Difference between revisions of "Syringe"

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|convertsto  = Herschel
|convertsto  = Herschel
|recovery    = 78
|recovery    = 78
|overclock    = 74
|c            = 66
|c            = 66
|bx          = 24
|bx          = 24
|by          = 34
|by          = 34
|spartan      = no
|spartan      = no
|recovery    = 78
|overclock    = 74
|discoverer  = Tanner Jacobi
|discoverer  = Tanner Jacobi
|discoveryear = 2015
|discoveryear = 2015
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|viewerconfig = #C [[ THUMBNAIL THUMBSIZE 2 X 4 Y 7 Z 16 WIDTH 600 HEIGHT 480 GPS 20 AUTOSTART PAUSE 2 T 165 PAUSE 2 LOOP 166 ]]
|viewerconfig = #C [[ THUMBNAIL THUMBSIZE 2 X 4 Y 7 Z 16 WIDTH 600 HEIGHT 480 GPS 20 AUTOSTART PAUSE 2 T 165 PAUSE 2 LOOP 166 ]]
}}
}}
The '''syringe''' is a glider-to-Herschel converter discovered by [[Tanner Jacobi]] on March 19, [[:Category:Patterns found in 2015|2015]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.conwaylife.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1651&start=0#p18086|title=Re: Let's find a G-to-X|author=Tanner Jacobi|date=March 19, 2015|accessdate=March 22, 2015}}</ref> composed of an [[eater 1]], a [[block]], a [[beehive with tail]], and a large [[weld|welded]] still life{{refn|group=note|{{LinkCatagolue|xs41_8e1eo0kcwo4oz33034al913kp|patternname=xs41_8e1eo0kcwo4oz33034al913kp|style=brief}}}} that combines an [[eater 2]] and an [[eater 5]]. It works by converting a bait [[block]] into a [[pi]], then [[hassle|hassling]] the pi into a [[B-heptomino]] that restores the bait block over the course of its evolution. Its repeat time is 78, but it can also "[[overclocking|overclock]]" to function with glider streams of period 74 or 75. Jeremy Tan, who coined the term 'syringe' to describe how it injects a glider into a Herschel system, observed that attempting to overclock the intermediate periods of 76 and 77 causes the block to become an LWSS or MWSS; this immediately crashes into the [[beehive with tail]] so is of limited utility. The eater 1 can be placed in 3 orientations.
The '''syringe''' is a glider-to-Herschel converter discovered by [[Tanner Jacobi]] on March 19, {{year|2015}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.conwaylife.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1651&start=0#p18086|title=Re: Let's find a G-to-X|author=Tanner Jacobi|date=March 19, 2015|accessdate=March 22, 2015}}</ref> composed of an [[eater 1]], a [[block]], a [[beehive with tail]], and a large [[weld|welded]] still life{{refn|group=note|{{LinkCatagolue|xs41_8e1eo0kcwo4oz33034al913kp|patternname=xs41_8e1eo0kcwo4oz33034al913kp|style=brief}}}} that combines an [[eater 2]] and an [[eater 5]]. It works by converting a bait [[block]] into a [[pi]], then [[hassle|hassling]] the pi into a [[B-heptomino]] that restores the bait block over the course of its evolution. Its repeat time is 78, but it can also "[[overclocking|overclock]]" to function with glider streams of period 74 or 75. Jeremy Tan, who coined the term 'syringe' to describe how it injects a glider into a Herschel system, observed that attempting to overclock the intermediate periods of 76 and 77 causes the block to become an LWSS or MWSS; this immediately crashes into the [[beehive with tail]] so is of limited utility. The eater 1 can be placed in 3 orientations.


