Oblique spaceship

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Revision as of 14:22, 12 March 2018 by Calcyman (talk | contribs) (Also removed the two non-oblique rows; they could confuse people.)
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An oblique spaceship is a spaceship which moves neither orthogonally nor diagonally.

The simplest type is a knightship, so called because it moves parallel to a knight in chess. By analogy with the corresponding fairy chess pieces, the following other terms may be used to designate spaceships with different slopes:

Type Ship Movement Maximum speed
(Life)
Example
(2m,m)/n knightship knightwise (2,1)c/6 Sir Robin*
(3m,m)/n camelship camelwise (3,1)c/8 Gemini 3
(4m,m)/n giraffeship giraffewise (4,1)c/10 none found
(5m,m)/n ibisship ibiswise (5,1)c/12 Gemini
(6m,m)/n flamingoship flamingowise (6,1)c/14 none found
(3m,2m)/n zebraship zebrawise (3,2)c/10 none found
(4m,3m)/n antelopeship antelopewise (4,3)c/14 none found
...
(23m,5m)/n (23,5)c/56 waterbear

*Spaceship is elementary

A full list of spaceships in Life can be seen at List of spaceships; further spaceships in arbitrary isotropic non-totalistic rules are catalogued at the 5s project.

History

The first oblique spaceship was Andrew Wade's ibisship Gemini, based on the Chapman-Greene universal constructor. Dave Greene proceeded to build variants, called Geminoids, travelling in a variety of directions.

In early 2014, a collaborative effort was launched to build a half-baked knightship, which translates itself by (6, 3) each period and is therefore a knightship. Chris Cain optimised the construction to yield a smaller and faster parallel HBK.

In December 2014, Brett Berger constructed the first fast oblique spaceship in Conway's Game of Life, the waterbear, moving at a velocity of (23,5)c/79. It has a bounding box very slightly smaller than the parallel HBK. With a period of 158, it is the lowest-period oblique spaceship other than Sir Robin.

In March 2018, Adam P. Goucher and Tomas Rokicki discovered Sir Robin, the first elementary oblique ship. It is the fastest knightship and lowest-period oblique ship possible, and also the smallest known oblique ship.

Other rules

(5,2)c/190 oblique spaceship in Pedestrian Life (B38/S23)

Many automata extremely similar to Life have oblique ships and related technology. For example, Pedestrian Life has a naturally-occuring family of (5,2)c/190 ships, as well as a natural (101,3)c/1884 puffer; tDryLife has a slope 3 ship puffer that can be stabilized into a spaceship.

These natural spaceships and puffers are qualitatively different from any in Life, which are either large engineered constructions or, in the case of Sir Robin, the result of extensive computer search.

Also see