If you fired a gun in a spaceship it would act like a gun on Earth, regardless of gravity level. But it couldn't fire in open space since there is no oxygen for combustion and since it is two degrees above absolute zero and lubricants will freeze jamming the gun.
Well, the air wouldn't catch on fire or explode, but the bullet would probably put a hole in the space craft, doing a lot of damage there and because there is no gravity the bullet would become sort of like a comet.
"You'll shoot your eye out, kid!"He didn't actually, but he did come close. When he fired the gun, the pellet ricocheted and broke his glasses.
Races (such as horse races) were started by firing a gun- when it fired, the racers would start. But if you moved before the gun fired, you "jumped the gun" and were disqualified. It has come to mean acting prematurely.
ImproveRaces (such as horse races) were started by firing a gun- when it fired, the racers would start. But if you moved before the gun fired, you "jumped the gun" and were disqualified. It has come to mean acting prematurelybut also it did start in 1921 january 16Read more: Where_did_the_origin_jump_the_gun_idiom_started
A round is loaded into a gun. The gun is then cocked and then fired.
Not by any "guns" we have at present; and if "fired" through a standard gun - would either be too weak to do any harm to the target - OR - would melt the gun first.
Damage. How much depends on the gun that fired the bullet that hits it. it probably would explode
It would be 350fps which means that the BBs fired from the gun travel 350 feet per second.
Yes, it is very rare but can happen when fired very close to and aimed directly at certain parts of the body.
This gun is a Rifle
A gun recoils when fired due to the need to eject the casing and to recycle the pent up gas
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.