Difference between revisions of "$rats"

From LifeWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Corrected thumbsize)
m (By my count it actually costs 136 gliders)
Line 18: Line 18:
|isorulemin      = B3-acey/S2-n3-ijy
|isorulemin      = B3-acey/S2-n3-ijy
|isorulemax      = B2in34cey5cin6cn7c8/S01c234-inz5678
|isorulemax      = B2in34cey5cin6cn7c8/S01c234-inz5678
|synthesis        = 100
|synthesis        = 136
|synthesisRLE    = true
|synthesisRLE    = true
|plaintext        = true
|plaintext        = true

Revision as of 02:33, 19 May 2019

$rats
5b2o5b$6bo5b$4bo7b$2obob4o3b$2obo5bobo$3bo2b3ob2o$3bo4bo3b$4b3obo3b$7b o4b$6bo5b$6b2o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ GPS 3 LOOP 6 THUMBSIZE 2 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 480 ]]
Pattern type Oscillator
Oscillator type Billiard table
Number of cells 32
Bounding box 12 × 11
Period 6
Mod 6
Heat 2
Volatility 0.17
Strict volatility 0.17
Discovered by David Buckingham
Year of discovery 1972

$rats is a period 6 oscillator that was found by David Buckingham in September 1972.[1] It was one of the first period 6 oscillators to be discovered, and it is a billiard table configuration.

References

  1. Robert Wainwright (September 1972). Lifeline, vol 5, p. 1.

External links

Template:LinkWeisstein