 |

César Guerra
Bio [2005]
César Guerra was born in Huancayo, a little city in the Andes of
Peru. He studied physics at Pontificia Universidad Católica del
Perú (PUCP), and obtained his M.S. in quantum optics and quantum
computing. Other fields that caught his attention are particle
physics, cosmology, and computer science. While developing a package
for doing calculations in quantum physics, he started
using Mathematica. Later, two colleagues at PUCP introduced
him to NKS. They formed a complex systems research group and have
focussed on NKS approaches to understanding nature. At nights, and when
time permits some relaxation, he very much enjoys playing the guitar.
Project Title
Sequential Substitution Systems That Perform Some Simple Calculations
Project
Sequential substitution systems that perform some simple calculations
are investigated. To this aim, the input for a certain calculation is
encoded as a string of characters, then transformation rules are
applied sequentially until evolution of the system reaches a fixed
point. At this point, the output should be decoded from the evolved
string. The NKS approach is followed by doing exhaustive searches over
a subspace of the infinite possible transformation rules that can be
applied to the input string. The main results of these experiments
are the discovery of transformation rules that perform simple adding
and subtraction in unary coding. What searches have shown us is that
there are in fact several ways in which they can be performed. They
have also shown that the unary encoding is not a good choice for other
types of calculations, such as multiplication or finding primes. Possible
directions are to look for rules of greater length and colors, and to
envisage other ways to encode and decode the input and output,
respectively.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 32042
Although I didn't try all four-color totalistic cellular automata (too
many rules), I found several ones that are interesting. One of them is
rule number 32042. It's quite funny how in a background of little,
white, randomly distributed strings, several simple geometric
figures like rhombuses live, and how inside each rhombus, evolution
stops its complexity and decides to go periodically.
|
 |

|