In another topic, the subject of bullet induced spinal cord injury came up. Relatively little is known about gunshot wound induced spinal cord injury and there are many misconceptions, both by doctors and by ballistics experts.
In 1998, a retired colonel wrote the following article in the Defence Journal
http://www.defencejournal.com/april98/bulletwound.htm where he debunked several myths about bullet induced wounds:
• Sonic wave. There is a widely held belief that bullets cause a "sonic wave" through tissues, a wave that causes tissue damage. This is not true. While very high velocity bullets can produce a 100 atmosphere pressure on impact, the pressure peak lasts only several microseconds, not enough to produce a sonic wave that can damage tissues at a distance.
• Tissue displacement. There is an assumption that tissue displacement velcocity is similar to the velocity of the bullet. Tests suggest that the velocity of tissue displacement adjacent to the bullet path is only 1/10th of the bullet velocity. The bullet slows down dramatically when it enters the body, depending of course on the tissues that it is penetrating.
• Temporary cavity is 30x greater than the permanent cavity. The permanent cavity is the actual path of the bullet through the tissue while the temporary cavity is due to stretching of surrounding tissues. It is interesting to me that they did not consider the pressure wave, only stretching. In any case, according to this article, the temporary cavity from a 1000 m/sec bullet is 11x greater than the permanent cavity and that it would take a 2000 m/sec bullet to get 11x temporary cavity.
The article also suggested that the wound size is independent of the muzzle velocity... and that recent high-velocity guns produce smaller wounds than older generations of guns. Finally, there is a very interesting discussion of the difference between an AK-47 bullet versus a M16 bullet. The former apparently has a hollow-point but lead in the bullet apparently enters the front air space upon contact, producing a large permanent cavity. Apparently, the M16 bullet travels through 12 cm of tissues before it starts to "yaw" and begins to produce a larger permanent cavity. The article points out that relatively little is known about wound ballistics.
Wise.
PS http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.php...vol3n2/gsw.xml
In 1998, a retired colonel wrote the following article in the Defence Journal
http://www.defencejournal.com/april98/bulletwound.htm where he debunked several myths about bullet induced wounds:
• Sonic wave. There is a widely held belief that bullets cause a "sonic wave" through tissues, a wave that causes tissue damage. This is not true. While very high velocity bullets can produce a 100 atmosphere pressure on impact, the pressure peak lasts only several microseconds, not enough to produce a sonic wave that can damage tissues at a distance.
• Tissue displacement. There is an assumption that tissue displacement velcocity is similar to the velocity of the bullet. Tests suggest that the velocity of tissue displacement adjacent to the bullet path is only 1/10th of the bullet velocity. The bullet slows down dramatically when it enters the body, depending of course on the tissues that it is penetrating.
• Temporary cavity is 30x greater than the permanent cavity. The permanent cavity is the actual path of the bullet through the tissue while the temporary cavity is due to stretching of surrounding tissues. It is interesting to me that they did not consider the pressure wave, only stretching. In any case, according to this article, the temporary cavity from a 1000 m/sec bullet is 11x greater than the permanent cavity and that it would take a 2000 m/sec bullet to get 11x temporary cavity.
The article also suggested that the wound size is independent of the muzzle velocity... and that recent high-velocity guns produce smaller wounds than older generations of guns. Finally, there is a very interesting discussion of the difference between an AK-47 bullet versus a M16 bullet. The former apparently has a hollow-point but lead in the bullet apparently enters the front air space upon contact, producing a large permanent cavity. Apparently, the M16 bullet travels through 12 cm of tissues before it starts to "yaw" and begins to produce a larger permanent cavity. The article points out that relatively little is known about wound ballistics.
Wise.
PS http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.php...vol3n2/gsw.xml
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