Calculate Bullets Per Minute for Machine Gun and Man

  • Thread starter Thread starter blue5t1053
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Per
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the speed of a block after being hit by bullets and determining how many bullets a man can fire per minute while exerting a specific force. The first part of the calculation correctly finds the block's speed at 110.263 m/sec after 15 bullets. For the second part, participants explore the relationship between force, momentum, and the rate of fire, ultimately arriving at a maximum firing rate of approximately 176 bullets per minute, based on the average force of 180 N. However, it is noted that the actual force experienced during firing may exceed this average, complicating the scenario. The calculations emphasize the importance of understanding momentum conservation and the dynamics of force in shooting scenarios.
blue5t1053
Messages
23
Reaction score
1
This was a two part question, the first part I was able to calculate.

Question Part 1:
A machine gun fires a stream of bullets into a block that is free to move on a horizontal frictionless tabletop. Each bullet has mass 66 grams; their speed is 930 m/sec, and the block a mass of 7.36 kg. After 15 bullets, the speed of the block is?

Calculation Part 1:
\frac{(0.066 kg * 15 bullets)}{(0.066 kg * 15 bullets) + 7.36 kg}=110.263 m/sec

Question Part 2:
If a man in the previous statement can exert an average force of 180 N against the gun, determine the maximum number of bullets he can fire per minute.

Attempt to Calculate:
I am unsure of how I would go about this. I attempted to think of it as a reverse of the previous question, but what didn't work out was getting bullets per minute without figuring out a basic equation then using sample bullets/minute numbers to see where the breaking point of 0 m/sec is. Also, I kept in mind the need to change the velocity of m/sec to m/min if needed.

The equation I attempted to use was:
V_{gun+man}=\frac{m_{bullet}*numberofbullets}{(m_{bullet}*numberofbullets)+M_{man}}v_{bullet}

Any help with where to start?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
it is basically just a simple problem of conservation of momentum.
 
You have the "force equation": F*t=m*v
the total momentum during a minute is m*v*k, where k is the number of bullets per minute.
 
Kurret said:
You have the "force equation": F*t=m*v
the total momentum during a minute is m*v*k, where k is the number of bullets per minute.


So I get...

F \times t=m \times v

F \times t=m \times v \times k

\frac{F \times t}{m \times v}=k; k=bullets/min

\frac{180 N \times 60 sec}{0.066 kg \times 930 m/sec}=175.953 bullets/sec


Thank you both.
 
blue5t1053 said:
So I get...

F \times t=m \times v

F \times t=m \times v \times k

\frac{F \times t}{m \times v}=k; k=bullets/min

\frac{180 N \times 60 sec}{0.066 kg \times 930 m/sec}=175.953 bullets/secThank you both.

.953?
Never knew Bullets went to the target in fractions.!
 
ever heard of splinters/shotguns/shells
 
Part 1 is correct, although your expression is not correct. You need the muzzle velocity in there:

m_{bullet}v_{muzzle} N_{bullets} = \Delta P = (M_{block} + m_{bullet}N_{bullets}) v_{block/bullets}

The analysis for Part 2 is not clear.Since the force applied by the gun to the shooter is the time rate of change of momentum of the gun/bullet system F = dp/dt:

F = \frac{dm}{dt}v_{muzzle}

\frac{dm}{dt} = F/v = 180/930 = .194 \text{kg/sec}

Therefore, the number of bullets per second is .194/.066 = 2.94 or 176 bullets/minute, but this is only if you want to provide an average force of 180 N. The actual peak force that must be applied will be greater than this, so actually firing this number of bullets will cause the force on the shooter to exceed 180N.

AM
 
Last edited:
Back
Top