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A gun is a normally tubular weapon or other device designed to discharge projectiles or other

material.[1] The projectile may be solid, liquid, gas or energy and may be free, as with bullets and
artillery shells, or captive as with Taser probes and whaling harpoons. The means of projection
varies according to design but is usually effected by the action of gas pressure, either produced
through the rapid combustion of a propellant or compressed and stored by mechanical means,
operating on the projectile inside an open-ended tube in the fashion of a piston. The confined gas
accelerates the movable projectile down the length of the tube, imparting sufficient velocity to
sustain the projectile's travel once the action of the gas ceases at the end of the tube or muzzle.
Alternatively, acceleration via electromagnetic field generation may be employed in which case
the tube may be dispensed with and a guide rail substituted.

The first devices identified as guns appeared in China around CE 1000. By the 12th century the
technology was spreading through the rest of Asia, and into Europe by the 13th century.[2]

Contents
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1 Etymology

2 History

3 Operating principle

4 Components

o 4.1 Barrel

o 4.2 Projectile

5 Terminology

6 Types

o 6.1 Military

o 6.2 Machine guns

o 6.3 Handguns

o 6.4 Autocannon

o 6.5 Artillery
o 6.6 Tank

o 6.7 Hunting

o 6.8 Rescue equipment

o 6.9 Training and entertainment

o 6.10 Energy

7 See also

8 Notes

9 References

Etymology
The origin of the English word gun is considered to derive from the name given to a particular
historical weapon. Domina Gunilda was the name given to a remarkably large ballista, a
mechanical bolt throwing weapon of enormous size, mounted at Windsor Castle during the 14th
century. This name in turn may have derived from the Old Norse woman's proper name
Gunnhildr which combines two Norse words referring to battle.[3] In any case the term gonne or
gunne was applied to early hand-held firearms by the late 14th or early 15th century.

History
Further information: History of the firearm

Hand cannon from the Chinese Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368)

Western European handgun, 1380


Depiction of a musketeer (1608)

The first device identified as a gun, a bamboo tube that used gunpowder to fire a spear, appeared
in China around AD 1000.[2] The Chinese had previously invented gunpowder in the 9th century.[4]
[5][6]

An early type of firearm (or portable gun) is the fire lance, a black-powderfilled tube attached
to the end of a spear and used as a flamethrower; shrapnel was sometimes placed in the barrel so
that it would fly out together with the flames.[6][7] The earliest depiction of a gunpowder weapon is
the illustration of a fire-lance on a mid-10th century silk banner from Dunhuang.[8] The De'an
Shoucheng Lu, an account of the siege of De'an in 1132, records that Song forces used fire-lances
against the Jurchens.[9]

In due course, the proportion of saltpeter in the propellant was increased to maximise its
explosive power.[7] To better withstand that explosive power, the paper and bamboo of which fire-
lance barrels were originally made came to be replaced by metal.[6] And to take full advantage of
that power, the shrapnel came to be replaced by projectiles whose size and shape filled the barrel
more closely.[7] With this, we have the three basic features of the gun: a barrel made of metal,
high-nitrate gunpowder, and a projectile which totally occludes the muzzle so that the powder
charge exerts its full potential in propellant effect.[10]

One theory of how gunpowder came to Europe is that it made its way along the Silk Road
through the Middle East; another is that it was brought to Europe during the Mongol invasion in
the first half of the 13th century.[11][12] English Privy Wardrobe accounts list "ribaldis", a type of
cannon, in the 1340s, and siege guns were used by the English at Calais in 1346.[13] The earliest
surviving[clarification needed] firearm in Europe has been found from Otep, Estonia and it dates to at
least 1396.[14]
Around the late 14th century in Europe, smaller and portable hand-held cannons were developed,
creating in effect the first smooth-bore personal firearm. In the late 15th century the Ottoman
empire used firearms as part of its regular infantry.

The first successful rapid-fire firearm is the Gatling Gun, invented by Richard Gatling and
fielded by the Union forces during the American Civil War in the 1860s.

The world's first sub-machine gun (a fully automatic firearm which fires pistol cartridges) able to
be maneuvered by a single soldier is the MP18.1, invented by Theodor Bergmann. It was
introduced into service in 1918 by the German Army during World War I as the primary weapon
of the Stosstruppen (assault groups specialized in trench combat).

The first assault rifle was introduced during World War II by the Germans, known as the StG44.
It was the first firearm which bridges the gap between long range rifles, machine guns, and short
range sub-machine guns. Since the mid-20th century guns that fire beams of energy rather than
solid projectiles have been developed, and also guns that can be fired by means other than the
use of gunpowder.

