Difference between revisions of "Dinner table"

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{{LinkWeisstein|DinnerTable.html}}
{{LinkWeisstein|DinnerTable.html}}
{{LinkLexicon|lex_d.htm#dinnertable}}
{{LinkLexicon|lex_d.htm#dinnertable}}
{{Symmetry|osc=turn90}}

Revision as of 06:24, 1 April 2016

Dinner table
bo11b$b3o7b2o$4bo6bob$3b2o4bobob$9b2o2b$6bo6b$4b2obo5b2$2bo3bo2bo3b$bo b2o4bo3b$bo6bo4b$2o7b3ob$11bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]]
Pattern type Oscillator
Number of cells 33
Bounding box 13 × 13
Period 12
Mod Unknown
Heat 10.0
Volatility 0.55
Strict volatility Unknown
Discovered by Robert Wainwright
Year of discovery 1972

Dinner table is a period 12 oscillator. It was the first period 12 oscillator to be found, and was discovered by Robert Wainwright in 1972.[1] It consists of four eater 1s hassling a pre-beehive. In terms of its minimum population of 33 cells, it is the smallest known non-trivial period 12 oscillator, although the trivial mold and long hook eating tub contains only 24 cells.[2] It can also be extended as an agar.

Image gallery

Generation 1 reveals that the object being hassled is a pre-beehive
An extension of dinner table
RLE: here

See also

References

External links

Template:LinkWeisstein