Even those who have not been at war know that when a gun is fired it jumps back abruptly. When a rifle is fired, recoil in the shoulder occurs. But it is possible to become acquainted with recoil without having recourse to firearms. Pour some water into a test tube, cork it up and suspend it horizontally on two threads (Figure 1). Now turn on a burner under the test tube, the water will begin boiling, and in a couple of minutes the cork will fly out in one direction, while the test tube will be deflected in the opposite direction.

The force which drove the cork out of the test tube is steam pressure. And the force deflecting the test tube is also steam pressure. Both motions arose under the action of one and the same force. The same thing also happens in shooting, only there the action is not that of steam but of gunpowder gas.
Recoil is an inevitable consequence of the principle of equality between an action and its reaction. If the steam acts on the cork, the cork also acts on the steam in the opposite direction, and the steam transmits this reaction to the test tube.
Perhaps the following objection occurs to you: Can one and the same force really lead to such dissimilar effects? The rifle moves backwards only slightly, but the bullet flies far away. We hope, however, that such an objection had not occurred to the reader. Identical forces certainly can lead to different effects: for the acceleration which a body receives (and this is precisely the effect of the action of the force) is inversely proportional to its mass. We must write out the acceleration of one of the bodies (shell, bullet, cork) in the form
The acceleration of the bullet, and also of the rifle during recoil, lasts as long as the bullet is moving through the muzzle. Let us denote this time by
For the sake of simplicity, we shall assume the acceleration to be constant. Then the speed with which the bullet flies out of the muzzle of the rifle is
If we recall the vector nature of velocity, we can rewrite the last relation as follows:
Finally, let us rewrite our equation once again bringing the products of mass by velocity to one side: