Off course it will. The average bullet contains a propellant and an oxidizer, so a lack of oxygen is not going to be a problem.
Yes, a bullet can be shot in outer space because guns rely on internal mechanisms to fire bullets, rather than external oxygen or air. However, the bullet would travel indefinitely until acted upon by another force, as there is no atmosphere in space to slow it down or change its trajectory.
When you shoot a bullet the bullet casing pos out through the ejector and that is where the bullet is and gunpowder to fire it.
it is impossible to fire a bullet a the speed of light
When the trigger is pulled, the hammer holding a piece of flint snaps forward. The flint strikes a piece of steel, creating a spark. The spark drops into a little cup filled with gunpowder. There's a narrow hole at the bottom of the cup, connecting it with the space behind the bullet where there's also gunpowder. The Powder in the cup ignites, and the fire spreads into the space behind the bullet. The expanding gases from the burning gunpowder push the bullet out of the barrel.
No, it is not possible to shoot a bullet into space from the ground on Earth. Bullets fired from firearms do not have enough velocity to escape Earth's gravity and reach space. Additionally, there are aerodynamic forces, air resistance, and other factors that would prevent a bullet from traveling to space.
No it cannot
It fires 5.7x28mm.
No, it cannot.
Various weights.
Yes, a bullet is affected by gravity in space. Gravity is a fundamental force that acts upon all objects with mass, so a bullet will still be pulled towards a larger mass like a planet in space due to gravity's influence.
fire can't exist in space, because there is no Oxygen in space and thats what fire feeds from
It fires a 7.62x51mm NATO bullet, which is similar to a .308 Winchester.