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View Full Version : how does a boomerang behave in empty space and gravity?


raaaid
Oct15-03, 03:34 PM
If a space ship throws a boomerang in the vacuum of the space but with some gravity from earth. Will it have the same trayectory than if you throw a stone of equal mass than the boomerang with equal force?
thanks

chroot
Oct15-03, 04:07 PM
Yup. There are no areodynamic forces that would make the stone and boomerang's trajectories any different.

- Warren

jcsd
Oct15-03, 04:24 PM
As Rolf Harris sang: "My bommerang won't come back".

renedox
Oct16-03, 05:05 AM
What makes a boomerang return?

Jonathan
Oct16-03, 05:16 AM
You might post a new thread on this, but it has to do with the wind and their shape.

abhishek
Oct16-03, 05:18 AM
Asymmetrical design (it's a bit crook one way).

LURCH
Oct16-03, 03:10 PM
Yes, it is asymmetry that makes them return, but not the asymmetry of their crooked design. Rather, it is asymmetrical lift. Like the rotary wing of a helicopter, when the boomerang is rotating one side (the side going into the wind) generates more lift than the other. This side rises up, causing the entire device to "bank". What aviators refer to as "the horizontal component of lift" then makes it turn. Without an atmosphere, the boomerang would just fly straight along a ballistic trajectory.