Cis-rotated bun

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Cis-rotated bun
x = 7, y = 5, rule = B3/S23 4b2o$bo2bobo$obobobo$obo2bo$b2o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ THUMBSIZE 3 ZOOM 21 HEIGHT 400 SUPPRESS ]]
Pattern type Strict still life
Number of cells 14
Bounding box 7 × 5
Frequency class 30.1
Static symmetry Unspecified
Discovered by Unknown
Year of discovery Unknown

Cis-rotated bun is a 14-cell strict still life consisting of two mutually stabilising buns. It is one of six ways in which two buns can be arranged to create a still life, and one of the five which have two separate islands.

This specific isomer is named cis-rotated due to the two inducting faces being skewed from each other (hence rotated, as skewing forbids mirror symmetry), and the "denser" parts of each island are close to the outside (hence cis).

Occurrence

See also: List of common still lifes

Cis-rotated bun is the 120th most common 14-cell still life out of 619. It is about 500 times rarer than the trans-rotated bun.

Glider synthesis

A 5-glider synthesis of this still life was found in March 2023.[1]

See also

References

  1. shinjuku (#3929802623) (March 14, 2023). Job triggered by Adam P. Goucher at GitLab Catagolue project.

External links