Crab
Crab (or quarter[1]) is a c/4 diagonal spaceship that was found by Jason Summers in September 2000. It is the smallest known diagonal spaceship other than the glider and it consists of two gliders pulling a tagalong.
Crab | |||||||||||
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Pattern type | Tagalong Spaceship | ||||||||||
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Number of cells | 25 | ||||||||||
Bounding box | 13×12 | ||||||||||
Direction | Diagonal | ||||||||||
Period | 4 | ||||||||||
Mod | 2 | ||||||||||
Speed | c/4 | ||||||||||
Speed (unsimplified) | c/4 | ||||||||||
Heat | 22.0 | ||||||||||
Discovered by | Jason Summers | ||||||||||
Year of discovery | 2000 | ||||||||||
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It was noticed by Nicolay Beluchenko in August 2005 that it can be converted into a small tubstretcher, as shown below.[2] This tubstretcher is the basis for the one per generation pattern.
Due to the diagonal glide symmetry and by simple inspection, the spaceship can easily be made to stretch two tub wicks simultaneously, via a domino spark repeatedly adding units to a tub or long^N barge. Additional non-stretching variants are possible by adding tub-eating c/4 spaceships at the back of the chain(s), at any distance.
Martin Grant found a synthesis for crab with the help of Tanner Jacobi and Brett Berger on December 26, 2014.[3] The cost has since been reduced several times, most recently to 14 gliders by Tanner Jacobi on August 16, 2020.[4]
Image gallery
See also
References
- "quarter". The Life Lexicon. Stephen Silver.
- H. Koenig (August 5, 2005). "New c/4 Diagonal Tubstretcher". Game of Life News. Retrieved on May 9, 2009.
- Martin Grant (December 26, 2014). "Re: How about a crab synthesis?". Retrieved on December 26, 2014.
- Tanner Jacobi (August 16, 20020). "Re: One Glider Seeds". Retrieved on August 16, 2020.
External links
- Quarter at the Life Lexicon
- 25P4H1V1.1 at Heinrich Koenig's Game of Life Object Catalogs
- Crab at Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue