Rifle

A rifle is a long-barreled firearm designed for accurate shooting, distinguished by having a barrel cut with a helical or spiralling pattern of grooves (rifling).[1][2][3] Most rifles are designed to be held with both hands and braced against the shoulder via a buttstock for stability. Rifles are used in warfare, law enforcement, hunting and target shooting sports.

The invention of rifling separated such firearms from the earlier smoothbore weapons (e.g., arquebuses, muskets, and other long guns), greatly elevating their accuracy and general effectiveness. The raised areas of a barrel's rifling are called lands; they make contact with and exert torque on the projectile as it moves down the bore, imparting a spin. When the projectile leaves the barrel, this spin persists and lends gyroscopic stability to the projectile due to conservation of angular momentum, increasing accuracy and hence effective range. The class of firearm was originally termed the rifled gun, with the verb to rifle referring to the early modern machining process of creating grooves with cutting tools.

Like all typical firearms, a rifle's projectile (bullet) is propelled by the contained deflagration of a combustible propellant compound (originally black powder and now nitrocellulose and other smokeless powders), although other propulsive means are used, such as compressed air in air rifles, which are popular for vermin control, small game hunting, competitive target shooting and casual sport shooting (plinking).

  1. ^ "Friedrich Engels. The History of the Rifle. Ende Oktober 1860 bis 18. Januar 1861", Karl Marx / Friedrich Engels: Werke, Artikel, Entwürfe, Oktober 1859 bis Dezember 1860, De Gruyter, pp. 1008–1010, 31 December 1984, doi:10.1515/9783050076119-127, ISBN 978-3-05-007611-9, retrieved 25 May 2024
  2. ^ "Friedrich Engels. On Rifled Cannon. 1. Hälfte März 1860", Karl Marx / Friedrich Engels: Werke, Artikel, Entwürfe, Oktober 1859 bis Dezember 1860, De Gruyter, pp. 898–901, 31 December 1984, doi:10.1515/9783050076119-093, ISBN 978-3-05-007611-9, retrieved 25 May 2024
  3. ^ Shafer, Matt (2023). "Rifle Theory: Engels and the History of Technology". Political Theory. 51 (4): 597–617. doi:10.1177/00905917231155277. ISSN 0090-5917.