Computing in continuous space with self-assembling polygonal tiles

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Published on: 2016/01/10

Abstract

In this paper we investigate the computational power of the polygonal tile assembly model (polygonal TAM) at temperature 1, i.e. in non-cooperative systems. The polygonal TAM is an extension of Winfree's abstract tile assembly model (aTAM) which not only allows for square tiles (as in the aTAM) but also allows for tile shapes that are polygons. Although a number of self-assembly results have shown computational universality at temperature 1, these are the first results to do so by fundamentally relying on tile placements in continuous, rather than discrete, space. With the square tiles of the aTAM, it is conjectured that the class of temperature 1 systems is not computationally universal. Here we show that the class of systems whose tiles are composed of a regular polygon P with n > 6 sides is computationally universal. On the other hand, we show that the class of systems whose tiles consist of a regular polygon P with n \(\le\) 6 cannot compute using any known techniques. In addition, we show a number of classes of systems whose tiles consist of a non-regular polygon with n \(\ge\) 3 sides are computationally universal.

Authors

Oscar Gilbert, Jacob Hendricks, Matthew J. Patitz, Trent A. Rogers

File

Computing in continuous space with self-assembling polygonal tiles