Difference between revisions of "41P7.2"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Apple Bottom (talk | contribs) |
Apple Bottom (talk | contribs) m (pdid) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Oscillator | {{Oscillator | ||
|name | |name = 41P7.2 | ||
|pname | |pname = 41p7.2 | ||
|c | |c = 41 | ||
|bx | |bx = 13 | ||
|by | |by = 14 | ||
|p | |p = 7 | ||
|m | |m = 7 | ||
|h | |h = 6.6 | ||
|v | |v = 0.38 | ||
|discoverer | |discoverer = Dean Hickerson | ||
|rulemin | |rulemin = B3/S23 | ||
|rulemax | |rulemax = B378/S23678 | ||
|life105 | |life105 = true | ||
|life106 | |life106 = true | ||
|plaintext | |plaintext = true | ||
|rle = | |rle = true | ||
| | |apgcode = xp7_wg886picgc48czoi7o5knzx343 | ||
| | |pentadecathlonid = 41P7.2 | ||
|animated = true | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''41P7.2''' is an unnamed [[period]]-[[:Category:oscillators with period 7|7]] [[oscillator]] discovered by [[Dean Hickerson]] no later than November [[:Category:Patterns found in 1998|1998]]. In [[generation]] 5 it provides a two-[[cell]] [[spark]], making it useful in the construction of higher-period oscillators. | '''41P7.2''' is an unnamed [[period]]-[[:Category:oscillators with period 7|7]] [[oscillator]] discovered by [[Dean Hickerson]] no later than November [[:Category:Patterns found in 1998|1998]]. In [[generation]] 5 it provides a two-[[cell]] [[spark]], making it useful in the construction of higher-period oscillators. |
Revision as of 12:03, 25 February 2018
41P7.2 | |||||||
View animated image | |||||||
View static image | |||||||
Pattern type | Oscillator | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of cells | 41 | ||||||
Bounding box | 13 × 14 | ||||||
Period | 7 | ||||||
Mod | 7 | ||||||
Heat | 6.6 | ||||||
Volatility | 0.38 | ||||||
Strict volatility | 0.38 | ||||||
Discovered by | Dean Hickerson | ||||||
Year of discovery | Unknown | ||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
|
41P7.2 is an unnamed period-7 oscillator discovered by Dean Hickerson no later than November 1998. In generation 5 it provides a two-cell spark, making it useful in the construction of higher-period oscillators.