Tony Smith
Meme Media
Melbourne, Australia
Registered: Oct 2003
Posts: 157 |
Asymmetry is rarely productive
... at least in the universe defined by Life in a Tube. The animated example that accompanies that post is highly symmetric, as are many of the more appealing examples that I have found.
The Tube geometry causes symmetry to arise more commonly than in less narrowly constrained 2D Life worlds. From many thousands of experiments, I have only discovered two basic forms of persistent asymmetry, with nothing really profound arising from either of them.
Eight months after completing the core logic to produce animated GIFs from Life in a Tube patterns, I have finally gotten around to incorporating that logic into a sufficiently neat CGI to start routine production of such GIFs in preparation for a long promised web "paper" more comprehensively exploring Life in a Tube.
Meanwhile, I thought I should at least share the attached GIF which shows more interesting details than any other asymmetric Tube I have found to date. It is basically period 32, although the leading edge is period 16 for almost 150 cells/generations before doubling. As a circumference 29 Tube, it is also at the wider end of the main range of interest. Asymmetric leading edges take longer to stabilise, but, typically for any periodic leading edge, after nearly another 200 generations it leaves a trail, each 32 generations, of three common Life forms: a block, a glider and a fleet, the latter two being only able to occur unpaired in asymmetric Tubes. The glider means that first trail is not quite stable, but the near stability is made more conspicuous because the fleet forms as close as possible to the path of the approaching glider for it to survive without immediate disruption. The diagonal path of the glider and the closeness of the period (32) to the circumference (29) then conspire to allow the glider a surprisingly long flight path which sees 14 gliders in flight and 10 fleets persisting at any time before the 15th glider finally disrupts the 11th fleet. Then after nearly another 400 generations of asymmetric disorder, another period 32 trail of common Life forms finally fully stabilises.
The attached GIF is 1178 pixels high because that's what it takes to show the whole long stabilisation process. It is 87 pixels wide to show the circumference 29 Tube rolled out three times for easier viewing. And it cycles through 33 frames, the first and last being held for longer to show that they are identical save for being displaced by 32 cells.
Tony Smith has attached this image:
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Tony Smith, Melbourne, Australia
Independent researcher
TransForum developer
Last edited by Tony Smith on 02-23-2004 at 08:28 AM
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