwards, which means it needs to be pushing downwards with a force greater than its own weight. That force gets transmitted to the bottom of the box, and feels like weight.
Hovering: Equal to a dead bee. The bee has to push down with a force equal to its own weight.
Falling: Less than a dead bee. The bee is pushing down with less than a force equal to its own weight, which is the reason it falls.

Since the box has a top and a bottom, none of the bees can be going up for very long, nor can they be falling for very long. Indeed, to do any falling, they need to have done some rising. In the end, if you average the weight over a small bit of time, the average weight will be exactly the same as the dead bees.

But if you take a snapshot at some instant, you can’t know. If all the bees suddenly stop beating their wings and fall, they are all weightless, and the box will weigh less than a box full of dead bees. If they all take off from the bottom at the same time, it will weight more. But averaged, it’s the same as the dead bees.

Walter Brennan could not have explained it better.

No, I think you’re wrong, because the hovering bee has kinetic energy and hence more mass (relativistically). This would, of course, be a tiny effect and I’m probably being horribly pedantic.

Ahh, but no one has mentioned that the dead bees WOULD weigh less than the live ones as their souls would have fled their lifeless little bee corpses…

That only applies to Eric.

I don’t think this matters for reference frame outside of the box (I could be wrong about this, however)

A perfectly hovering bee is not moving (in the reference frame of the box), so it shouldn’t have any more relatavistic momentum than a dead/sitting bee. Well, OK its wings are moving, so they will have some extra momentum. A rising or falling bee will have some extra momentum, though.

But of course any kinetic energy increase in the bees is going to be exactly balanced by the tine loss of mass as chemicals that are storing energy inside the bee’s body undergo reactions. But we don’t need to worry about the details: since no energy is going in or out of the box, the relatavistic mass of the box as a whole system has to be constant.

Post 19 grumble grumble.

The box with flying bees weighs exactly the weight of the box plus the bees, so yes it weighs more with flying bees in it. Many people that have asked this question in the past on this board actually asked the question comparing the weight of a box of bees that are at rest in the box and the same box of bees when they are flying in the box. In that case they box of bees weighs the same regardless if they fly or rest in the box.

What if they were jumping, instead of flying?

Zombees! :eek:

Actually, it doesn’t matter if the bees are moving up or down, since a bee that’s moving at a constant speed is only generating net forces on its surroundings equal to its weight. What matters is whether the bee is accelerating up or down.

Awesome - a whole new genre of horror:

bees that don’t die when they sting you, BECAUSE THEY’RE ALREADY DEAD! THEY’LL NEVER STOP!! AAAAAAHHHHHHH!!!:eek:

only if Bisected accidentally..

And it really put a bee in her bonnet.