fredag 3. april 2020

Imperial War Museum, også Duxford, stenger dørene med denne meldingen om Enigma maskinen - IWM

The Story of Alan Turing
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IWM | IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUMS


Enigma Machine © IWM (COM 228)
In line with advice from Public Health England, our museums are temporarily closed for people’s well-being and safety. Over the coming weeks we will continue to send you handpicked stories that resonate in remarkable times for your enjoyment at home. Your support - as ever - is appreciated.

Throughout history, governments and military commanders have tried to keep their communications secret using codes and ciphers. At the same time, these governments have always attempted to intercept and decode messages from their enemies.

In 1923, the first Enigma machine was invented. The first models were built for industrial espionage, but various German government and armed forces used the machines to maintain secure radio communications.

The British Government Code and Cypher School was devoted to breaking Enigma ciphers. It was set up in 1939 at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire. Known as the ULTRA programme, it was increasingly successful from 1941 onwards in infiltrating German enciphered radio traffic.

Before the Second World War broke out, Alan Turing, a mathematician, was already working part-time for the school. In 1939, he took up a full-time role to decipher the military codes used by Germany and its allies. The focus of Turing’s work was cracking the Enigma code.

Polish mathematicians had already worked out how to read Enigma messages and shared this information with the British. But the Germans increased their security at the outbreak of war by changing the cipher system daily.


In response, Turing invented a machine known as the Bombe, along with fellow codebreaker Gordon Welchman. This device helped to significantly reduce the work of the codebreakers.

From mid-1940, German Air Force signals were being read at Bletchley and the intelligence gained from them was helping the war effort. But German U-boats were inflicting heavy losses on Allied shipping and the need to understand their signals was crucial.

Turing worked to decrypt the more complex German naval communications. With the help of captured Enigma material, and Turing’s development of a technique he called 'Banburismus', the naval Enigma messages were able to be read from 1941.

The ‘Hut 8’ team at Bletchley, lead by Turing, carried out cryptanalysis of all German naval signals. This meant that apart from a period in 1942 when the code became unreadable, Allied convoys could be directed away from the U-boat 'wolf-packs'.

Turing’s role was pivotal in helping the Allies during the Battle of the Atlantic. It has been estimated that the efforts of Turing and his fellow codebreakers shortened the war by several years.

Read more about Turing's complex code-breaking techniques and 'the universal Turing machine'.

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