Work

Bombe

project · 1940

Computing Cryptography Electrical Engineering

The Bombe was an electromechanical device designed by Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman at Bletchley Park to decrypt Nazi Germany’s Enigma-enciphered messages during World War II. It was one of the most important technological achievements of the war, enabling the Allies to read German military communications.

The Enigma Problem

The German Enigma machine created ciphers with approximately 158 million million million possible settings. The settings changed daily, making brute-force attacks seemingly impossible. German military commanders believed Enigma was unbreakable[1].

Breaking Enigma required finding the daily settings—the rotor order, ring settings, plugboard connections, and starting positions—before the next day’s messages arrived.

Turing’s Design

Building on earlier Polish work, Turing designed the British Bombe in 1939. His key insight was to exploit a fundamental weakness: Enigma never encrypted a letter as itself. Combined with known or guessed plaintext (“cribs”), this allowed systematic elimination of impossible settings.

The Bombe worked by:

  1. Assuming a piece of plaintext appeared at a specific position
  2. Testing this assumption against all possible rotor settings
  3. Using logical contradictions to eliminate impossible configurations
  4. Identifying settings that produced no contradictions[2]

Gordon Welchman’s Improvement

Welchman enhanced Turing’s design with the “diagonal board,” which dramatically increased the Bombe’s effectiveness by exploiting additional properties of the Enigma’s plugboard. This improvement made the Bombe fast enough to break messages in real time.

Impact on the War

By 1942, over 200 Bombes were operating at Bletchley Park and outstations. They enabled the Allies to:

The intelligence derived from Enigma decrypts was codenamed “Ultra” and kept secret until the 1970s.

Legacy

The Bombe represented a crucial step in the development of computing:

A working Bombe reconstruction operates today at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park.


Sources

  1. Bletchley Park. “The Bombe.” Overview of Enigma and the Bombe.
  2. Wikipedia. “Bombe.” Technical details of operation.
  3. Hinsley, F.H. “The Influence of Ultra in the Second World War.” Estimates of Ultra’s impact on the war’s duration.