No.
That cartridge is actually a practice round for dry firing a weapon (people use them to practice with the action of a gun without harming the hammer)
No. This has actually been tested. The heat of the bullet among other things, as well as layers of material, etc,, pretty much rule it out.
No, not even a rare earth magnet could deter the path of a high velocity bullet. If the bullet hits the magnet then in would go in to a depth depending on caliber and range then stop just like if it hit any metal. Most bullets are made of lead and copper, and are not affected by magnets.
A bullet may pierce a mirror without breaking it if it hits the mirror at a very acute angle or if the mirror is made of toughened material that can absorb the impact without shattering. The angle of impact and the velocity of the bullet both play a role in determining whether the mirror breaks or not.
Gravity has an effect the instant the bullet leaves the barrel. The bullet starts to fall towards the earth at the same rate as the dropped bullet. However, (assuming the ground follows the curve of the earth, or you are shooting over water) the dropped bullet will hit the ground/water first. The reason is that the as the fired bullet falls the ground is receding away from it (the curve of the earth). The extreme example of this is: the bullet is fired fast enough that as it falls, the curve of the earth is 'falling' continuously away below it; we would say this bullet is now in orbit around the planet. However, if the ground you are shooting over is 'flat' (i.e. flat like a ruler, NOT following the curve of the earth) then: yes, the two bullets will hit the ground at the same time.
When the bullet penetrates into an object its velocity decreases very much or becomes 0 suddenly. This causes a change a momentum of bullet and impulse is applied. Technically the kinetic energy is converted to potential as a deformation occurs inside that object, transferring some of the kinetic energy into the object.
Depends where it hits you. If it hits you in the heart or any important organ, you probably will die. You can also lose too much blood if it hits you anywhere and die.
Yes, any bullet can kill you. The amount of damage a bullet does depends on several factors, basically: where it hits you, how hard it hits you, and how big the bullet is (or how much it expands).
When a bullet hits a bee, you call it a biscuit bullet.
Most of the time there is a firing pin, which hits the back of a bullet when the trigger is pulled. The firing pin hits the back of the bullet and ignites the gunpowder inside of the bullet. The bullet then becomes a small unguided rocket and hits something in the direction the gun was aimed at.
As with anyone it depends on the bullet and where it hits.
Possibly. Depends on the specific bullet, the glass it hits, damage done to the bullet, etc. To perform a ballistic marking match, the bullet must have areas that are relatively undamaged.
because bullet has great velocity and it has less surface area on tip means it is pointed
these are materials which are extremely strong, yet flexible. strong as to not break when a bullet hits it, and flexible so it can absorb some of the shock from the bullet
It disrupts the integrity of what it hits.
1972?
Nearly hit. I shoot a bullet at you, and it nearly hits. The bullet I shot at you nearly hit you.
When the Bullet Hits the Bone is a song by Golden Earring.