katadder said:
no try with a really big magnet and a lightweight but tough dart that would be fired down it. thats the same differance as my small magnet and and iron filing. basically you wouldnt feel it. most pressure as pointed out by mhensley is on the 2 opposing rails, pushing apart not back.
not saying the projectile wouldnt have backwards force but this would be against the magnetic field which can be converted into other energy and certainly not enough to effect the firer in any significant way.
consider current rifles - with the speed the round flys out the barrel if all this also went backwards then you would lose your shoulder, however because the round is so much smaller then ii requires alot less pressure so the recoil isnt huge. this is the same with gauss weapons except theres even less backwards pressure because of the way they accelerate the round. the reason that current gauss type weapons are strapped down is not because of massive recoil but to actually keep it steady because even slight recoil would end up with the round going anywhere and something moving that fast you dont want to happen, basically simulating someone holding it, if they could hold something that big.
This is getting silly.
You are deeply confused between energy and momentum. They are different things. Whatever happens to the energy, whatever form it is in, the momentum of the projectile must nevertheless be balanced by the recoil momentum of the weapon.
But that's ultimately a minor point. It doesn't really matter whether or not you understand the workings of a sci-fi gun. What is much more important - for you, at least - is the attitude you take towards learning.
You don't understand physics. You like to talk as if you do, but you don't. Various people who do understand physics have tried, with varying degrees of patience, to explain to you some physical principles that you don't understand. You have remained impervious to this new information, and have insisted on pressing on with your misconceptions.
The world is big and complex. It is full of things you do not yet understand. If this is the attitude you take in general to people trying to explain things to you, you will never ever understand any more of the world than you do right now. And that is a tragic thing in a human being.
I urge you, in all humanity, to abandon this sorry thread. Read up on some physics with an open mind, if you're still interested in how these things work. Or do something else with your time. But, at all costs, seek out new knowledge, welcome new learning, and strive to understand the world a little more each day.