No, I calculated the speed of the first link after falling 1000 meters.
Clearly you don't understand what you have calculated, so permit me the liberty of enlightening you: First, you assume that the chain accelerates at a
constant rate of
g m/s
2, i.e. free fall, through a distance of 1,000 metres. You calculate (from s =
1/
2.a.t
2) that this process takes 14.3 seconds. You then take the distance travelled, i.e. 1,000 metres, and divide it by 14.3 seconds, yielding 70 m/s. But this is the constant velocity (i.e. without acceleration) that the chain would have had to travel to cover 1,000 metres in 14.3 seconds. Ergo, it is the average velocity, as I said. Also, you haven't provided any justification for why the chain accelerates at
g m/s
2, which would only be the case if you threw the whole lot of chain over the edge all in one go.
I used the equations for objects under constant acceleration:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/acons.html#c2
Uncritically, I'm afraid.
The weight of a free falling body does not affect the speed or acceleration, so I have no idea what you mean by "weight of chain over the edge accelerate the entire chain". The weight of the chain over the edge can have no affect on the first link. and as long as the chain is taut the back link can never travel faster than the first link.
But that's the whole point: if there's chain over the edge and chain left at the top, the chain over the edge cannot accelerate at
g m/s
2 since the chain at the top is being accelerated horizontally by the pull of the part that is over the edge. It may help to think of the chain as laid out horizontally on top so that its entire length is perpendicular to the edge of the cliff. If what you're saying were correct, then a 10-ton mass at the top being pulled horizontally via a thin cord connected to a 10-gramme weight over the edge would accelerate at the same rate, i.e.
g m/s
2, as the reverse situation where a 10-ton weight over the edge pulls a 10-gramme weight horizontally at the top. That would be in total violation of Newton's Second Law of motion.
I would say the weight still on the cliff could slow the first link down, except that a frictionless environment was called for, so that won't happen.
The assumption of a frictionless environment does not remove the inertia of a mass. All it does is remove from consideration energy losses resulting from friction.
'Luthon64