About 3,000 fps
The speed of a bullet coming down, when fired vertically upwards and then falling back under the influence of gravity, will be the same as its speed when it was initially fired upwards. This is because gravity affects both the upward and downward trajectories equally, assuming no other forces are involved. The speed will depend on the initial velocity of the bullet when fired.
No. The bullet will actually travel much slower due to wind resistance.
the speed of a bullet fired by g3 is approximately 3500km/second according to my knowledge regards malikhammad38@yahoo.com
In the 2000-2200 fps range.
The momentum of a bullet fired from a gun is the product of its mass and velocity. It is a vector quantity that represents the motion of the bullet in a specific direction and is conserved in the absence of external forces.
The mass of a bullet is nowhere near the mass of a gun. A bullet weighs at most a few hundred grains. Most guns weigh at least a couple of pounds, some weigh several pounds (talking about handguns and rifles).
The average bullet speed can vary depending on the type of bullet and the firearm it is fired from. However, typical bullet speeds can range from about 800 feet per second (fps) to 3000 fps. High-powered rifles can have bullet speeds exceeding 3000 fps.
Newton said "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction." The action is pushing the bullet in one direction. Reaction is the gun being pushed in the other. The energy is speed times mass. The gun masses much more than the bullet, and so will move proportionately slower than the bullet. Which is a very good thing- or the recoil of the gun would kill the shooter.
Depends entirely on the type of 32 cartridge and what load.
According to a couple of different sources, the "average" bullet fired from an AK travels about 2300 feet per second.
The momentum of the bullet is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to the momentum of the gun. Use conservation of momentum to find the speed of the gun recoil. Since momentum is conserved, the momentum of the gun and bullet before they are fired is equal to the combined momentum of both after they are fired.
Typically between 2600 and 2800 feet per second. Exact speed depends on WHICH bullet, the powder charge, and the length of barrel it is fired from.