A typical chaotic "exploding" pattern in Seeds running for 140 generations.

Seeds is a cellular automaton in the same family as the Game of Life, initially investigated by Brian Silverman[1][2] and named by Mirek Wójtowicz.[1][3] It consists of an infinite two-dimensional grid of cells, each of which may be in one of two states: on or off. Each cell is considered to have eight neighbors (Moore neighborhood), as in Life. In each time step, a cell turns on or is "born" if it was off or "dead" but had exactly two neighbors that were on; all other cells turn off. Thus, in the notation describing the family of cellular automata containing Life, it is described by the rule B2/S.[1]

In Game of Life terminology, a pattern in which all cells that were on turn off at each step is called a phoenix. All patterns in Seeds have this form. Even though all live cells are constantly dying, the small birth requirement of two cells means that nearly every pattern in Seeds explodes into a chaotic mess that grows to cover the entire universe. Thus, in Wolfram's classification of cellular automata, it is a Class III automaton, in which nearly all patterns evolve chaotically.[1]

However, some patterns are known to behave in a more controlled fashion, repeating the same shape either in the same position of the grid (an oscillator) or translated some number of grid units after several steps (a spaceship). More complex rake and puffer patterns are known which move like spaceships leaving trails of oscillators or other spaceships behind them. Most of these patterns move at a speed of 1 cell per time step (the so-called speed of light, or c/1)[4] including three commonly seen spaceships with four on cells each, but slower-moving patterns are also known. A collection of patterns for the Seeds rule collected by Jason Summers includes patterns found by Stephen Wright, Mirek Wójtowicz, Noam Elkies, Mark Niemiec, Peter Naszvadi, and David Eppstein.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Martínez, Genaro J.; Seck-Tuoh-Mora, Juan C.; Zenil, Hector (2013), "Computation and Universality: Class IV versus Class III Cellular Automata", Journal of Cellular Automata, 7 (5–6): 393–430, arXiv:1304.1242, Bibcode:2013arXiv1304.1242M.
  2. Brian Silverman (1996), "Changing the Rules", The Virtual Computer, Mathematical Association of America, archived from the original on July 2, 2013.
  3. Mirek Wójtowicz, "Cellular Automaton Rules Lexicon — Family: Life", Mirek's Cellebration.
  4. David Eppstein. "Known spaceships for the Seeds rule". Archived from the original on February 18, 2019.
  5. Jason Summers' collection of Seeds patterns
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