Depends on the speed of the bullet, and the length of the barrel. In the case of a .22 rifle, firing a bullet at 1200 feet per second, from a 16 inch barrel, it will take 1/75th of a second for the bullet to leave the barrel.
That would depend on the mass of the bullet, the bullet's velocity when it left the barrel of the gun, and from how high up the bullet was fired from.
It depends on the type of ammunition.
No, it does not.
Gun can refer to a long gun or a hand gun. A rifle is very particular. It has to have grooved barrel which spin the bullet when it is going down the barrel. This spin action on the bullet makes it more accurate.
That's going to depend on the muzzle velocity of the bullet as it leaves the gun, the distance between the shooter and the intended victim, and on how fast the intended victim turns and runs.
The gun weighs MUCH more than the bullet.
A bullet fired from a gun
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Affix the gun to a target. Load the bullet into a cartridge. Load the cartridge into a second gun. Aim carefully, squeeze the trigger. If you have done everything right, you will have shot the gun with a bullet.
It's the recoil from the force of the bullet being fired. The gun powder pushes the bullet forward and also equally pushes the gun back into your hand.
you take a peace of metal take a nerf bullet and glue it to the piece of metal
Chastain - Bullet From A Gun