Line 3: Line 3:
  
 
==Part 2==
 
==Part 2==
Because this encryption is linear, Eve doesn't need to know the inverse to decrypt messages.  She can write any unknown message as linear multiples of the message she knows.  This is easier done then said, see the example in part 3.<br>
+
Because this encryption is linear, Eve doesn't need to know the inverse to decrypt messages.  She can write any unknown message as linear multiples of the message she knows.  This is easier done than said, see the example in part 3.<br>
  
 
==Part 3==
 
==Part 3==

Revision as of 08:24, 19 September 2008

Part 1

Bob can decrypt the message by multiplying 3 letter sequences by the inverse of the encryption matrix.

Part 2

Because this encryption is linear, Eve doesn't need to know the inverse to decrypt messages. She can write any unknown message as linear multiples of the message she knows. This is easier done than said, see the example in part 3.

Part 3

<2,23,3> can be written as 1<2,0,0> + 23<0,1,0> + 1<0,0,3>
Since we know the inputs that yield the vectors <2,0,0> , <0,1,0> , and <0,0,3>, linearity says the corresponding input is:

1<1,0,4> + 23<0,1,0> + 1<1,0,1>

which simplifies to <2,23,5>, or BWE

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. on Applied Mathematics in Aug 2007. Involved on applications of image super-resolution to electron microscopy

Francisco Blanco-Silva