- #36
BobG
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
- 352
- 88
Five.
You don't want the shooter to shoot directly at you. Other than directly at you, there are only four directions the shooter can shoot and hit you.
Rebounds from the wall come off the wall at the same angle they approached the wall. The sum of the angle on the side wall plus the end wall has to equal 90 degrees. (In other words, if the bullet approached and left the side wall at 30 degrees, it will approach and leave the end wall at 60 degrees.
That means a shot will not cover the entire area of the rectangle no longer how many times it bounces. You could select an angle that will cover a huge percentage of the rectangle, but, it can never cover the entire rectangle and there are still only four possible directions that you can be hit from.
Essentially, you could consider the rebounds as the mirror image of an infinitely expandable rectangle and the path of the bullet could eventually be expanded into a large parrellelogram that constantly repeats.
And, because the departure from the wall has to equal the approach to the wall, there's only four possible indirect directions the shooter can shoot that will actually hit you. And four instead of two because you also have to account for your mirror image on the other side of the shooter (in other words, the bullet can actually travel two different directions along the same line).
You don't want the shooter to shoot directly at you. Other than directly at you, there are only four directions the shooter can shoot and hit you.
Rebounds from the wall come off the wall at the same angle they approached the wall. The sum of the angle on the side wall plus the end wall has to equal 90 degrees. (In other words, if the bullet approached and left the side wall at 30 degrees, it will approach and leave the end wall at 60 degrees.
That means a shot will not cover the entire area of the rectangle no longer how many times it bounces. You could select an angle that will cover a huge percentage of the rectangle, but, it can never cover the entire rectangle and there are still only four possible directions that you can be hit from.
Essentially, you could consider the rebounds as the mirror image of an infinitely expandable rectangle and the path of the bullet could eventually be expanded into a large parrellelogram that constantly repeats.
And, because the departure from the wall has to equal the approach to the wall, there's only four possible indirect directions the shooter can shoot that will actually hit you. And four instead of two because you also have to account for your mirror image on the other side of the shooter (in other words, the bullet can actually travel two different directions along the same line).
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