On July 15, 1928, this machine encoded its first message. Find out more about this World War II cipher system
On July 15, 1928, this machine encoded its first message. Find out more about this World War II cipher system
ADVERTISEMENT
Try it now: This Java applet allows you to type in messages and encode them using Enigma. To use it, visit https://homepages.tesco.net/~andycarlson/enigma/enigma_j.html |
How it works: This illustration shows the key components of the Enigma machine |
The Enigma lives on: Though this is an ancient system of cryptography, it still has new avatars. The machine shown here, which was inspired by the Enigma, was constructed in 2002 by Netherlands-based Tatjana van Vark. It uses 40-point rotors and uses characters, numbers and even punctuation. Each rotor contains 509 parts. |