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Number of active (ON, black) cells in n-th stage of growth of two-dimensional cellular automaton defined by "Rule 94", based on the 5-celled von Neumann neighborhood.
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%I #10 Jul 26 2024 21:16:32

%S 1,5,12,16,36,24,60,44,116,52,148,96,244,76,228,180,420,120,308,232,

%T 556,248,548,368,812,308,556,548,936,640,832,836,1176,884,888,948,

%U 1500,1092,1336,1368,1864,1232,1584,1692,2136,1768,1912,1984,2676,1828,2172

%N Number of active (ON, black) cells in n-th stage of growth of two-dimensional cellular automaton defined by "Rule 94", based on the 5-celled von Neumann neighborhood.

%C Initialized with a single black (ON) cell at stage zero.

%D S. Wolfram, A New Kind of Science, Wolfram Media, 2002; p. 170.

%H Robert Price, <a href="/A270133/b270133.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 0..128</a>

%H Robert Price, <a href="/A270133/a270133.tmp.txt">Diagrams of the first 20 stages.</a>

%H N. J. A. Sloane, <a href="http://arxiv.org/abs/1503.01168">On the Number of ON Cells in Cellular Automata</a>, arXiv:1503.01168 [math.CO], 2015

%H Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, <a href="http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ElementaryCellularAutomaton.html">Elementary Cellular Automaton</a>

%H S. Wolfram, <a href="http://wolframscience.com/">A New Kind of Science</a>

%H <a href="/index/Ce#cell">Index entries for sequences related to cellular automata</a>

%H <a href="https://oeis.org/wiki/Index_to_2D_5-Neighbor_Cellular_Automata">Index to 2D 5-Neighbor Cellular Automata</a>

%H <a href="https://oeis.org/wiki/Index_to_Elementary_Cellular_Automata">Index to Elementary Cellular Automata</a>

%t CAStep[rule_,a_]:=Map[rule[[10-#]]&,ListConvolve[{{0,2,0},{2,1,2},{0,2,0}},a,2],{2}];

%t code=94; stages=128;

%t rule=IntegerDigits[code,2,10];

%t g=2*stages+1; (* Maximum size of grid *)

%t a=PadLeft[{{1}},{g,g},0,Floor[{g,g}/2]]; (* Initial ON cell on grid *)

%t ca=a;

%t ca=Table[ca=CAStep[rule,ca],{n,1,stages+1}];

%t PrependTo[ca,a];

%t (* Trim full grid to reflect growth by one cell at each stage *)

%t k=(Length[ca[[1]]]+1)/2;

%t ca=Table[Table[Part[ca[[n]][[j]],Range[k+1-n,k-1+n]],{j,k+1-n,k-1+n}],{n,1,k}];

%t Map[Function[Apply[Plus,Flatten[#1]]],ca] (* Count ON cells at each stage *)

%K nonn,easy

%O 0,2

%A _Robert Price_, Mar 11 2016