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W. T. Tutte

William Thomas Tutte OC FRS FRSC (/tʌt/; 14 May 1917 – 2 May 2002) was an English and Canadian codebreaker and mathematician. During the Second World War, he made a brilliant and fundamental advance in cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher, a major Nazi German cipher system which was used for top-secret communications within the Wehrmacht High Command. The high-level, strategic nature of the intelligence obtained from Tutte's crucial breakthrough, in the bulk decrypting of Lorenz-enciphered messages specifically, contributed greatly, and perhaps even decisively, to the defeat of Nazi Germany.[2][3] He also had a number of significant mathematical accomplishments, including foundation work in the fields of graph theory and matroid theory.[4][5]

W. T. Tutte
Born(1917-05-14)14 May 1917
Died2 May 2002(2002-05-02) (aged 84)
Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge (PhD)
Known for
SpouseDorothea Geraldine Mitchell (m. 1949–1994, her death)
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Toronto
University of Waterloo
Thesis An Algebraic Theory of Graphs[1]  (1948)
Doctoral advisorShaun Wylie[1]
Doctoral students

Tutte's research in the field of graph theory proved to be of remarkable importance. At a time when graph theory was still a primitive subject, Tutte commenced the study of matroids and developed them into a theory by expanding from the work that Hassler Whitney had first developed around the mid-1930s.[6] Even though Tutte's contributions to graph theory have been influential to modern graph theory and many of his theorems have been used to keep making advances in the field, most of his terminology was not in agreement with their conventional usage and thus his terminology is not used by graph theorists today.[7] "Tutte advanced graph theory from a subject with one text (D. Kőnig's) toward its present extremely active state."[7]

Early life and education edit

Tutte was born in Newmarket in Suffolk. He was the younger son of William John Tutte (1873–1944), an estate gardener, and Annie (née Newell; 1881–1956), a housekeeper. Both parents worked at Fitzroy House stables where Tutte was born.[5] The family spent some time in Buckinghamshire, County Durham and Yorkshire before returning to Newmarket, where Tutte attended Cheveley Church of England primary school[8] in the nearby village of Cheveley.[4] In 1927, when he was ten, Tutte won a scholarship to the Cambridge and County High School for Boys. He took up his place there in 1928.

In 1935 he won a scholarship to study natural sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he specialized in chemistry and graduated with first-class honours in 1938.[4] He continued with physical chemistry as a graduate student, but transferred to mathematics at the end of 1940.[4] As a student, he (along with three of his friends) became one of the first to solve the problem of squaring the square, and the first to solve the problem without a squared subrectangle. Together the four created the pseudonym Blanche Descartes, under which Tutte published occasionally for years.[9]

Second World War edit

 
The Lorenz SZ machines had 12 wheels each with a different number of cams (or "pins").
Wheel number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
BP wheel name[10]            37  61          
Number of cams (pins) 43 47 51 53 59 37 61 41 31 29 26 23

Soon after the outbreak of the Second World War, Tutte's tutor, Patrick Duff, suggested him for war work at the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park (BP). He was interviewed and sent on a training course in London before going to Bletchley Park, where he joined the Research Section. At first, he worked on the Hagelin cipher that was being used by the Italian Navy. This was a rotor cipher machine that was available commercially, so the mechanics of enciphering was known, and decrypting messages only required working out how the machine was set up.[11]

In the summer of 1941, Tutte was transferred to work on a project called Fish. Intelligence information had revealed that the Germans called the wireless teleprinter transmission systems "Sägefisch" (sawfish). This led the British to use the code Fish for the German teleprinter cipher system. The nickname Tunny (tunafish) was used for the first non-Morse link, and it was subsequently used for the Lorenz SZ machines and the traffic that they enciphered.[12]

Telegraphy used the 5-bit International Telegraphy Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2). Nothing was known about the mechanism of enciphering other than that messages were preceded by a 12-letter indicator, which implied a 12-wheel rotor cipher machine. The first step, therefore, had to be to diagnose the machine by establishing the logical structure and hence the functioning of the machine. Tutte played a pivotal role in achieving this, and it was not until shortly before the Allied victory in Europe in 1945, that Bletchley Park acquired a Tunny Lorenz cipher machine.[13] Tutte's breakthroughs led eventually to bulk decrypting of Tunny-enciphered messages between the German High Command (OKW) in Berlin and their army commands throughout occupied Europe and contributed—perhaps decisively—to the defeat of Germany.[2][3]

