- Kryha
In the
history of cryptography , the Kryha machine was a device for encryption and decryption, appearing in the early 1920s and used until the 1950s. The machine was the invention of Alexander von Kryha, a Ukrainian engineer based inBerlin . There were several versions; the standard Kryha machine weighed around five kilograms, and was totally mechanical. A scaled down pocket version was introduced later on, termed the "Lilliput" model. There was also a more bulky electrical version.The machine was used for a time by the German Diplomatic Corps, and was adopted by Marconi in
England .Operation
The machine consisted of two
concentric rings each containing analphabet . The inner alphabet was stepped a variable number of places by pushing a lever. In operation, the user would encrypt by finding theplaintext letter on one ring (usually the outer ring), and reading the corresponding letter on the other ring; this was then used as the ciphertext letter. When the lever was pressed, the inner ring would step, causing the relationship between the two alphabets to change. The stepping was irregular and governed by the use of a disk with a number of sectors, each containing a number of teeth.Cryptanalysis
The security of the machine was evaluated by the mathematician
Georg Hamel , who calculated the size of the key space. The US Army was also contacted to see if they would be interested in using the machine, and were persuaded to accept a challenge message to evaluate the security of the device. The challenge message, 1135 characters long, was solved byWilliam Friedman , assisted bySolomon Kullback ,Frank Rowlett andAbraham Sinkov , in 2 hours and 41 minutes.References
* Alexander von Kryha, "Coding machine", US patent|1744347
* Alan G. Konheim, Cryptanalysis of a Kryha Machine, EUROCRYPT 1982, pp49–64.
* Cipher A. Deavours and Louis Kruh, "Machine Cryptography and Modern Cryptanalysis", Artech House, 1985, chapter IV.
* The Kryha Liliput Ciphering Machine, "Cryptologia ", IX(3), June 1985.External links
* Jerry Proc's pages on the Kyrha: [http://www.jproc.ca/crypto/kryha_mech.html Standard] , [http://www.jproc.ca/crypto/kryha.html Electrical] and [http://www.jproc.ca/crypto/kryha_liliput.html Lilliput] .
* Standard Kryha: [http://www.marconi.com/MarconiCollection/MediaResources/0095.001.001x2046x1536.jpgMachine cover open] and [http://www.marconi.com/MarconiCollection/MediaResources/0095.001.003x2048x1536.jpgMachine cover closed]
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