That is essentially correct, although if you want to get technical some energy is absorbed by the inertia of the weapon itself and the cycling of the slide in a semiauto. The recoil you feel is also spread over your hands, arms, and shoulders whereas the impact of the bullet is concentrated on a small area. However, the impact of most pistol rounds is not nearly enough to physically knock an adult down. If they carried that much energy, the shooter would find himself on his butt as well.baldeagle wrote:Thanks for the link. I'm still reading, but this one statement really struck me. "The impact of the bullet on the body is no more than the recoil of the weapon." If you think about it, that makes sense. Newton's law says that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. The recoil you feel will be the same as the impact of the bullet felt by your adversary. If you think about the recoil you feel when you're shooting, that isn't enough to knock you over or even cause you to lose your balance, unless it's a very large caliber weapon and you are unprepared for the recoil.suthdj wrote:There were some links posted somewhere on this site here is one.
http://www.firearmstactical.com/pdf/fbi-hwfe.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
There was another with drawings of wound cavity that was good also. Just can't find it.
A rough equivalent would be that a torso hit with a .45 slug might feel much like a punch if you were in a frame of mind to notice and make such observations. Some folks who are doing things that make it necessary to shoot them are not, and it's not unusual for them to show no immediate reaction at all while they keep doing whatever it was they were doing just then.
The laws of physics don't have exceptions for bullets.