Contra the other answers, I contest that virologists haven't been running studies like that because they believed they had already been run.
And they are correct, studies had been run, from the 1940s to the 1960s. You are also correct - the setup you propose is exactly the one which cracked the problem for tuberculosis. Those results were published in 1962 by William Firth Wells.
The problem is that the WHO mostly deferred to the CDC, and the CDC guidance was accidentally written for weaponized airborne transmission rather than airborne transmission in general. So everyone, virologists included, believed the question of airborne transmission was largely settled and 5 microns was the magic number for airborne transmission in general, when in fact that was the magic number for bioweapons which can bypass our mucous lining instead. In addition to this error, the head of the CDC at the time the 5 micron number was recorded had for most of his career criticized the group of people who made the airborne transmission discovery, and to make matters worse Wells died in 1963 so there was no persistent authority to correct the matter. Also worth mentioning is that Wells was an engineer, and not a virologist.
The only people who had cause to question the "established facts" are people who a) had deep domain expertise that applied to the physical problem or b) were highly sensitive to the contradictions provided by the evidence.
I feel like this is basically expected, since the levels at which we expect most virology to work won't encounter this naturally. Wrong disease prevention guidelines won't show up if you are studying the shape of a virus, or its impact on tissues, or its genetic code; they also won't show up obviously in big picture characterizations like R number because these include multiple factors without making clear what they are up front.
In summary, virologists weren't doing the studies because they thought they had been done and we had our answer, but that answer was wrong in the exact same fashion as a wrong entry in a published steam table. In my view the problem is not with virologists the practitioners or virology the field, but with the fact that a bunch of bureaucrats were using a wrong reference. The reference would normally be corrected, but the best person to do so died too early and was a disparaged outsider to boot.
I sourced most of this from this old linkpost from 2021 and my own spot-checks.
There's a simple, terrible answer: because studies are hugely expensive, very time intensive, take a very long time to complete, and require multiple very slow iterations to get everything through committee in a way that our institutions will accept. Consider:
- Nobody is funding it. The cost is literally hundreds of millions of dollars to do in a way that the medical establishment would accept. Even then it would be challenged.
- It would take thousands of man hours. Ain't nobody got time for that.
- It would take 3+ years to get everything approved and done properly, otherwise the medical establishment won't accept it. Actually they still probably won't.
- By the time you're done, it's a virtual certainty that the virus will have run its course and the result will be useless.
IMO, the above is more than sufficient. The incentives were not there - or rather, the incentives were not sufficiently large to justify the cost and were further derated by the expected utility of the information a year after the pandemic is over.
That leaves the question of why. Why was Fauci more interested in funding useless gain-of-function research than useful basic science like this?