ChatterBank3 mins ago
Bullet
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The bullet would leave the muzzle of the gun at the same speed as it would normally (that is the same as if you were not on the train) plus the speed of the train. Just like any othe projectile it would travel in a sraight line for some distance, gradually slow down due to air resistance, and then gravity would become a more increasing force compared with the momentum of the bullet and it would fall to earth, provided it did not hit an obstacle on its way.
Now the train in the meantime would travelling in the same direction as the bullet, but unable to catch it up in the initial part of its trajectory. However, when the bullet's speed decayed and it fell to earth the train would now be much faster and it would catch it up, probably after the bullet had stopped moving and was lying on the ground. The disatnce travelled during the fast part of the bullet's trajectory is unlikey to be "made up" by the train, so there is no risk of firing forward and shooting yourself.