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Gunpowder is a substance which burns very rapidly and is used as a propellant in firearms. There are two types:
Black powder—invented by the Chinese in the 9th Century—was the only widely-known and used practical explosive until the 20th Century. However, it is now primarily only used for fireworks, model rocket engines and in reproduction weapons.
Smokeless powder replaced black powder as a propellant at the end of the 19th Century and is used in all modern guns.
Both forms of gunpowder burn producing a subsonic deflagration wave rather than the supersonic detonation wave which high explosives would produce. This reduces peak pressures in a gun, but makes it less suitable for shattering rock or fortifications.
Although historically gunpowder meant black powder, as in the Gunpowder plot, modern references usually imply smokeless powder when referring to the propellant in small arms.
Category:Explosives
Category:Firearm propellants
Category:Granular materials
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