In most circumstances, no. The bullet is too large to chamber in the handgun.
I used gelatin or a large water tank.
Each of those items has large momentum and kinetic energy ... the bullet because of its high speed, and the train on account of its large mass.
Each of those items has large momentum and kinetic energy ... the bullet because of its high speed, and the train on account of its large mass.
If you mean a .40 caliber bullet in a .32 caliber gun- no. The bullet would be 8 thousandths of inch too large to fit in the gun. Caliber refers to the diameter of the bullet, so a .40 caliber bullet is ABOUT .40 inches across, and a .32 bullet ABOUT .32 inches across.
Depends on the bullet. A few have NO lead. Bullet weights are usually given in GRAINS rather than grams- a 110 grain bullet, like the M1 Carbine, weighs 7.1 grams. Bullet for a .22 short is about 29 grains, for a LARGE rifle, maybe 500 grains.
Momentum is the product of velocity and mass.
ALL items- large or small- fall at the same speed when affected by gravity. A large bullet and a small bullet, both fired parallel to the ground, will hit at the same time if fired at the same time from the same distance above ground. The FASTER will hit further away, but at the same time.
The AK47 fires a CARTRIDGE that is 39 mm long, with a 7.92 mm bullet (even though it is CALLED a 7.62 bullet, it is bigger). Typically the bullet is 123 grains in weight, which makes it about as fat as a 30-06 rifle bullet, but shorter. See the link at the bottom of this page:
Bullet points are usually used in word documents when making lists. They are also used in PowerPoint presentations to summarize large amounts of information.
The function of the bullet train is to move large amounts of people quickly from one point to another. The bullet train improves the efficiency of the transportation system allowing it to serve higher numbers of people.
The function of the bullet train is to move large amounts of people quickly from one point to another. The bullet train improves the efficiency of the transportation system allowing it to serve higher numbers of people.