Cardboard boomerang experiments and calculations

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on designing an experiment using cardboard boomerangs for a class project, focusing on calculating velocity and angular momentum. The participant is unsure how to generate lift with a flat boomerang and seeks guidance on finding the lift coefficient. Suggestions include researching how boomerangs work, particularly the importance of airfoil shapes for generating lift. Resources such as videos and Wikipedia articles on boomerangs are recommended for further understanding and calculation methods. The goal is to test the boomerangs and validate the calculations made during the experiment.
jjellybean320
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I have to come up with an experiment using cardboard boomerangs that the rest of the class will do. The class then has to make calculations and test out the boomerangs to see if their calculations were correct.

However, i don't know what kind of experiment I can have the class do with cardboard boomerangs. How could i find the velocity or the angular momentum? and How could i prove that my calculations are right?

Please help. thank you.
 
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jjellybean320 said:
I have to come up with an experiment using cardboard boomerangs that the rest of the class will do. The class then has to make calculations and test out the boomerangs to see if their calculations were correct.

However, i don't know what kind of experiment I can have the class do with cardboard boomerangs. How could i find the velocity or the angular momentum? and How could i prove that my calculations are right?

Please help. thank you.

Welcome to the PF.

What research have you done so far on how boomerangs work? Can a flat boomerang work, or does it need to be a shape other than flat?


EDIT -- I don't mean the shape in the U-shape direction, I mean the contour of the material...
 
yes a flat boomerang will work because i am using very light cardboard, and the boomerang will be very small. I have tried to find the radius of path but i need to know the lift coefficient of my boomerang. I don't know how I would find that out. So I thought about simply trying to find the velocity, but I don't know how I would go about doing that.
 
jjellybean320 said:
yes a flat boomerang will work because i am using very light cardboard, and the boomerang will be very small. I have tried to find the radius of path but i need to know the lift coefficient of my boomerang. I don't know how I would find that out. So I thought about simply trying to find the velocity, but I don't know how I would go about doing that.

How do you expect to get lift from a flat boomerang? What have you read so far about how boomerangs work?
 
http://blossoms.mit.edu/video/tan/tan-watch.html

I have watched his video. That is the boomerang i intend to make. I want to know the possible calculations I can make with my level of physics understanding (I am an ap physics student).
 
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jjellybean320 said:
http://blossoms.mit.edu/video/tan/tan-watch.html

I have watched his video. That is the boomerang i intend to make. I want to know the possible calculations I can make with my level of physics understanding (I am an ap physics student).

The concept I was asking about was how you generate lift with the cardboard. I didn't watch the full 30-minute video, but presumably he talks about how to bend the cardboard to make more of an airfoil shape with lift.

The wikipedia link has lots of good info:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boomerang

They talk about the airfoil and lift aspects, and there are links to cardboard/paper boomerang articles.

As for calculations, I'd look for any lift calculations that are outlined in the wikipedia or other articles, and see if you can relate that to how quickly the boomerang turns in its flight.
 
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thanks, i'll look into that.
 
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