Herschel transmitter

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Herschel transmitter
x = 19, y = 18, rule = B3/S23 6b2o$5bobo$3b3o$2bo3bo6bo$2b2ob2o6b3o$13bobo$15bo3$2obo$ob2o4$15b2o$ 15bo$16b3o$18bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ ZOOM 16 HEIGHT 480 GPS 10 LOOP 52 PAUSE 2 T 51 PAUSE 2 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Input Herschel
Output tandem glider
Number of cells 26
Bounding box 19 × 18
Step Unknown
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
116 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
Unknown
Spartan? Yes
Discovered by Paul Callahan
Year of discovery 1997

Herschel transmitter, in the narrow sense, is a stable Herschel-to-tandem glider converter found by Paul Callahan in May 1997. Labelled HSW-2T21_SW-7T38, it produces two gliders on parallel tracks separated by five half-diagonals. This G5 glider pair can be used as an input to the original Herschel receiver.

The converter consists of a house siamese shillelagh, a snake and an eater 1. The larger but more Spartan dead spark coil is sometimes substituted for the house siamese shillelagh, because a dead spark coil is easier to construct with a slow salvo. If the eater 1 is removed, a U-turner forms at generation 63 instead of the second glider.

In the broad sense, the term Herschel transmitter can refer to other Herschel-to-tandem glider converters provided that a corresponding receiver exists.

See also

External links