514.378 degrees fahrenheit
A bullet fired from a gun
When a bullet is fired upwards vertically it gains kinetic energy.
while firing a bullet, the shooter may get a sudden jerk in his/her hands. So, by keeping track of shooters movement, one can determine which bullet was fired first
The answer is no, regardless of what you hear. The actual impact of a bullet fired from a handgun or shoulder-fired weapon will not physically knock a person over.
514.378 degrees fahrenheit
A bullet fired from a gun
When a bullet is fired upwards vertically it gains kinetic energy.
The bullet fired from a gun has greater horizontal acceleration. For vertical acceleration, they are both the same.
I used gelatin or a large water tank.
When a bullet is fired into the sky, it will eventually stop becasue it has run out of energy and fall back to the ground.
That would depend on the mass of the bullet, the bullet's velocity when it left the barrel of the gun, and from how high up the bullet was fired from.
Yes.
Wilkes Booth John.
while firing a bullet, the shooter may get a sudden jerk in his/her hands. So, by keeping track of shooters movement, one can determine which bullet was fired first
No. The bullet will actually travel much slower due to wind resistance.
Yes