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What Can Oracles Teach Us About the Ultimate Fate of Life?




TekijätSalo Ville, Törmä Ilkka

ToimittajaMikołaj Bojańczyk, Emanuela Merelli, David P. Woodruf

Konferenssin vakiintunut nimiInternational Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming

KustantajaSchloss Dagstuhl- Leibniz-Zentrum fur Informatik GmbH, Dagstuhl Publishing

Julkaisuvuosi2022

JournalInternational Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming

Kokoomateoksen nimi49th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming (ICALP 2022)

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiLeibniz International Proceedings in Informatics, LIPIcs

Sarjan nimiLeibniz international proceedings in informatics

Vuosikerta229

Aloitussivu131:1

Lopetussivu131:20

ISBN978-3-95977-235-8

eISSN1868-8969

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ICALP.2022.131

Verkko-osoitehttps://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2022/16472/

Rinnakkaistallenteen osoitehttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/176100389


Tiivistelmä

We settle two long-standing open problems about Conway’s Life, a two-dimensional cellular automaton. We solve the Generalized grandfather problem: for all n ≥ 0, there exists a configuration that has an nth predecessor but not an (n+1)st one. We also solve (one interpretation of) the Unique father problem: there exists a finite stable configuration that contains a finite subpattern that has no predecessor patterns except itself. In particular this gives the first example of an unsynthesizable still life. The new key concept is that of a spatiotemporally periodic configuration (agar) that has a unique chain of preimages; we show that this property is semidecidable, and find examples of such agars using a SAT solver.

Our results about the topological dynamics of Game of Life are as follows: it never reaches its limit set; its dynamics on its limit set is chain-wandering, in particular it is not topologically transitive and does not have dense periodic points; and the spatial dynamics of its limit set is non-sofic, and does not admit a sublinear gluing radius in the cardinal directions (in particular it is not block-gluing). Our computability results are that Game of Life’s reachability problem, as well as the language of its limit set, are PSPACE-hard.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 18:56