As a pilot, I am looking at this like the bullet is an airplane. ........ snip....... I am totally contrary to all the ballisticians in this regard, because I think they are wrong........ snip...........
Look, I hate to rain on your parade, but aerodynamic jump is settled science and it has been for a long time. My most thorough involvement with the concept of aerodynamic jump was during my time at the U.S. Navy's Fighter Weapons School (known by the civilian public as "Top Gun") back in 1975 flying the F-14 fleet defense aircraft. This aircraft had a 20mm M-61 Gatling cannon and a gun-sight which was significantly more sophisticated than earlier gun-sights. That is because the F-14 had huge computing power compared with previous aircraft as well as a very good radar system which could reliably provide accurate ranging information to the fire control computer.
But aerodynamic jump wasn't invented with the F-14; far from it. It has been a factor in maneuvering gun sight systems well before my time in the military service.
Often, when firing a forward firing gun of the type carried by fighter aircraft, the angle of attack on the aircraft is large. In other words, the aircraft (and its gun) is pointing in a direction quite different from the relative wind. That produces an exaggerated version of the relatively mild crosswinds we target shooters experience and it makes aerodynamic jump an important factor to consider.
The fire control system solution required to hit a maneuvering aircraft under conditions where the range, angle-off, airspeed, altitude, air density, g-loading, angle of attack, are all constantly changing is a difficult one. If the scientists who developed this particular fire control system failed to have a good understanding of aerodynamic jump, they would not have been able to build a gun-sight which would work properly. The fact that they did it, along with my several interviews with the Grumman project manager for the F-14 gun sight convinced me that they did indeed know what they were talking about.
The proof of the pudding is, of course, in the eating. The air-to-air gunnery missions I flew against both a towed banner and a maneuvering "Dart" target (kind of like a huge lawn dart on the end of a long wire attached to a maneuvering tow aircraft) were not only educational, they were fun especially when scoring hits which I did with regularity. Had the gun sight and fire control computer designers been ignorant of what aerodynamic jump is and how it works, I would never had scored any hits.
Previously I had flown many air-to-air gunnery training flights in aircraft such as the F-11, F-8, and the F-4E, aircraft equipped with more primitive fire control systems than the F-14. Nevertheless, their relatively rudimentary gun sight computers took into account aerodynamic jump too and hits on the desired targets were achieved with regularity although in a much more narrow window. Why? Because one factor taken into account was aerodynamic jump. It's old news. People who need to understand it do indeed understand it and they have done so for a long long time.