The answer should be equal effect, if all of the bullets momentum is transferred to the head.
What does 'equal effect' even mean?
This is your problem: you can't talk about the technical aspects in appropriate language.
Now, since all the bullet's momentum clearly was
not transferred to the head, what exactly is your point?
Were did you see the videos of unconcious people with their heads hanging free getting shot in the head with a high powered rifle?
Ah, the typical complaint of the layman: you haven't seen it
exactly duplicated, therefore your conclusions are invalid. Bull. Science doesn't care if you use a head, a melon, a human or a goat. The physics applies equally well in all cases.
What I have seen: film from the two world wars including people being shot in various parts of the body; experiments involving shooting live animals; experiments involving shooting other objects, including human skulls with ballistics gel material to represent skin and brain tissue; experiments involving shooting objects with various weapons to determine how much momentum gets transferred from the bullet to the target. Now explain to me why the conclusions drawn from those are invalid.
Please post the url.
Ah, the typical complaint of the internet troll.
Would it really surprise you to learn that I didn't actually see these things online, but on television shows, DVDs, or published books and papers describing the effects? I don't happen to have an url to give you. Explain to me why
that invalidates the argument.
Also, exlpain to me why you have suddenly gone very quiet about the ability of a human to localise sounds like rifle shots now you have been given personal experiences and proper explanations. Did you think we wouldn't notice your change of horse?