Bullets vary from slight below the speed of sound, 1100 feet per second, to several times the speed of sound, perhaps 3,300 feet per second. commercial ammo runs from 600 fps to 4300 fps. slower rounds would be like a 44 special and faster like a 220 swift.
same as calculating every other velocity, distance traveled from starting point divided by the time it took to get there.
A typical bullet speed is 800 metres/second on leaving the gun.
muzzle velocity is the velocity of bullet and recoil velocity is the velocity of gun.
Bullet trajectory is the path the bullet travels once it leaves the barrel. Bullets travel on a long arch and cross the line of sight twice. Once shortly after leaving the barrel and once again on target assuming the sights are properly zeroed. This is the trajectory of the bullet. Bullet velocity is the speed at which the bullet is traveling along it's trajectory.
Gravity adds 32.1 feet per second to the bullet's downward velocity every second after the shot is fired.
To a point, the velocity of the bullet will increase. However, at some point, the gasses driving the bullet have maxed out, and beyond that point, the bullet will begin to slow from friction with the barrel. For a .22 LR cartridge, that length is about 12 inches. Larger cartridges have a greater "Max velocity" length, but there is a point of no more gain, and the start of loss of velocity.
Shoot in a heavy fog
muzzle velocity is the velocity of bullet and recoil velocity is the velocity of gun.
Bullet trajectory is the path the bullet travels once it leaves the barrel. Bullets travel on a long arch and cross the line of sight twice. Once shortly after leaving the barrel and once again on target assuming the sights are properly zeroed. This is the trajectory of the bullet. Bullet velocity is the speed at which the bullet is traveling along it's trajectory.
Momentum = mass x velocity A bullet has a high momentum because its velocity is really high.
Gravity adds 32.1 feet per second to the bullet's downward velocity every second after the shot is fired.
Yes, if the bullet is shot with escape velocity.
The forward velocity of the bullet is greater than the recoil velocity of the rifle because of Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When the bullet is fired forward with high velocity, the rifle experiences a recoil in the opposite direction but with lower velocity due to the mass difference between the bullet and the rifle.
It depends on the thickness of the glass and the muzzle energy of the bullet, not just the velocity.
velocity decrease and at last it becomes zero.
"The velocity of the bullet was 300 metres per second."
It fires a 22LR projectile. "Power" will depend on bullet weight and velocity.
To a point, the velocity of the bullet will increase. However, at some point, the gasses driving the bullet have maxed out, and beyond that point, the bullet will begin to slow from friction with the barrel. For a .22 LR cartridge, that length is about 12 inches. Larger cartridges have a greater "Max velocity" length, but there is a point of no more gain, and the start of loss of velocity.
Shoot in a heavy fog