A uniform, flexible and frictionless chain falling link by link from a heap by the edge of a table falls with an acceleration g/3 if the motion is nonconservative, but g/2 if the motion is conservative, g being the acceleration due to gravity. Unable to construct such a falling chain, we use instead higher-dimensional versions of it. A home camcorder is used to measure the fall of a three-dimensional version called an xyz-slider. After frictional effects are corrected for, its vertical falling acceleration is found to be ax/g=0.328±0.004. This result agrees with the theoretical value of ax/g=1/3 for an ideal energy-conserving xyz-slider.
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