Yes.
A gun recoils when fired due to the need to eject the casing and to recycle the pent up gas
When a gun is fired a bullet (or cartridge) with a small mass but a very high velocity is ejected. The recoil of the gun is a reaction to this force and is sufficient to push back the person who fired the weapon.
A gun recoils when bullet is fired off the gun.A swimmer pushes the water when he moves forward.
=it is newtons third law of motion which states=="for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction"==when a gun is fired the bullet moves in the forward direction which is action whereas the gun recoils in the backward direction which is the reaction......................=
A gun recoils when bullet is fired off the gun.A swimmer pushes the water when he moves forward.
The plural of recoil is recoils. As in "the gun recoils quite heavily".
When a gun is fired, the bullet propels forward with a certain momentum due to the force applied by the expanding gases in the gun barrel. According to the principle of momentum conservation, the gun must also experience an equal but opposite momentum in the backward direction. This backward momentum causes the sensation of "kick" felt by the shooter as the gun recoils.
When a bullet is fired from a gun, Newton's third law is applied as the bullet and the gun experience equal and opposite forces. The force pushing the bullet out of the gun is equal to the force pushing the gun backward, causing recoil. This relationship between the bullet and the gun follows the principle of momentum conservation.
Strictly speaking, I think all three of his laws of motion could apply, but I believe the answer to what you are asking is, the third law, "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction."
By conservation of momentum, the momentum of the gun and bullet system before firing must equal the total momentum after firing. Therefore, the velocity at which the gun recoils can be calculated by using the equation: (mass of bullet * velocity of bullet)/mass of gun = velocity of gun. Substituting the values given: (0.06 kg * 500 m/s) / 5 kg = 6 m/s.
There is a part almost all guns called the extractor that, like its name implies, extracts the shell when the bolt of the gun recoils back.