Rake (cellular automaton)

From HandWiki
Short description: Type of moving pattern which periodically produces spaceships

A rake, in the lexicon of cellular automata, is a type of puffer train, which is an automaton that leaves behind a trail of debris. In the case of a rake, however, the debris left behind is a stream of spaceships,[1] which are automata that "travel" by looping through a short series of iterations and end up in a new location after each cycle returns to the original configuration.

A selection of rakes in Conway's Game of Life

In Conway's Game of Life, the discovery of rakes was one of the key components needed to form the breeder, the first known pattern in Life in which the number of live cells exhibits quadratic growth. A breeder is formed by arranging several rakes so that the gliders—the smallest possible spaceships—they generate interact to form a sequence of glider guns, patterns which emit gliders. The emitted gliders fill a growing triangle of the plane of the game.[2] More generally, when a rake exists for a cellular automaton rule (a mathematical function defining the next iteration to be derived from a particular configuration of live and dead cells), one can often construct puffers which leave trails of many other kinds of objects, by colliding the streams of spaceships emitted by multiple rakes moving in parallel.[3] As David Bell writes:

The "space rake", which moves orthogonally ten units through a twenty step cycle, emitting one glider per cycle

The first rake to be discovered, in the early 1970s, was the "space rake", which moves with speed c/2 (or one unit every two steps), emitting a glider every twenty steps.[5] For Life, rakes are now known that move orthogonally with speeds c/2, c/3, c/4, c/5, 2c/5, 2c/7, c/10[6][better source needed] and 17c/45, and diagonally with speeds c/4 and c/12, with many different periods.[7] Rakes are also known for some other life-like}} cellular automata, including Highlife,[8] Day & Night,[9] and Seeds.[10]

Gotts (1980) shows that the space rake in Life can be formed by a "standard collision sequence" in which a single glider interacts with a widely separated set of 3-cell initial seeds (blinkers and blocks). As a consequence, he finds lower bounds on the probability that these patterns form in any sufficiently sparse and sufficiently large random initial condition for Life. This result leads to standard collision sequences for many other patterns such as breeders.[11]

References

  1. Rake, Life lexicon . Rake, E. Weisstein.
  2. Gardner, M. (1983). "The Game of Life, Part III". W.H. Freeman. pp. 241–257. 
  3. For this reason, Jason Summers' life status page describes a rake as a "versatile puffer", and collects data on the existence of rakes for various speeds and periods of puffers.
  4. David I. Bell, Speed c/3 Technology in Conway's Life, 1999.
  5. Space rake, Life lexicon . Space rake, E. Weisstein. The first published description of the space rake was in Lifeline, a newsletter published by R. Wainwright in the early 1970s, issue 3.6 (index).
  6. "is this c/10 spaceship known? - Page 8 - ConwayLife.com". https://conwaylife.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2057&start=175. 
  7. Jason Summers' life status page.
  8. David I. Bell, HighLife - An Interesting Variant of Life, 1994.
  9. David I. Bell, Day & Night - An Interesting Variant of Life, 1997.
  10. Patterns for the Seeds rule, collected by Jason Summers.
  11. Gotts, N. M. (2000). "Emergent phenomena in large sparse random arrays of Conway's 'Game of Life'". International Journal of Systems Science 31 (7): 873–894. doi:10.1080/002077200406598.