Chris,
Not too bad. You got 2/4.
We'll give C7 a chance to try his hand, if he wants, and tomorrow I'll post the "whys".
Tom
PS. Nope, not a teacher. I'm a working mechanical engineer (bioengineering). But I have taught engineering dynamics for freshmen/sophmore college engineering students. That was a lot of fun.
And I've helped raise a passel of kids thru their "science fair" days.
PPS. You guessed right on the bullet spinning. For aerodynamic stabilization. Same as with a football. No spin, you can't throw it far or accurate. It'll start to tumble.
"Rifling" is helical grooves in the barrel that dig into the sides of the soft, lead bullet, that cause the bullet to spin. Makes it much, much, much more stable in flight (like a gyroscope or a frisbee) & therefore much more accurate.
A spinning bullet (whether shot or dropped) will maintain it's original orientation. A non-spinning one will orient itself (weather-cock) to the apparent wind to minimize drag forces.
Care to adjust any of your answers?
;-)