Difference between revisions of "Tub-with-tail eater"
m (Synthesis) |
(Undo revision 69426 by AwesoMan3000 (talk): IMO these don't need to be distinguished) Tag: Undo |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
The '''tub-with-tail eater''' (or '''eater 5'''), commonly abbreviated to '''TWIT''', is an [[eater]] composed of a [[block]] and a [[tub with tail]]. It is capable of eating [[glider]]s from two perpendicular directions. It is generally used to absorb gliders in situations where the standard eater is insufficient, particularly because of its edge-eating ability. The eater 5 can be constantly renewed and hassled with an [[eater 1]], giving the [[eater/block frob]] or the eater/long-hook-with-tail frob. | The '''tub-with-tail eater''' (or '''eater 5'''), commonly abbreviated to '''TWIT''', is an [[eater]] composed of a [[block]] and a [[tub with tail]]. It is capable of eating [[glider]]s from two perpendicular directions. It is generally used to absorb gliders in situations where the standard eater is insufficient, particularly because of its edge-eating ability. The eater 5 can be constantly renewed and hassled with an [[eater 1]], giving the [[eater/block frob]] or the eater/long-hook-with-tail frob. | ||
Variants using different [[still life]]s are possible. For instance, the block can be replaced with a more complicated [[catalyst]], or extra catalysts can be added to perturb the block. Eaters created in this way form a significant proportion of Dean Hickerson's eater collection. A commonly applicable variant uses a [[long hook with tail]] rather than a block to catalyze the reaction, which can be used to compress [[Herschel]] [[Herschel loop|loop]]s to [[period]]s of | Variants using different [[still life]]s are possible. For instance, the block can be replaced with a more complicated [[catalyst]], or extra catalysts can be added to perturb the block. Eaters created in this way form a significant proportion of Dean Hickerson's eater collection. A commonly applicable variant uses a [[long hook with tail]] rather than a block to catalyze the reaction, which can be used to compress [[Herschel]] [[Herschel loop|loop]]s to [[period]]s of {{period|57|brief}}, {{period|58|brief}}, {{period|59|brief}}, and {{period|60|brief}}. | ||
==Image gallery== | ==Image gallery== |
Revision as of 22:15, 15 February 2020
Tub-with-tail eater | |||||||
View static image | |||||||
Pattern type | Constellation Eater | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of cells | 12 | ||||||
Bounding box | 9 × 6 | ||||||
Discovered by | Unknown | ||||||
Year of discovery | Unknown | ||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
|
The tub-with-tail eater (or eater 5), commonly abbreviated to TWIT, is an eater composed of a block and a tub with tail. It is capable of eating gliders from two perpendicular directions. It is generally used to absorb gliders in situations where the standard eater is insufficient, particularly because of its edge-eating ability. The eater 5 can be constantly renewed and hassled with an eater 1, giving the eater/block frob or the eater/long-hook-with-tail frob.
Variants using different still lifes are possible. For instance, the block can be replaced with a more complicated catalyst, or extra catalysts can be added to perturb the block. Eaters created in this way form a significant proportion of Dean Hickerson's eater collection. A commonly applicable variant uses a long hook with tail rather than a block to catalyze the reaction, which can be used to compress Herschel loops to periods of 57, 58, 59, and 60.
Image gallery
See also
External links
- Eater 5 at the Life Lexicon
- Tub-with-tail eater at Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue (pseudo-object)