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Friedman's "Long Finite Sequences'': The End of the Busy Beaver Contest (2303.02855v1)

Published 6 Mar 2023 in math.CO, cs.CC, cs.IT, and math.IT

Abstract: Harvey Friedman gives a comparatively short description of an ``unimaginably large'' number $n(3)$ , beyond, e.g. the values $$ A(7,184)< A({7198},158386) < n(3)$$ of Ackermann's function - but finite. We implement Friedman's combinatorial problem about subwords of words over a 3-letter alphabet on a family of Turing machines, which, starting on empty tape, run (more than) $n(3)$ steps, and then halt. Examples include a (44,8) (symbol,state count) machine as well as a (276,2) and a (2,1840) one. In total, there are at most 37022 non-trivial pairs $(n,m)$ with Busy Beaver values ${\tt BB(n,m)} < A(7198,158386).$ We give algorithms to map any $(|Q|,|E|)$ TM to another, where we can choose freely either $|Q'|\geq 2$ or $|E'|\geq 2$ (the case $|Q'|=2$ for empty initial tape is the tricky one). Given the size of $n(3)$ and the fact that these TMs are not {\it holdouts}, but assured to stop, Friedman's combinatorial problem provides a definite upper bound on what might ever be possible to achieve in the Busy Beaver contest. We also treat $n(4)> A{(A(187196))}(1)$.

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