Cis-mirrored wing
| Cis-mirrored wing | |||||||||
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| Pattern type | Strict still life | ||||||||
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| Number of cells | 16 | ||||||||
| Bounding box | 9 × 4 | ||||||||
| Frequency class | 21.1 | ||||||||
| Static symmetry | Unspecified | ||||||||
| Discovered by | Unknown | ||||||||
| Year of discovery | Unknown | ||||||||
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Cis-mirrored wing is a 16-cell strict still life consisting of two mutually stabilising wings. It is one of six ways in which two wings can be arranged to create a still life, and one of the five which have two separate islands.
This specific arrangement is named cis due to the two inducting faces not being skewed from each other, and the "denser" parts of each island are on the same side. As such, it is the only one of the six with mirror symmetry.
Commonness
Cis-mirrored wing is the ninety-second most common object on Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue.[1] In odd orthogonal symmetries (D2_+1, D2_+2, D4_+1, D8_+1), it is the twenty-second through twenty-seventh most common object, with the exact ranking depending on the specific symmetry.
Despite wings being more common than doves, the cis-mirrored wing is slightly less common than the cis-mirrored dove; this is true in both asymmetric and symmetric soups.
Glider synthesis
All strict still lifes with a population of 22 or fewer cells, all oscillators with 16 or fewer cells, and all spaceships with 31 or fewer cells are known to be glider-constructible. A glider synthesis of this object can be found in the infobox to the right.
See also
References
- ↑ Adam P. Goucher. "Statistics". Catagolue. Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
External links
- The 3286 sixteen-bit still-lifes at Mark D. Niemiec's Life Page (16.10)