Have you ever observed a child playing with toy blocks? A favorite game is to build towers and then make them topple like falling trees. To the eye of a trained physicist this should immediately look like an example of the physics of “falling chimneys,” when tall structures bend and break in mid-air while falling to the ground. The game played with toy blocks can actually reproduce well what is usually seen in photographs of falling towers, such as the one that appeared on the cover of the September 1976 issue of The Physics Teacher.1 In this paper we describe how we performed and analyzed these simple but interesting experiments with toy blocks.

1.
Albert A.
Bartlett
, “
More on the falling chimney
,”
Phys. Teach.
14
,
351
353
(Sept.
1976
); and cover photo of the same issue.
2.
Gabriele
Varieschi
and
Kaoru
Kamiya
, “
Toy models for the falling chimney
,”
Am. J. Phys.
71
(
10
),
1025
1031
(Oct.
2003
). See also the references in this paper for a complete bibliography on the subject.
3.
The Falling Chimney Web Page (http://myweb.lmu.edu/gvarieschi/chimney/chimney.html). This site contains all our photos and videos, plus links to other related pages.
4.
Assuming a square cross section for our structures is useful to simplify the calculations. Results for circular cross-sectional chimneys or similar structures do not change significantly.
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