Well, the mast is purple up to temperature 1, which means that either player can choose to play at or below that temperature. It also means that the miai value of a play in the sum is ambiguous. Either player could play at temperature 1, but neither player needs to play above temperature 0, or, if the players agree to the score, at all (temperature -1).Gérard TAILLE wrote:In case of miai, the miai value of the sum is 0, isn't it?Bill Spight wrote:In terms of regular go, chilled go infinitesimals have a miai value of 1. So the remaining plays have a miai value strictly less than 1. (Miai value is a go term, not a CGT term. It applies to plays, not areas. In a way, we have too much terminology.Gérard TAILLE wrote:I begin to understand the interest of chilling-go but I need to know another result. At the end of the chilled-go, after each infinitesimal has been played, each of the remaining areas has a miai value ≤1.)
One important lesson of Mathematical Go is that the fight for the last play of the game in go is actually about the fight for the last play at temperature 1; i.e., for the last play in the chilled go game.Hence the subtitle: Chilling gets the last point. That discovery was new to go theorists, and many of them may still be unaware of it, unless they have read Mathematical Go. AFAICT, the bots haven't learned that, either. It is not exactly obvious.
In chilled go they are scores, in regular go they are counts or territorial values. (Too much terminology.Let's call G1, G2, G3 ... all these remaining areas and let's call s1, s2, s3 .. the score of these areas.)
Well, the chilled score for G will be the sum of the scores of its components. Which will be their combined count in regular go.The remaining game is G = G1 + G2 + G3 + ....
Is it true that, at the end of chilling-go we have:
1) G score = s1 + s2 + s3 + ....
2) G miai value ≤1
In regular go the effective miai value of the sum of games will be less than 1. For instance, although the miai value of each play in the following diagram is 1, the effective miai value of their sum is -1.
I think that most go players would say that the miai value of this combination is 1. To score the game, most rules require play at temperature 0, so in practice that is the effective miai value. Thanks to Berlekamp's subterranean thermography, we can also say that the effective miai value is -1. At area scoring the players could wait until the end of the game to play in the sum.