Ficheru:A Turing Bombe, Bletchley Park - geograph.org.uk - 1590899.jpg

Contenido de la página no disponible en otros idiomas.
De Wikipedia

Ficheru orixinal(480 × 640 píxels, tamañu de ficheru: 136 kB, triba MIME: image/jpeg)

Esti ficheru ye de Wikimedia Commons y puen usalu otros proyeutos. La descripción de la páxina de descripción del ficheru s'amuesa darréu.

Resume

Descripción
English: A Turing Bombe, Bletchley Park. The BOMBE was named after and inspired by a device that had been designed in 1938 by the cryptologist Marian Rejewski of the Polish Cipher Bureau, who revealed their deciphering technique to the British just prior to WWII. Unlike COLOSSUS 1590854, the bombe was not a programmable computer, but an electromechanical machine designed to assist British cryptologists to break into German Enigma-machine-enciphered wireless traffic. Designed by Alan Turing 1591025, with an important refinement suggested by Gordon Welchman, the bombe made its first appearance during 1940 and refinements followed, particularly in the later American version.

A standard German Enigma employed, at any one time, a set of three rotors (in the German Navy, from early 1942, four rotors), each of which could be set in any of 26 positions. The bombe tried each possible rotor position and applied a test. The test eliminated thousands of positions of the rotors; the few potential solutions were then examined by hand. In order to use a bombe, a cryptanalyst first had to produce a "crib" - a section of ciphertext for which he could guess the corresponding plaintext. During the War, bombes were built by the British Tabulating Machine Company at Letchworth and by May 1945 there were 211 operational machines requiring nearly 2,000 staff to run. After the war some fifty bombes were retained in Britain for intelligence work, while the rest were destroyed.

A team led by John Harper conducted a 13-year project to reconstruct a working bombe, which was completed in 2007 and can be seen at the Bletchley Park Museum. For more information about the BOMBE, see . . . . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombe

For other views of the bombe, see:

1590986; 1590989; 1590991; 1590992; 1590993; 1590996; 1590997;

1591001
Data
Fonte From geograph.org.uk
Autor Ian Petticrew
Ubicación del objeto51° 59′ 54″ N, 0° 44′ 38″ O Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.Ubicación de esta y otras imágenes en: OpenStreetMapinfo


Llicencia

w:es:Creative Commons
reconocimientu compartir igual
Este archivo se encuentra bajo la licencia Creative Commons Genérica de Atribución/Compartir-Igual 2.0.
Reconocimientu: Ian Petticrew
Ye llibre:
  • pa compartir – pa copiar, distribuir y comunicar públicamente la obra
  • pa remezclar – p'adautar la obra
Baxo les condiciones siguientes:
  • reconocimientu – Tienes de dar el créitu apropiáu, apurrir un enllaz a la llicencia ya indicar si realizasti dalgún cambéu. Puedes faelo de cualquier mou razonable ,pero non de manera que suxera l'encontu del autor pa ti o pal usu que faigas.
  • compartir igual – Si entemeces, tresformes o te bases nesti material, tienes de distribuir les tos contribuciones baxo la mesma llicencia o una compatible cola orixinal.

Pies

Añade una explicación corta acerca de lo que representa este archivo

Elementos representados en este archivo

representa a

51°59'53.5"N, 0°44'38.4"W

tipo de archivo español

image/jpeg

b9563ca7cd4ba9fd33de15c085c4dcf199d326a6

138 803 Byte

640 píxel

480 píxel

Historial del ficheru

Calca nuna fecha/hora pa ver el ficheru como taba daquella.

Data/HoraMiniaturaDimensionesUsuariuComentariu
actual02:21 4 mar 2011Miniatura de la versión a fecha de 02:21 4 mar 2011480 × 640 (136 kB)GeographBot== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1=A Turing Bombe, Bletchley Park The BOMBE was named after and inspired by a device that had been designed in 1938 by the cryptologist Marian Rejewski of the Polish Cipher Bureau, who revealed their d

La páxina siguiente usa esti ficheru:

Usu global del ficheru

Estes otres wikis usen esti ficheru:

Metadatos