You'd be surprised.jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:Granted, though in the case of spudguns the recoil of the air alone is going to be negligible compared to what would happen if you had a projectile in the barrel.
Let's take an example. In the case of HEAL, the chamber contains about 18 grams of air, a huge mass compared to firearms, which typically use no more than a few grams.
With a 25g projectile leaving the barrel at 180 m/s, those 18 grams of air will leave the barrel at around 225 m/s (on average).
Believe it or not, that makes the air responsible for a majority of the recoil.
@BTB: When dealing with recoil, it is typical to express it as free recoil energy, rather than velocity or momentum.
For the FRE, you do need to know the cannon mass, as heavier cannons will have a lower FRE. Assuming all else is equal, a cannon with twice the weight will have half the FRE.
In practise, it's more complex than that, but the general rule of thumb still applies.
@Thunderlord: The thread where I discuss the maths can be seen here: http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/topic-t11431.html
While a coilgun certainly has recoil (the camera flash one I have actually has a surprisingly noticeable jerk on firing), my point was that it doesn't have a propellant gas to complicate the recoil calculation, so the momentum of the coilgun will be equal to that of the projectile.
You do however seem to be a little mixed up about magnetism and plasma.
Magnetism is a force, formed either by electric current, or by a majority alignment of magnetic cells in a ferromagnetic material. Plasma is an ionised gas.
Magnetism does affect plasma, but they are separate from each other.
Now, magnetism does have a limited mass. As Einstein's famous E=mc<sup>2</sup> says, energy has mass (although absolutely minuscule amounts). Magnetic fields store energy, so they therefore have some mass.
However, in a coilgun, the mass in these magnetic fields is not accelerated. After a coil has been fired, the energy is converted back into electrical current, which becomes back E.M.F across the coil. Depending on geometry, this energy can then be returned to the capacitors via a half-bridge circuit, or can be discarded in the form of coil heat.
So, for those reasons, the recoil momentum of a coilgun is always equal to the momentum of the projectile.