the science or study of the motion of projectiles, as bullets, shells, or bombs.
the art or science of designing projectiles for maximum flight performance.
更多ballistics例句
In March, the ATF embedded a machine in the Columbia Police Department to process the ballistics data.
You have access to a handful of sound profiles, including a competitive mode for detecting footsteps, an ultra-low ballistics mode for punchy explosions, and non-gaming options “music” and “warm.”
One of the selling points of the technology was that it could capture DNA and ballistics information useful to investigators, but not all the stats previously offered by SDPD hold up today.
ShotSpotter’s other major selling point is that its technology helps police departments collect ballistics information and DNA evidence from shell casings, which can then be uploaded into law enforcement databases.
He admitted in court that he was not a pathologist, and that he did not have any formal training in ballistics or sound.
As he puts it in terms that could apply to ballistics, he is “plotting an arc of motions that plotted me.”
But DiMaio, with his ballistics and forensic credentials, may have been more persuasive.
To be sure, there are professorships, and ballistics experts in the Navy, but these aren't actually all that well paid.
He was tied to the cases through ballistics and DNA evidence.
Ballistics tests proved that it was Jeff's gun which had killed both Biggert and Carlson.
Another interesting and profitable province of the cinematograph is that concerning ballistics.
Have you ever had any formal training in ballistics or in exit wounds or entrance wounds—bullet wounds?
Well, I am not an expert on ballistics, but one cannot escape certain ballistic implications in this business.
Investigating the wound ballistics of various bullets and other military missiles.