What Would Happen If You Shot a Gun in Space? (2024)

Fires can't burn in the oxygen-free vacuum of space, but gunscanshoot. Modern ammunition contains its own oxidizer, a chemical that will trigger the explosion of gunpowder, and thus the firing of a bullet, wherever you are in the universe. No atmospheric oxygen required.

The only difference between pulling the trigger on Earth and in space is the shape of the resulting smoke trail. In space, "it would be an expanding sphere of smoke from the tip of the barrel," said Peter Schultz an astronomer at Brown University who researches impact craters.

The possibility of gunfire in space allows for all kinds of absurd scenarios.

Related: 7 everyday things that happen strangely in space

Shooting stars

Imagine you're floating freely in the vacuum between galaxies — just you, your gun and a single bullet. You have two options. You either can spend all of eternity trying to figure out how you got there, or you can shoot the damn cosmos.

If you do the latter, Newton's third law of motion dictates that the force exerted on the bullet will impart an equal and opposite force on the gun, and, because you're holding the gun, you. With very few intergalactic atoms against which to brace yourself, you'll start moving backward (not that you’d have any way of knowing). If the bullet leaves the gun barrel at 1,000 meters per second, you — because you're much more massive than it is — will head the other way at only a few centimeters per second.

Once shot, the bullet will keep going, quite literally, forever."The bullet will never stop, because theuniverse is expanding fasterthan the bullet can catch up with any serious amount of mass" to slow it down, said Matija Cuk, an astronomer with joint appointments at Harvard University and the SETI Institute. (If the universe weren'texpanding, then the one or two atoms per cubic centimeter encountered by the bullet in the near-vacuum of space would bring it to a standstill after 10 million light-years.)

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Getting down to details, the universe expands at a rate of 73 kilometers per second per megaparsec (about 3 million light-years, or the average distance between galaxies). By Cuk's calculations, this means matter that is 40,000 to 50,000 light-years away from the bullet would move away from it at about the same speed at which it is travelling, and would thus be forever out of reach. In the entire future of the universe, the bullet will catch up only to atoms that are less than 40,000 or so light-years from the chamber of your gun.

Speaking of you, you'll be bobbing through space forever, too.

Related: In images: Visualizations of infinity

What Would Happen If You Shot a Gun in Space? (1)

Shooting giants from the hip

Guns do actually get carried to space, though not quite to the void between galaxies. For decades, the standard survival pack for Russian cosmonauts has included a gun. Until recently, it wasn't just any gun, but "a deluxe all-in-one weaponwith three barrels and a folding stock that doubles as a shovel and contains a swing-out machete," according to space historian James Oberg.The space guns are issued in case the cosmonauts need one back on Earth, so that they can protect themselves if emergency landing of their Soyuz spacecraft has left them deserted in a treacherous region. But still, cosmonautsin theorycould shoot their guns before they landed.

So what if, during a spacewalk, a cosmonaut opened fire onJupiter?

He or she should feel free toshoot from the hip. According to Robert Flack, a physicist at University College London, the enormous gravitational field of Jupiter is likely to suck in a bullet even if it is badly aimed. "Jupiter is so huge, it will capture the bullet and then it will follow a curved path down into the planet," Flack said.

And as it does, it will pick up some serious steam. According to Schultz, if the bullet is shot straight toward Jupiter, the planet's gravity will accelerate the ammo to the eye-popping speed of almost 60 kilometers per second by the time it crosses the gas giant's threshold.

Watch your back

Shooting someone in the back is a cowardly act. In space, "theoretically you could shootyourselfin the back," Schultz said.

You could do it, for example, while in orbit around a planet. Because objects orbiting planets are actually in a constant state of free fall, you have to get the setup just right. You'd have to shoot horizontally at just the right altitude for the bullet to circle the planet and fall back to where it started (you). And you'd also have to consider how much you'll get kicked backwards (and consequently, how much your altitude will change) when you fire.

"The aim has to be perfect," Schultz said.

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Such a scenario isn't as absurd as it sounds. In fact, Schultz said scientists at one point were considering setting up such a self-hit in space in order to investigate the effects ofhigh-speed impacts.

However, considering all the math involved, Cuk suggests it might be easier to commit space suicide by standing on a mountain on the moon. "'Shooting yourself in the back' works in principle if you shoot a bullet at horizon from the top of a lunar mountain, at 1600 meters per second or so," he said. He thinks it just might work as long as you adjust your aim to account for lumps and irregularities in the shape of the moon, which would affect the altitude of the bullet as it travels.

With so many possible movie plotlines to consider, one question remains: Why are there so few space shoot 'em ups?

Originally published on Live Science.

Natalie Wolchover was a staff writer for Live Science from 2010 to 2012 and is currently a senior physics writer and editor for Quanta Magazine. She holds a bachelor's degree in physics from Tufts University and has studied physics at the University of California, Berkeley. Along with the staff of Quanta, Wolchover won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory writing for her work on the building of the James Webb Space Telescope. Her work has also appeared in the The Best American Science and Nature WritingandThe Best Writing on Mathematics, Nature, The New Yorker and Popular Science. She was the 2016 winner of the Evert Clark/Seth Payne Award, an annual prize for young science journalists, as well as the winner of the 2017 Science Communication Award for the American Institute of Physics.

