let
(relativistic kinetic energy) = (relativistic mass-energy) - (rest mass-energy)
(rest mass-energy) = m * c^2
let resq = "remaining speed squared" = c^2 - v^2, having units of speed^2.
aside: lorentz = sqrt(c^2/resq) is unitless. we prefer to work with resq rather than lorentz because with resq, some mistakes can be caught by dimensional analysis.
aside: for very small v, resq has problems with numerical precision. for very high v, lorentz has problems with numerical precision.
(relativistic mass-energy) = sqrt(c^2/resq) * m * c^2
(relativistic kinetic energy) = (sqrt(c^2/resq)-1) * m * c^2
assume a bullet has mass 100 grain = 6.49 gram. (aside: the fact that "in" in grain looks like "m" in gram in some fonts is unfortunate.) (another aside: dram is another unit of mass used in firearms, 1/256 lb. dram sounds similar to gram. 1 dram = 1.77 gram. "if you are facing a charging rhino, be sure your shotgun shell is loaded with at least ___ [unintelligible]rams of black powder in order to stop it. but not too much or the gun will explode in your face.")
(rest mass-energy of 100 grain bullet) = 5.82e14 J
at typical bullet speed 0.0000031622777 c = sqrt(1e-11) c = 3110 ft/s = 2121 mph = 948 m/s : (relativistic kinetic energy) = 2911.9 J
0.01 c : (relativistic kinetic energy) = 2.9121e10 J (3162x speed ~= 10,000,000x energy, matching non-relativistic approximation)
0.1 c : 2.93e12 J (10x speed ~= 100x energy, matching non-relativistic approximation)
0.5 c : 9.01e13 J (50x speed ~= 3094x energy, not 2500x by non-relativistic approximation)
0.866 c = sqrt(0.75) c : 5.82e14 J (kinetic energy equals rest mass-energy)
0.9 c : 7.54e14 J
0.99 c : 3.546e15 J
expressing energy in terms of tons of TNT:
(rest mass-energy) = 5.82e14 J = 139 kiloton tnt
typical bullet speed 0.0000031622777 c : (relativistic kinetic energy) = 696 nanoton tnt = 9.74 grain tnt (which unsurprisingly is in the same order of magnitude as typical amounts of black powder in gun rounds)
0.01 c : 6.96 ton tnt
0.1 c : 701 ton tnt
0.5 c : 21.53 kiloton tnt
0.866 c : 139 kiloton tnt
0.9 c : 180 kiloton tnt
0.99 c : 848 kiloton tnt
inspiration: if a SpaceX Starship (approximately 10 kiloton tnt) were to explode on the launchpad, and a significant fraction of its chemical energy were freakishly transferred into a single bullet-sized piece of debris, how far would be safe distance to view the launch and not get hurt by debris?
answer, assuming no air resistance: there is no safe distance. inverting the equations above, a bullet with relativistic kinetic energy 10 kiloton tnt has speed 0.36 c. 5 kiloton tnt is 0.26 c, because maybe we care about conservation of momentum. in comparison, speed of low earth orbit is 0.000026 c, and earth escape velocity is 0.000037 c. a bullet in orbit can hit anywhere on earth; a bullet escaping earth can hit anywhere in the universe.
the SpaceX Starship is of course trying to deliver payloads much more massive than a bullet into orbit or to infinity. this fact alone is enough to conclude there is no safe distance.
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