The syringe allows much more compactness and timing versatility in signal circuitry than Herschel [[conduit]]s alone, and in combination with the [[Snark]], it can largely replace very long p1 Herschel tracks (if they are not required to be [[spartan]], and the dependent form ''is'' spartan) by simply passing a glider from somewhere near the start to somewhere near the destination. This works similarly to Herschel transmitters and receivers, but in more flexible way. Within 3 days of the syringe's discovery, over half of all known guns from periods 14 to 999 were obsoleted by loops involving a syringe and various Snarks.
The syringe allows much more compactness and timing versatility in signal circuitry than Herschel [[conduit]]s alone, and in combination with the [[Snark]], it can largely replace very long p1 Herschel tracks (if they are not required to be [[spartan]], and the dependent form ''is'' spartan) by simply passing a glider from somewhere near the start to somewhere near the destination. This works similarly to Herschel transmitters and receivers, but in more flexible way. Within 3 days of the syringe's discovery, over half of all known guns from periods 14 to 999 were obsoleted by loops involving a syringe and various Snarks.
Line 40: Line 39:
*[[Herschel receiver]]
*[[Herschel receiver]]
*[[Herschel transmitter]]
*[[Herschel transmitter]]
*[[Jormungant's G-to-H]]


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 05:22, 30 December 2019

Syringe
x = 41, y = 36, rule = B3/S23 2bo$obo$b2o10$25bo$23b3o$22bo$22b2o$7b2o$8bo$8bob2o$9bo2bo23bo$10b2o 24bo$25b2o9b3o$25b2o11bo4$34bo3b2o$33bobo3bo$32bobo3bo$28b2obobo3bo$ 28b2obo2b4obo$32bobo3bobo$28b2ob2o2bo2bobo$29bobo2b2o3bo$17b2o10bobo$ 17b2o11bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ THUMBNAIL THUMBSIZE 2 X 4 Y 7 Z 16 WIDTH 600 HEIGHT 480 GPS 20 AUTOSTART PAUSE 2 T 165 PAUSE 2 LOOP 166 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Conduit type Converter
Input Glider
Output Herschel
Number of cells 66
Bounding box 24 × 34
Step Unknown
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
78 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
74 ticks
Spartan? No
Discovered by Tanner Jacobi
Year of discovery 2015

The syringe is a glider-to-Herschel converter discovered by Tanner Jacobi on March 19, 2015[1] composed of an eater 1, a block, a beehive with tail, and a large welded still life[note 1] that combines an eater 2 and an eater 5. It works by converting a bait block into a pi, then hassling the pi into a B-heptomino that restores the bait block over the course of its evolution. Its repeat time is 78, but it can also "overclock" to function with glider streams of period 74 or 75. Jeremy Tan, who coined the term 'syringe' to describe how it injects a glider into a Herschel system, observed that attempting to overclock the intermediate periods of 76 and 77 causes the block to become an LWSS or MWSS; this immediately crashes into the beehive with tail so is of limited utility. The eater 1 can be placed in 3 orientations.

The syringe allows much more compactness and timing versatility in signal circuitry than Herschel conduits alone, and in combination with the Snark, it can largely replace very long p1 Herschel tracks (if they are not required to be spartan, and the dependent form is spartan) by simply passing a glider from somewhere near the start to somewhere near the destination. This works similarly to Herschel transmitters and receivers, but in more flexible way. Within 3 days of the syringe's discovery, over half of all known guns from periods 14 to 999 were obsoleted by loops involving a syringe and various Snarks.

The syringe was voted on ConwayLife.com as Pattern of the Year 2015.[2]

Dependent form

A variant of the syringe that replaces the welded eater 2 and eater 5 with a separate eater 2 and eater 1 was used in the Demonoid, a self-constructing spaceship. The eater 1 can only be made to fit if the syringe is followed by a dependent conduit. In rare cases where the following conduit does not allow any glider to escape at all (like the dependent beehive-producing H-to-MWSS conduit), only the eater 2 is required.

This 'dependent syringe', unlike the variant with the complex weld, is considered Spartan. It is most useful when attached to an Lx200, as this gives the minimal recovery time of 90.

Removal of block

If the initial transparent block is removed, subsequent gliders entering the syringe will be cleanly consumed by the eater 2. This was utilised by the 0E0P metacell in various places to act as a one-time valve, with the dependent form of the syringe.

See also

Notes

References

  1. Tanner Jacobi (March 19, 2015). "Re: Let's find a G-to-X". Retrieved on March 22, 2015.
  2. Alexey Nigin (February 11, 2016). "Re: Pattern of the Year 2015 (Votes)". Retrieved on February 15, 2016.

External links