The average bullet velocity of an AR15 is 3000 ft/s.
the OP talks about 30fps - this is just utterly irrelevant for a still image
It is completely relevant, because that picture was almost certainly not taken by "click". The odds of capturing that on anything but a very high framerate camera (minimum of 10,000 fps) is about the same as winning the lottery. It's not going to happen. But similarly, the odds of getting that on a camera filming at 30fps is equally impossible. The bullet travels 100 ft per frame. You aren't going to get that picture at 30 fps.
The only reasonable assumptions (statistically speaking) are that the person who captured the image was using a high speed camera, or the image was a fake. The only possible "third option" is lottery winning luck...
...of which quite a bit of that was required for that day to have been as it appears.
On an unrelated note, the lottery is rigged, so there isn't really any such thing as "lottery winning luck."
The average bullet velocity of an AR15 is 3000 ft/s.
the OP talks about 30fps - this is just utterly irrelevant for a still image
It is completely relevant, because that picture was almost certainly not taken by "click". The odds of capturing that on anything but a very high framerate camera (minimum of 10,000 fps) is about the same as winning the lottery. It's not going to happen. But similarly, the odds of getting that on a camera filming at 30fps is equally impossible. The bullet travels 100 ft per frame. You aren't going to get that picture at 30 fps.
The only reasonable assumptions (statically speaking) are that the person who captured the image was using a high speed camera, or the image was a fake. The only possible "third option" is lottery winning luck...
...of which quite a bit of that was required for that day to have been as it appears.
On an unrelated note, the lottery is rigged, so there isn't really any such thing as "lottery winning luck."