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What Would Happen If You Shot a Gun in Space? (2024)

FAQs

What Would Happen If You Shot a Gun in Space? ›

The recoil from shooting a gun in zero gravity would push the shooter backward, demonstrating Newton's third law of every action having an equal and opposite reaction. Bullets fired in space could travel indefinitely at a constant speed unless they hit an object, due to the lack of atmospheric drag and gravity.

Can you shot guns in space? ›

Assuming you are floating freely in space the gun will work just as it does on Earth. However, the bullet will continue moving for many thousands of years, eventually coming to a stop due to the friction from the diffuse material found in 'empty' space (or when it encounters another object).

How fast would a bullet go in space? ›

In a static (non-expanding) Universe a bullet fired in space may travel for perhaps 10 million lightyears before losing all its energy, but at an initial speed of 1,000 m/s this would take about 300 billion years; more than 20 times the current age of the Universe!

Would a gun overheat in space? ›

Without the stabilising effect of the atmosphere, the wide temperature variations in space might be a problem though: direct sunlight might make the gun hot enough for the ammunition to explode spontaneously, whereas a gun kept in the shade would eventually become so cold that the primer in the firing cap might not go ...

What happens if you shoot a gun in the air? ›

Shot straight up, the bullet will climb and decelerate as it loses energy, at the top, the bullet will have zero energy and tumble back to earth, landing in the vicinity of the firing point. the bullet will experience atmospheric drag on the way up and the way down.

Are space weapons illegal? ›

The treaty forbids countries from deploying "nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction" in outer space. The term "weapons of mass destruction" is not defined, but it is commonly understood to include nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.

Is A bullet faster than a rocket? ›

A typical rocket produces more than a million pounds of thrust that allows it to carry more than 6,000 pounds at speeds topping 22,000 miles per hour. This is equivalent to the power generated by 13 Hoover Dams, carrying the weight of eight horses, and traveling at speeds 15 times faster than a speeding bullet!

How fast will a bullet return to Earth? ›

U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Julian Hatcher's experiments in the 1940s found that a standard . 30 caliber bullet fired straight up could reach an altitude of 9,000 feet (2,743.2 meters) and return to Earth at a speed of 300 feet (91.4 meters) per second during its descent.

Do guns need oxygen to fire? ›

Modern ammunition contains its own oxidizer, a chemical that will trigger the explosion of gunpowder, and thus the firing of a bullet, wherever you are in the universe. No atmospheric oxygen required. Fires can't burn in the oxygen-free vacuum of space, but guns can shoot.

Would a gun work on the Moon? ›

A very powerful gun, like a military cannon, would be able to fire a shot all the way around the surface of the Moon. What about firing a gun out in the middle of space? Well, it would simply drift into the blackness, forever alone, while the galaxies around it sped further away.

Would a gun make a sound in space? ›

But quite the contrary – gunpowder contains its own oxidizer that enables guns to fire in airless environments, such as underwater, and perhaps even outer space. What is worth noting, however, is that the gunshot will not be heard because there isn't any air for the sound waves to travel through.

Would a gun cycle in space? ›

The recoil from shooting a gun in zero gravity would push the shooter backward, demonstrating Newton's third law of every action having an equal and opposite reaction. Bullets fired in space could travel indefinitely at a constant speed unless they hit an object, due to the lack of atmospheric drag and gravity.

Can a gun hit a plane? ›

A single person with a handgun has virtually no chance of hitting an airplane like that. If the bullet is able to damage a tire, such that chunks of the tire fly off, those chunks could cause even more damage than just the bullet alone.

How high will a bullet go up? ›

This is because injury typically occurs to the head and shoulders rather than to less critical body parts. If fired vertically into the air, a bullet can reach a height of up to around 2 miles.

Can a falling bullet go through a roof? ›

I most often find bullets partially lodged in a composition shingle roof system, but I occasionally find them fully penetrating the roof. I have also seen evidence of this type of damage in TPO/Vinyl roof systems, metal roofs, and modified bitumen roof systems.

Can gunpowder explode in space? ›

But quite the contrary – gunpowder contains its own oxidizer that enables guns to fire in airless environments, such as underwater, and perhaps even outer space. What is worth noting, however, is that the gunshot will not be heard because there isn't any air for the sound waves to travel through.

Can you shoot things into space? ›

However, a space gun has never been successfully used to launch an object into orbit or out of Earth's gravitational pull.

Why are guns not allowed in space? ›

An international treaty bans nations from positioning large-scale weapons in space but there is no such law preventing astronauts from carrying small arms into orbit. In fact, Russian astronauts are known to pack some serious heat.

Did astronauts bring guns to space? ›

The TP-82 (Russian: ТП-82) is an out-of-service triple-barreled Soviet combination gun carried by cosmonauts on space missions. It was intended as a survival aid to be used after landings and before recovery in the Siberian wilderness.

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