Cis-mirrored bookend
| Bookends | |||||||||
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| Pattern type | Strict still life | ||||||||
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| Number of cells | 14 | ||||||||
| Bounding box | 7 × 4 | ||||||||
| Frequency class | 18.7 | ||||||||
| Static symmetry | Unspecified | ||||||||
| Discovered by | Unknown | ||||||||
| Year of discovery | Unknown | ||||||||
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Bookends (or cis-mirrored hook) is a still life composed of two bookends.
Commonness
Bookends is the forty-sixth most common still life in Achim Flammenkamp's census, being less common than dead spark coil but more common than elevener.[1] It is also the fifty-third most common object on Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue.[2]
In D2_+1 symmetry, it is the 13th most common still life, being about 450 times more common than in an asymmetric soup, and it is the second most common still life after dead spark coil that takes advantage of symmetry to be much more common.
As a catalyst
Bookends are very useful catalysts for symmetrical objects. Three objects are below: the most common natural period-29 oscillator, the canonical p40 pre-pulsar shuttle, and the original form of the p32 honey farm hassler.
| The three oscillators described above (click above to open LifeViewer) RLE: here Plaintext: here |
See also
References
- ↑ Achim Flammenkamp (September 7, 2004). "Most seen natural occurring ash objects in Game of Life". Retrieved on January 15, 2009.
- ↑ Adam P. Goucher. "Statistics". Catagolue. Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
External links
- Cis-mirrored bookend at the Life Lexicon
- The 619 fourteen-bit still-lifes at Mark D. Niemiec's Life Page