Abstract Geometrical Computation 10: An Intrinsically Universal Family of Signal Machines
Signal machines form an abstract and idealised model of collision computing. Based on dimensionless signals moving on the real line, they model particle/signal dynamics in Cellular Automata. Each particle, or signal, moves at constant speed in continuous time and space. When signals meet, they get r...
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Zusammenfassung: | Signal machines form an abstract and idealised model of collision computing.
Based on dimensionless signals moving on the real line, they model
particle/signal dynamics in Cellular Automata. Each particle, or signal, moves
at constant speed in continuous time and space. When signals meet, they get
replaced by other signals. A signal machine defines the types of available
signals, their speeds and the rules for replacement in collision. A signal
machine A simulates another one B if all the space-time diagrams of B can be
generated from space-time diagrams of A by removing some signals and renaming
other signals according to local information. Given any finite set of speeds S,
we construct a signal machine that is able to simulate any signal machine whose
speeds belong to S. Each signal is simulated by a macro-signal, a ray of
parallel signals. Each macro-signal has a main signal located exactly where the
simulated signal would be, as well as auxiliary signals which encode its id and
the collision rules of the simulated machine. The simulation of a collision, a
macro-collision, consists of two phases. In the first phase, macro-signals are
shrunk, then the macro-signals involved in the collision are identified and it
is ensured that no other macro-signal comes too close. If some do, the process
is aborted and the macro-signals are shrunk, so that the correct
macro-collision will eventually be restarted and successfully initiated.
Otherwise, the second phase starts: the appropriate collision rule is found and
new macro-signals are generated accordingly. Considering all finite set of
speeds S and their corresponding simulators provides an intrinsically universal
family of signal machines. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1804.09018 |