Operating principle
Most guns use compressed gas confined by the barrel to propel the bullet up to high speed,
though devices operating in other ways are sometimes called guns. In firearms the high-pressure
gas is generated by combustion, usually of gunpowder. This principle is similar to that of internal
combustion engines, except that the bullet leaves the barrel, while the piston transfers its motion
to other parts and returns down the cylinder. As in an internal combustion engine, the combustion
propagates by deflagration rather than by detonation, and the optimal gunpowder, like the
optimal motor fuel, is resistant to detonation. This is because much of the energy generated in
detonation is in the form of a shock wave, which can propagate from the gas to the solid
structure and heat or damage the structure, rather than staying as heat to propel the piston or
bullet. The shock wave at such high temperature and pressure is much faster than that of any
bullet, and would leave the gun as sound either through the barrel or the bullet itself rather than
contributing to the bullet's velocity.

Components
Barrel
Rifling of a 105 mm Royal Ordnance L7 tank gun.

Barrel types include rifleda series of spiraled grooves or angles within the barrelwhen the
projectile requires an induced spin to stabilize it, and smoothbore when the projectile is
stabilized by other means or rifling is undesired or unnecessary. Typically, interior barrel
diameter and the associated projectile size is a means to identify gun variations. Bore diameter is
reported in several ways. The more conventional measure is reporting the interior diameter
(bore) of the barrel in decimal fractions of the inch or in millimetres. Some gunssuch as
shotgunsreport the weapon's gauge (which is the number of shot pellets having the same
diameter as the bore produced from one English pound (454g) of lead) oras in some British
ordnancethe weight of the weapon's usual projectile.

Projectile

A gun projectile may be a simple, single-piece item like a bullet, a casing containing a payload
like a shotshell or explosive shell, or complex projectile like a sub-caliber projectile and sabot.
The propellant may be air, an explosive solid, or an explosive liquid. Some variations like the
Gyrojet and certain other types combine the projectile and propellant into a single item.

Terminology
The term gun may refer to any sort of projectile weapon from large cannons to small firearms
including those that are usually hand-held (handgun).[15] The word gun is also commonly used to
describe objects which, while they are not themselves weapons, produce an effect or possess a
form which is in some way evocative of a handgun or long gun.

The use of the term "cannon" is interchangeable with "gun" as words borrowed from the French
language during the early 15th century, from Old French canon, itself a borrowing from the
Italian cannone, a "large tube" augmentative of Latin canna "reed or cane".[16] Recent scholarship
indicates that the term "gun" may have its origins in the Norse woman's name "Gunnildr" (which
means "War-sword") (or "Gunnild", possibly Queen Gunhild of Wenden, wife of King Sweyn
Forkbeard [citation needed]), which was often shortened to "Gunna".[17] The earliest recorded use of the
term "gonne" was in a Latin document circa 1339. Other names for guns during this era were
"schioppi" (Italian translation-"thunderers"), and "donrebusse" (Dutch translation-"thunder gun")
which was incorporated into the English language as "blunderbuss".[17] Artillerymen were often
referred to as "gonners" and "artillers"[18] Early guns and the men who used them were often
associated with the devil and the gunner's craft was considered a black art, a point reinforced by
the smell of sulfur on battlefields created from the firing of guns along with the muzzle blast and
accompanying flash.[19]

The word cannon is retained in some cases for the actual gun tube but not the weapon system.
The title gunner is applied to the member of the team charged with operating, aiming, and firing
a gun.

Autocannons are automatic guns designed primarily to fire shells and are mounted on a vehicle
or other mount. Machine guns are similar, but usually designed to fire simple projectiles. In some
calibers and some usages, these two definitions overlap.

In contemporary military and naval parlance the term gun has a very specific meaning and refers
solely to any large-calibre, direct-fire, high-velocity, flat-trajectory artillery piece employing an
explosive-filled hollowed metal shell or solid bolt as its primary projectile.[citation needed] This later
usage contrasts with large-calibre, high-angle, low-velocity, indirect-fire weapons such as
howitzers, mortars, and grenade launchers which invariantly employ explosive-filled shells. In
other military use, the term "gun" refers primarily to direct fire weapons that capitalize on their
muzzle velocity for penetration or range. In modern parlance, these weapons are breech-loaded
and built primarily for long range fire with a low or almost flat ballistic arc. A variation is the
howitzer or gun-howitzer designed to offer the ability to fire both low or high-angle ballistic
arcs. In this use, example guns include naval guns. A less strict application of the word is to
identify one artillery weapon system or non-machine gun projectile armament on aircraft.

A related military use of the word is in describing gun-type fission weapon. In this instance, the
"gun" is part of a nuclear weapon and contains an explosively propelled sub-critical slug of
fissile material within a barrel to be fired into a second sub-critical mass in order to initiate the
fission reaction. Potentially confused with this usage are small nuclear devices capable of being
fired by artillery or recoilless rifle.

In civilian use, the captive bolt pistol is used in agriculture to humanely stun farm animals for
slaughter.[20]

Shotguns are normally civilian weapons used primarily for hunting. These weapons are typically
smooth bored and fire a shell containing small lead or steel balls. Variations use rifled barrels or
fire other projectiles including solid lead slugs, a Taser XREP projectile capable of stunning a
target, or other payloads. In military versions, these weapons are often used to burst door hinges
or locks in addition to antipersonnel uses.

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