Dust Bunny

Dust bunnies (or dustbunnies), also called dust mice, are small clumps of dust that form under furniture and in corners that are not cleaned regularly. They are made of hair, lint, dead skin, spider webs, dust, and sometimes light rubbish and debris, and are held together by static electricity and felt-like entanglement. They can house dust mites or other parasites, and can lower the efficiency of dust filters by clogging. The movement of a single large particle can start the formation of a dust bunny.

Dust bunnies are harmful to electronics, as they can obstruct air flow through heat sinks, raising temperatures significantly and shortening the life of electronic components.

A trademark for "Dustbunny" was registered in 2006 for the "Dustbunny Cleaner", a robotic ball with an electrostatic sleeve that rolls around under furniture to collect dustbunnies and other material.

Dust bunnies have been used as an analogy for the accretion of cosmic matter in planetoids.

In Jude Deveraux series, dust-bunnies are small, but deadly, little creatures resembling fuzz and are described as looking like "something that rolled out from under the bed."

Famous quotes containing the word dust:

    There is no evolving, only unfolding. The lily is in the bit of dust which is its beginning, lily and nothing but lily: and the lily in blossom is a ne plus ultra: there is no evolving beyond.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)