What's the farthest anyone has ever thrown a projectile?

Nothing fuel-powered, I’m talking powered 100% by kinetic energy

Baseball

Boomerang

A previous thread(2006)
Flight distance record for a hand-thrown object?

Are you asking about hand-thrown objects? Or human-powered but not necessarily by hand (e.g. a golf ball counts)? Or are you including machines that throw projectiles (trebuchet, artillery)? What about things that are initially self-propelled, then travel the rest of the way by kinetic energy (e.g. ICBMs, interplanetary probes)?

Considering an ICBM to be thrown is pushing it just a tad. :stuck_out_tongue:

I’d say hand-thrown.

I wonder if an astronaut has thrown something that might still be travelling?

I think we know what you mean but anything that is moving has kinetic energy, and nothing is “powered” by kinetic energy. I think you mean that all of the kinetic energy comes from the human throwing it.

Ie, ballistics, with a one-off energy initiation and source biologically generated and mechanically transferred by one system.

I have never in my life heard of the act of striking a golf ball with a golf club being called “throwing.”

I think it’s pretty clear the OP wants to know what the record is for the furthest a human has thrown an object by THROWNG it - using their arm and hand to throw something without the benefit of a machine or engine of some kind.

Clearly the record, assuming throwing the object from level ground, will be held by an person throwing an object designed for this purpose., probably some sort of Frisbee type thing. Throwing a baseball 440 feet is an absolutely incredible feat - there are professional baseball players who can’t HIT a baseball that far - but some types of Frisbee, thrown expertly, will go way, way further. The earlier thread makes mention of some product of this sort that a guy throw over 1300 feet.

The current frisbee (golf disc) distance record is 1,109 feet (338 m).

I used to own one of these, until my brother discovered they don’t float nearly as well as they fly…

The bolded part is where things gets grey, and I would suggest the OP probably didn’t intend to include objects designed to extend distance traveled by taking advantage of lift, air currents, etc… at least that’s what I get from using the term “projectile”.

A person can throw a paper airplane (or even a balloon) into the wind and have it travel very long distances; far beyond the distance the person actually “threw” it. I’d say the boomerang record shouldn’t qualify, but the baseball record should.

I agree that the term “projectile” conjures up images of non-aerolifted objects but just putting spin on a baseball would put it into the aerodynamical category. I also think that it would be easy to qualify the question to specify “no wind currents, on level ground” to remove the cases of paper airplanes flying by the wind or dropped from a height.

I don’t think an astronaut has ever had the opportunity to throw something beyond earth or the moon’s gravity. Although throwing something while in orbit is going to win you the record. See for example the half a million yard throw from February, on the ISS (YouTube).

Indoor record 226 ft.: Paper Airplane Throw World Record Broken | Live Science

I guess it depends on whether an object accidentally dropped by an astronaut on EVA counts as ‘thrown’ - a dropped/lost tool will carry on orbiting the Earth for a long time - and that’s long ‘throw’ - if the scenario qualifies at all.

Astronauts have intentionally thrown objects off the ISS. Cubesats, for example. Assuming the cubesat stayed in orbit around 6 months, that’s 74 million miles.

Does that count both out and back, though?

Came it to say this.

Non-returning boomerangs.