[math-fun] Minsky/Trinsky questions
What is known about which orbit sizes are possible? What is known about which orbit sizes are impossible? How many bits of state are required for an orbit of size N ? (non-trivial max ?, non-trivial min ?) The video talks about parallelizing; is there any kind of "speedup" -- e.g., repeated squaring of matrices or some such? Suppose that a Minsky orbit of size N is known; how hard is it to map the integers 1..N to the elements of the orbit, and how hard is it to map back? Or is a table lookup the fastest method in both directions? More generally, can I use Minsky orbits for addition mod N ? Are there any Minsky orbits which "decompose" into direct products of Minsky orbits? (I'm not entirely certain how such a direct product would work, but perhaps the peculiarities of particular numbers might allow the separation of a "high order" part and a "low order" part that happen not to interfere with one another.) Does Minsky/Trinsky work on any other algebraic objects other than standard integers -- e.g., polynomials over Q in a single variable ? Perhaps I didn't understand the video well enough, but are there elegant cellular automata that perform the Minsky/Trinsky computation?
participants (1)
-
Henry Baker