Caesar Cipher Decoder Ring - English Alphabet letters

Caesar Cipher Decoder Ring - English Alphabet letters

prusaprinters

<p>The Caesar cipher with English Alphabet letters was designed to use for GenCyber summer camp participants. It was used with high school students to reinforce the concept of symmetric cryptography.</p> <p>The following Introduction to Caesar Cipher was borrowed from the GenCyber curriculum.</p> <p><strong>Introduction to Caesar Cipher</strong><br/> The Caesar cipher is one of the simplest forms of cryptography. It encrypts messages by shifting the alphabet between 1 and 25. It can’t go any higher since there are only 26 letters in the alphabet.</p> <p>The direction of an alphabet shift in the Caesar cipher does matter. For example, in the chart shown below, is the cipher a left shift of 3 or a right shift of 23?</p> <p>Plain: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ<br/> Cipher: XYZABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVW</p> <p>Both can be correct, but if you only said “a shift of 3,” there would be confusion on which way to go. For simplicity, we will handle everything as a shift to the right.</p> <p><strong>Known Key Decryption</strong><br/> We will use the Ceaser cipher ring to decrypt a message.<br/> With any type of cryptography, the key is very important. It is the key to decrypting the message. In this type of cipher, the key will determine how many spaces the ring shifts.</p> <p>1.) Let’s start with a simple shift of 1. To decrypt the message, shift the top of the ring 1 space to the right; you will change the bottom letter into the top letter.<br/> Your cipher ring should look like this:</p> <pre><code>Ciphertext: HFODZCFS Key: Rotate 1 Answer: _____________________ </code></pre> <p>2.) Not too bad, right? Let’s try a harder one. This one has a shift of three. Your cipher ring will look a bit different.<br/> Your cipher ring should look like this:</p> <pre><code>Ciphertext: GR RU GR QRW WKHUH LV QR WUB Key: Rotate 3 Answer: ___________________________________ </code></pre> <p>More lab examples are available upon request.</p> <h3>Print instructions</h3><p>All models are exported in STL files.<br/> A standard nozzle size of 0.4 is recommended.<br/> It was tested using PLA filament with a nozzle 0.4 setting.</p>

Download Model from prusaprinters

With this file you will be able to print Caesar Cipher Decoder Ring - English Alphabet letters with your 3D printer. Click on the button and save the file on your computer to work, edit or customize your design. You can also find more 3D designs for printers on Caesar Cipher Decoder Ring - English Alphabet letters.