Heavy paper flys the farthest and the light paper flys the least , because the heavier paper has more inertia thus making them fly further.
Depends on the gun, the bullet, amount of propellant, angle of firing, rifling, temperature, air pressure, humidity etc An average military assault rifle can fire a bullet almost three miles on optimal trajectory.
The momentum of the bullet is equal and opposite to the momentum of the gun. Momentum = mv. Bullet =mbvb Gun = mgvg These are equal, with their speeds in opposite directions. mbvb = mgvg vg = vb x mb/mg = vb x (60/5000) = 0.012 vb The recoil speed of the gun is 0.012 the muzzle speed of the bullet. The question says vb is "500ms", which is unclear. If it is meant to indicate "500 meters per second", then the recoil speed is (500 x .012) = 6 m/s.
bullet trains travel at 96.5 percent the speeed of a bullet No it doesn't. A bullet train does around 190mph normally and can reach 275mph. Depending on calibre, a rifle bullet travels at 1,500-2,000mph. So on average, a bullet train travelling at normal speed travels at between 9.5 and 12.6% of the speed of a rifle bullet.
Generally speaking, the .45 caliber bullet is larger in diameter and heavier than a 9mm bullet.
well i know that it is definely 100% shore that it is the bullet
Heavy paper flys the farthest and the light paper flys the least , because the heavier paper has more inertia thus making them fly further.
flys
the flys , bullet for my valentine , forever the sickest kids , Sebastian bach and pat Boone
if you really need this you are an idiot but it is the moon
flys medium flys flys medium flys
No, "whitch" is not a word in the English language. The correct spelling is "which."
Depends on the gun, the bullet, amount of propellant, angle of firing, rifling, temperature, air pressure, humidity etc An average military assault rifle can fire a bullet almost three miles on optimal trajectory.
flys and other bugs flys and other bugs flys and other bugs flys and other bugs
yes flys are invertabrates
How Time Flys was created in 1973.
flys and horse flys