V spark

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V spark
x = 3, y = 2, rule = B3/S23 obo$bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ HEIGHT 500 THUMBSIZE 3 ZOOM 60 THEME 6 GPS 4 ]]
Pattern type Spark
Number of cells 3
Bounding box 3 × 2
Static symmetry Unspecified
Discovered by Unknown
Year of discovery 1970

A V spark is a common triplet spark. It is a parent of the domino, another spark which dies immediately.

Two common grandparents of the V spark are pentominoes: the short table and crotchet both evolve into a pentaplet, which is also V-shaped, which then becomes the triplet V spark afterwards. The V spark can be commonly found from the decay of much larger sparks such as the phi spark, line-of-six spark and twin bees shuttle spark. As such, V sparks are produced frequently by the twin bees shuttle as well as phi-sparker oscillators such as the pentadecathlon and Tanner's p46.

The spark can convert a pre-block or block into a glider as shown below; an example application is new gun 2. It can also turn a glider into a block, so two V sparks can make a reflector. The simplest example of this mechanism is the PD-pair reflector.

x = 5, y = 4, rule = B3/S23 bo$2o2bo$3bo$4bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ HEIGHT 500 THUMBSIZE 3 ZOOM 36 THEME 6 GPS 4 AUTOSTART T 0 PAUSE 3 LOOP 24 ]]
V spark converting a pre-block into a glider
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RLE: here Plaintext: here

A V-shaped motif can be seen in many still lifes. The tub can be seen as the V spark with an additional stabilising cell, and the boat one with two. Two V sparks can be combined to create either a beehive or barge, both of which are stable. The V is generally considered too primitive to be a true still life component.

See also

External links