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| [[File:Enigma rotor set.png|thumb|right|200px|Three rotors of an enigma machine]] | | [[File:Enigma rotor set.png|thumb|right|200px|Three rotors of an enigma machine]] |
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− | The '''Enigma machine''' was created for [[Germany]] by [[Arthur Scherbius]] in [[World War I]]. It is a [[cypher]] machine: a way of changing the letters of a message so that it appears to be scrambled letters (or, random letters). | + | The '''Enigma machine''' was created for [[Germany]] by [[Arthur Scherbius]] in [[World War I]]. It is a [[cypher]] machine: changing the letters of a message so that it appears to be random letters. Enigmas were among the most-used kind of cypher machines for the German military in [[World War II]]. |
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| Each time a letter is typed, it appears as another letter in the alphabet. The choices are ''not'' [[random]]. They are decided by a series of rotors which are set each day to a different starting set-up. Every press of a key turns the rotors to a new position. | | Each time a letter is typed, it appears as another letter in the alphabet. The choices are ''not'' [[random]]. They are decided by a series of rotors which are set each day to a different starting set-up. Every press of a key turns the rotors to a new position. |
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| : "Hut 6 [[Ultra]] would never have got off the ground if we had not learned from the Poles, in the nick of time, the details both of the German military version of the commercial Enigma machine, and of the operating procedures that were in use". Gordon Welchman, ''The Hut Six Story'', 1982, p. 289. | | : "Hut 6 [[Ultra]] would never have got off the ground if we had not learned from the Poles, in the nick of time, the details both of the German military version of the commercial Enigma machine, and of the operating procedures that were in use". Gordon Welchman, ''The Hut Six Story'', 1982, p. 289. |
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− | During the [[invasion of Poland (1939)]] the Polish codebreakers were sent to France for safety. Later, they fled to Britain. Making technical improvements, British codebreakers solved a vast number of messages from Enigma, and gave the [[plaintext]] to military staff. The information got from this, called "[[Ultra]]" by the British, was a great help to the [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] war effort. Ultra also included decrypts of other German, Italian and Japanese cyphers and codes, including the cypher of the German High Command. | + | During the [[invasion of Poland (1939)]] the Polish codebreakers were sent to [[France]] for safety. Later, they fled to Britain. Making technical improvements, British codebreakers solved a vast number of messages from Enigma, and gave the [[plaintext]] to military staff. The information gained from this team, called "[[Ultra]]" by the British, was a great help to the [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] war effort. Ultra also included decrypts of other German, Italian and Japanese cyphers and codes, including the cypher of the German High Command. |
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| Mistakes by German operators helped the [[cryptanalysis]] of [[Luftwaffe]] Enigmas, and the British capture of key tables and a machine from a German [[submarine]] helped in cracking Navy ones.<ref>Kahn, David 1991. ''Seizing the Enigma: the race to break the German U-Boats codes, 1939-1943''. {{ISBN|0-395-42739-8}}</ref><ref>Welchman, Gordon 1997. ''The Hut Six story: breaking the Enigma codes''. Cleobury Mortimer, England: Baldwin. New edition updated with an addendum consisting of a 1986 paper written by Welchman which corrects aspects of his 1982 edition. {{ISBN|978-0-947712-34-1}}</ref> | | Mistakes by German operators helped the [[cryptanalysis]] of [[Luftwaffe]] Enigmas, and the British capture of key tables and a machine from a German [[submarine]] helped in cracking Navy ones.<ref>Kahn, David 1991. ''Seizing the Enigma: the race to break the German U-Boats codes, 1939-1943''. {{ISBN|0-395-42739-8}}</ref><ref>Welchman, Gordon 1997. ''The Hut Six story: breaking the Enigma codes''. Cleobury Mortimer, England: Baldwin. New edition updated with an addendum consisting of a 1986 paper written by Welchman which corrects aspects of his 1982 edition. {{ISBN|978-0-947712-34-1}}</ref> |
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| On 15th July 2011, Queen [[Elizabeth II]] visited [[Bletchley Park]], where the machine is kept in the Museum, to pay tribute to those who worked there, since they cut short the [[World War II|war]] by breaking the cyphers of [[Nazi Germany]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2015254/Queen-salutes-heroes-Bletchley-Park-70-years-cracked-code-helped-win-World-War-Two.html |title=Queen salutes heroes of Bletchley Park 70 years after they cracked code that helped win World War Two | Mail Online |publisher=Dailymail.co.uk |date=2011-07-15 |accessdate=2011-10-28}}</ref> | | On 15th July 2011, Queen [[Elizabeth II]] visited [[Bletchley Park]], where the machine is kept in the Museum, to pay tribute to those who worked there, since they cut short the [[World War II|war]] by breaking the cyphers of [[Nazi Germany]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2015254/Queen-salutes-heroes-Bletchley-Park-70-years-cracked-code-helped-win-World-War-Two.html |title=Queen salutes heroes of Bletchley Park 70 years after they cracked code that helped win World War Two | Mail Online |publisher=Dailymail.co.uk |date=2011-07-15 |accessdate=2011-10-28}}</ref> |
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| + | == Enigma Machine Media == |
| + | <gallery widths='160px' heights='100%' mode='traditional' caption=''> |
| + | File:Enigma (crittografia) - Museo scienza e tecnologia Milano.jpg|Military Model Enigma I, in use from 1930 |
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| + | File:Poland Bydgoszcz Rejewski monument.jpg|A memorial in [[Bydgoszcz]], Poland, to [[Marian Rejewski]], the mathematician who, in 1932, first broke Enigma and, in July 1939, helped educate the French and British about Polish methods of Enigma decryption |
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| + | File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2007-0705-502, Chiffriermaschine "Enigma".jpg|*For documentary purposes the German Federal Archive often retained the original image captions, which may be erroneous, biased, obsolete or politically extreme. Prop.-Kp. z.b.V.Film-Nr. 2865*Bildberichter: Walther*Text: Strache*Ort: Hamburg*Datum 10.12.[1943]*Die Hände einer Luftnachrichtenhelferin bei der Arbeit |
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| + | File:Enigma-action.svg|The scrambling action of Enigma's rotors is shown for two consecutive letters with the right-hand rotor moving one position between them. |
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| + | File:Enigma rotors with alphabet rings.jpg|Enigma rotor assembly. In the Enigma I, three movable rotors are sandwiched between two fixed wheels: the entry wheel, on the right, and the reflector on the left. |
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| + | File:enigma-rotors.jpg|Three Enigma rotors and the shaft, on which they are placed when in use. |
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| + | File:Enigma rotors and spindle showing contacts rachet and notch.jpg|Two Enigma rotors showing electrical contacts, stepping ratchet (on the left) and notch (on the right-hand rotor opposite '''D'''). |
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| + | File:Enigma ratchet.png|The Enigma stepping motion seen from the side away from the operator. All three ratchet pawls (green) push in unison as a key is depressed. |
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| + | File:Enigma insides.agr.jpg|Internal mechanism of an Enigma machine showing the type B reflector and rotor stack. |
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| + | File:Encrypting and decrypting using an enigma machine.webm|Enciphering and deciphering using an Enigma machine |
| + | </gallery> |
| == References == | | == References == |
| {{reflist}} | | {{reflist}} |