What Makes a Boomerang Come Back?

The boomerang is one of humanity’s oldest heavier-than-air flying inventions. King Tutankhamen, who  lived during the 14th century, owned an extensive collection, and aboriginal Australians used boomerangs in  hunting and warfare at least as far back as 10,000 years ago. The world’s oldest boomerang, discovered in Poland’s Carpathian Mountains, is estimated to be more than 20,000 years  old. Anthropologists theorize that the first boomerangs were heavy projectile objects thrown by hunters to bludgeon a target with speed and accuracy. They were most likely made out of flattened sticks or animal tusks, and they weren’t intended to return to their  thrower—that is, until someone unknowingly carved the weapon into just the right shape needed for it to spin. A  happy accident, huh? Proper wing design produces the lift needed for a boomerang’s flight, says John “Ernie” Esser, a boomerang hobbyist who works as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at Irvine’s  Math Department. “The wings of a boomerang are designed to generate lift as they spin through the air,” Esser  says. “This is due to the wings’ airfoil shape, their angle of  attack, and the possible addition of beveling on the  underside of the wings.” But a phenomenon known as gyroscopic precession is the key to making a returning boomerang come back to its thrower. “When the boomerang spins, one wing is actually moving through the air  faster than the other [relative to the air] as the boomerang is moving forward as a whole,” explains Darren Tan, a  PhD student in physics at Oxford University. “As the top wing is spinning forward, the lift force on that wing is  greater and results in unbalanced forces that gradually turn the boomerang.” The difference in lift force between  the two sides of the boomerang produces a consistent torque that makes the boomerang turn. It soars through he air and gradually loops back around in a circle.

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