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COMMENT
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"In 1965 [Tibor] Rado, together with Shen Lin, proved that BB(3) is 21. ... Next, in 1983, Allan Brady proved that BB(4) is 107. ... Then, in 1989, Heiner Marxen and Juergen Buntrock discovered that BB(5) is at least 47,176,870. ... As for BB(6), Marxen and Buntrock set another record in 1997 by proving that it is at least 8,690,333,381,690,951." Aaronson.
The function Sigma(n) (A028444) denotes the maximal number of tape marks which a Turing Machine with n internal states and a two-way infinite tape can write on an initially empty tape and then halt. The function S(n) (the present sequence) denotes the maximal number of steps (shifts) which such a machine can make (it needs not produce many tape marks).
Given that 5-state machines can compute Collatz-like congruential functions (see references), it may be very hard to find the next term.
The sequence grows faster than any computable function of n and so is non-computable.
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REFERENCES
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Brady, A. H., The busy beaver game and the meaning of life, in Herken, R. (Ed) The Universal Turing Machine: A Half-Century Survey, pp. 259-277, Oxford Univ Press 1988. Reprinted by Springer-Verlag, 1995 (see pages 237-254). [Reference updated by Daniele Giorgio Degiorgi, Nov 22 2008]
Brady, A. H. The determination of Rado's noncomputable function Sigma(k) for four-state Turing machines, Math. Comp. 40 #62 (1983) 647-665.
Machlin, R. (nee Kopp) and Stout, Q, The Complex Behavior of Simple Machines, Physica D 42 (1990) 85-98
Michel, Pascal, Busy beaver competition and Collatz-like problems, Arch. Math. Logic (1993) 32:351-367.
R. M. Robinson, Minsky's small universal Turing machine, Int'l Jnl. Math, 2 #5 (1991) 551-562.
Yu. V. Rogozhin, Seven universal Turing machines (Russian), abstract, Fifth All-Union Conference on Math. Logic, Akad. Nauk. SSSR Sibirsk. Otdel., Inst. Mat., Novosibirsk, 1979, p. 127.
Yu. V. Rogozhin, Seven universal Turing machines (Russian), Systems and Theoretical Programming, Mat. Issled. no. 69, Akademiya Nauk Moldavskoi SSSR, Kishinev, 1982, pp. 76-90.
Claude E. Shannon, A universal Turing machine with two internal states, Automata Studies, Ann. of Math. Stud. 34 (1956) 157-165.
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