Carrier tie ship

From LifeWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Carrier tie ship
x = 6, y = 7, rule = B3/S23 4b2o$3bobo$3b2o$b2o$2bo$o$2o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ THUMBSIZE 3 ZOOM 21 HEIGHT 400 SUPPRESS ]]
Pattern type Strict still life
Number of cells 12
Bounding box 6 × 7
Frequency class 26.9
Discovered by Robert Wainwright
Everett Boyer
Year of discovery 1973

Carrier tie ship is a 12-cell still life. As its name implies, it involves an aircraft carrier having been tied to a ship.

Glider synthesis

x = 20, y = 23, rule = B3/S23 2bo$obo$b2o3$19bo$17b2o$18b2o7$12b2o3b2o$11bobo2bobo$13bo4bo4$7b2o$8b2o$7bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ THEME Book ZOOM 10 X 0 Y 0 GPS 12 AUTOSTART T 0 PAUSE 3 T 38 PAUSE 2 LOOP 39 ]]
A 5G synthesis
(click above to open LifeViewer)

Carrier tie ship can be constructed using 5 gliders, as shown above.[1] Several known alternate syntheses can be found in Mark Niemiec's database.[2]

Commonness

According to Catagolue, this is the 34th most common 12-cell still life, the 356th most common still life and the 378th most common object.

Below is shown the only collision in the octohash database with an occurrence of carrier tie ship in the ash.

x = 14, y = 11, rule = B3/S23 bo$obo$bobo5bo$2b2o3b3o$6bo$6b2o3$11b2o$11bobo$11bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ THEME Book ZOOM 10 X 0 Y 2 GPS 12 AUTOSTART T 0 PAUSE 3 T 105 PAUSE 2 LOOP 106 ]]
A collision from the octohash database
(click above to open LifeViewer)

References

External links