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Typical bullets can travel just a few feet through the water before they're slowed to a stop. CAV-X bullets can reportedly travel 60 meters underwater, and can go through 2 centimeters of steel fired from 17 meters away, indicating that it could even be used to penetrate submarines.
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Read More »Bullets that can shoot from underwater are being tested by the US Department of Defense's Combating Terrorism Technical Support Office. They work by creating a gas bubble around the tip of the bullet, reducing drag when a bullet is shot through water. Typical bullets can travel just a few feet through the water before they're slowed to a stop. CAV-X bullets can reportedly travel 60 meters underwater, and can go through 2 centimeters of steel fired from 17 meters away, indicating that it could even be used to penetrate submarines.
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Read More »Odd Leonhardsen, DSG's chief science officer, also told Defense One that DSG is selling the bullets to governments around the world, but did not specify where — although he did mention that those countries were testing the bullets by firing them from a helicopter into water. Leonhardsen tolf Insider that the bullets would only be sold to NATO member countries and NATO-friendly countries, and that they would not be sold to private-sector consumers. According to Defense One, .50 caliber CAV-X bullets can travel up to 60 meters underwater, and can go through 2 centimeters of steel fired from 17 meters away through water, indicating that it could be used to penetrate submarines. Leonhardsen told Insider that the gas bubble — and its supercavitating effect — is created by the speed of the bullet coming from the chamber. "The reason [the bullet] does not stop in the same way as conventional ammunition do, is because the CAV-X projectile is perfectly balanced through its own rotation, and the shape helps form the perfect cavitation body around the projectile," Leonhardsen said. "The only part of the projectile that will be in contact with the water to create drag/friction is the tip." Leonhardsen also told Insider that the bullets can be used in conventional firearms, and that DSG is testing with firearms currently in use by the US military, but a gas-piston firearm would be required for underwater shooting.
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This study, published in the early online edition of the journal, Science, shows that early modern humans adapted to living in the rainforest for...
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That's just not possible, tsunami safety experts told LiveScience, even for Usain Bolt, one of the world's quickest sprinters. Getting to high...
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