Self-replicator caught on video

Complex Projective 4-Space 2019-08-20

In a previous article, an announcement was made of a complex self-replicating machine (known as the 0E0P metacell) in a simple 2-state cellular automaton. In the interim between then and now, Thomas Cabaret has prepared a most illuminating video* explaining the method with which the machine copies itself:

Note: the video is in French; recently, Dave Greene added an English translation of the subtitles.

* the video is part of Cabaret’s Passe-Science series. You may enjoy some of his other videos, including an explanation of the P vs NP problem and a reduction of Boolean satisfiability to the 3-colourability of planar graphs.

Anachronistic self-propagation

In related news, Michael Simkin recently created a wonderfully anachronistic self-propagator entitled Remini: it uses the same single-channel/slow-salvo construction mechanism as the 0E0P metacell, but it is built from oscillatory components instead of static ones. That is to say, it implements modern ideas using components available in the 1970s.

The project involved slmake together with a suite of additional tools developed by Simkin. There isn’t a video of this machine self-replicating, so you’d need to download a program such as Golly in order to watch it running.

Further reading

For further reading, I recommend (in order):

  • The wiki entry (under construction) for the 0E0P metacell;
  • An article unveiling various simpler examples of self-constructing circuitry;
  • The slmake repository;
  • A tutorial on effective use of slmake;
  • A challenge thread proposing another contraption, that no-one has yet built. This would require the use of slmake followed by some ‘DNA-splicing’ to interleave the construction recipe with extra operations.