Cryptology: Classical and Modern, Second Edition proficiently introduces readers to the fascinating field of cryptology. The book covers classical methods including substitution, transposition, Alberti, Vigenère, and Hill ciphers. It also includes coverage of the Enigma machine, Turing bombe, and Navajo code. Additionally, the book presents modern methods like RSA, ElGamal, and stream ciphers, as well as the Diffie-Hellman key exchange and Advanced Encryption Standard. When possible, the book details methods for breaking both classical and modern methods. The new edition expands upon the material from the first edition which was oriented for students in non-technical fields. At the same time, the second edition supplements this material with new content that serves students in more technical fields as well. Thus, the second edition can be fully utilized by both technical and non-technical students at all levels of study. The authors include a wealth of material for a one-semester cryptology course, and research exercises that can be used for supplemental projects. Hints and answers to selected exercises are found at the end of the book. Features: Requires no prior programming knowledge or background in college-level mathematics Illustrates the importance of cryptology in cultural and historical contexts, including the Enigma machine, Turing bombe, and Navajo code Gives straightforward explanations of the Advanced Encryption Standard, public-key ciphers, and message authentication Describes the implementation and cryptanalysis of classical ciphers, such as substitution, transposition, shift, affine, Alberti, Vigenère, and Hill
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Cryptology: Classical and Modern, Second Edition proficiently introduces readers to the fascinating field of cryptology. The book covers classical methods including substitution, transposition, Playfair, ADFGVX, Alberti, Vigene re, and Hill ciphers.
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1. Introduction to CryptologyBasic TerminologyCryptology in PractiveWhy Study Cryptology?2. Substitution CiphersKeyword Substitution CiphersCryptanalysis of Substitution CipherPlayrair CiphersThe Navajo Code3. Transposition CiphersColumnar Transposition CiphersCryptanalysis of Transposition CiphersADFGX and ADFGVX Ciphers4. The Enigma MachineThe Enigma Cipher MachineCombinatoricsSecurity of the Enigma Machine5. The Turing BombeCribs and MenusLoops and Logical InconsistenciesSearching for the Correct ConfigurationThe Diagonal BoardThe Checking MachineTurnoversClonkingFinal Observations6. Shift and Affine CiphersModular ArithmeticShift CiphersCryptanalysis of Shift CiphersAffine CiphersCryptanalysis of Affine Ciphers7. Alberti and Vigenere CiphersAlberti CiphersVigenere CiphersProbabilityThe Friedman TestThe Kasiski TestCryptanalyis of Vigenere Keyword Ciphers8. Hill CiphersMatricesHill CiphersCryptanalyis of Hill Ciphers9. RSA CiphersIntroduction to Public-Key CiphersIntroduction to RSA CiphersThe Euclidean AlgorithmModular ExponentiationASCIIRSA CiphersCryptanalyis of RSA CiphersPrimality TestingInteger FactorizationThe RSA Factoring Challenges10. ElGamal CiphersThe Diffie-Hellman Key ExchangeDiscrete LogarithmsElGamal CiphersCryptanalyis of ElGamal Ciphers11. The Advanced Encryption StandardRepresentations of NumbersSream CiphersAES PreliminariesAES EncryptionAES DecryptionAES Security12. Message AuthenticationRSA SignaturesHash FunctionsRSA Signatures with HashingThe Man-in-the-Middle AttackPublic-Key InfrastructuresBibliographyHints and Answers for Selected ExercisesIndex
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032475929
Publisert
2023-01-21
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Chapman & Hall/CRC
Vekt
707 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, G, 05, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
496

Biographical note

Richard E. Klima is a professor in the Department of Mathematical Sciences at Appalachian State University. Prior to Appalachian State, Dr. Klima was a cryptologic mathematician at the National Security Agency. He earned a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from North Carolina State University. His research interests include cryptology, error-correcting codes, applications of linear and abstract algebra, and election theory. Neil P. Sigmon is a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics at Radford University. Dr. Sigmon earned a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from North Carolina State University. His research interests include cryptology, the use of technology to illustrate mathematical concepts, and applications of linear and abstract algebra.