Moar Doug Mills
(media.greatawakening.win)
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If you multiply 0.00375 by 8000 you get 3. So I think you had an error somewhere.
But we are saying the same thing. You have just a tiny amount of time. My numbers have that even tinier....1/3 of your time. But burst mode lets you take many pictures in a row. So that increases your chances a bit
Yes, but You still see 99% of the image. You still see Trump. But this only affects fast moving objects.
I imagine the initial impact would create all sorts of collisions and trajectories. So it the direction of the bullet generally not in a straight line, right?
Math challenge. If you have 30 frames in a second at 1/8000th of a second per frame, the total image time in a second is 30/8000 = 0.00375 second. The rest of the time is no image. I have no idea what you are trying to calculate.
The remaining 0.99625 second remains UNPHOTOGRAPHED. Thus, unseen.
The bullet was a piercing shot. It simply went straight through the earlobe. The trail is in line consistent with that. Bullets do not deflect unless they hit bone or other solid material.
Ok, I though you trying find the time for 1 frame
You were doing cumulative time for 30 frames.
I left a zero here. My bad.
I don't expect the bullet to deflect or to be doing anything other than going in a straight line
I was talking about blood spray, not the bullet. There would be all sorts of initial deflections of solids and liquids once the bullet pierced the skin
What happens when a bullet penetrates deeply into tissue is not quite the same as when it simply pierces a piece of skin and cartilage. There will be a low pressure pocket behind the supersonic bullet, and the "loose" tissue would be carried along behind it. Terminal ballistics is actually a science and certain things are expectable and consistent. Significant deflection would require deformation of the bullet.
No expecting the bullet to deflect.
I believe the smear in the picture is the bullet itself moving within the frame in that tiny moment the shutter is open.