Diagnosing the cipher machine edit

On 31 August 1941, two versions of the same message were sent using identical keys, which constituted a "depth". This allowed John Tiltman, Bletchley Park's veteran and remarkably gifted cryptanalyst, to deduce that it was a Vernam cipher which uses the Exclusive Or (XOR) function (symbolised by "⊕"), and to extract the two messages and hence obtain the obscuring key. After a fruitless period during which Research Section cryptanalysts tried to work out how the Tunny machine worked, this and some other keys were handed to Tutte, who was asked to "see what you can make of these".[14]

 
The Lorenz SZ42 machine with its covers removed. Bletchley Park museum

At his training course, Tutte had been taught the Kasiski examination technique of writing out a key on squared paper, starting a new row after a defined number of characters that was suspected of being the frequency of repetition of the key.[15] If this number was correct, the columns of the matrix would show more repetitions of sequences of characters than chance alone. Tutte knew that the Tunny indicators used 25 letters (excluding J) for 11 of the positions, but only 23 letters for the other. He therefore tried Kasiski's technique on the first impulse of the key characters, using a repetition of 25 × 23 = 575. He did not observe a large number of column repetitions with this period, but he did observe the phenomenon on a diagonal. He therefore tried again with 574, which showed up repeats in the columns. Recognising that the prime factors of this number are 2, 7 and 41, he tried again with a period of 41 and "got a rectangle of dots and crosses that was replete with repetitions".[16]

It was clear, however, that the first impulse of the key was more complicated than that produced by a single wheel of 41 key impulses. Tutte called this component of the key   (chi1). He figured that there was another component, which was XOR-ed with this, that did not always change with each new character, and that this was the product of a wheel that he called   (psi1). The same applied for each of the five impulses (  and  ). So for a single character, the whole key K consisted of two components:

 

At Bletchley Park, mark impulses were signified by x and space impulses by .[nb 1] For example, the letter "H" would be coded as ••x•x.[17] Tutte's derivation of the chi and psi components was made possible by the fact that dots were more likely than not to be followed by dots, and crosses more likely than not to be followed by crosses. This was a product of a weakness in the German key setting, which they later eliminated. Once Tutte had made this breakthrough, the rest of the Research Section joined in to study the other impulses, and it was established that the five chi wheels all advanced with each new character and that the five psi wheels all moved together under the control of two mu or "motor" wheels. Over the following two months, Tutte and other members of the Research Section worked out the complete logical structure of the machine, with its set of wheels bearing cams that could either be in a position (raised) that added x to the stream of key characters, or in the alternative position that added in .[18]

Diagnosing the functioning of the Tunny machine in this way was a truly remarkable cryptanalytical achievement which, in the citation for Tutte's induction as an Officer of the Order of Canada, was described as "one of the greatest intellectual feats of World War II".[5]

Tutte's statistical method edit

To decrypt a Tunny message required knowledge not only of the logical functioning of the machine, but also the start positions of each rotor for the particular message. The search was on for a process that would manipulate the ciphertext or key to produce a frequency distribution of characters that departed from the uniformity that the enciphering process aimed to achieve. While on secondment to the Research Section in July 1942, Alan Turing worked out that the XOR combination of the values of successive characters in a stream of ciphertext and key emphasised any departures from a uniform distribution. The resultant stream (symbolised by the Greek letter "delta" Δ) was called the difference because XOR is the same as modulo 2 subtraction.

The reason that this provided a way into Tunny was that although the frequency distribution of characters in the ciphertext could not be distinguished from a random stream, the same was not true for a version of the ciphertext from which the chi element of the key had been removed. This was the case because where the plaintext contained a repeated character and the psi wheels did not move on, the differenced psi character ( ) would be the null character ('/ ' at Bletchley Park). When XOR-ed with any character, this character has no effect. Repeated characters in the plaintext were more frequent both because of the characteristics of German (EE, TT, LL and SS are relatively common),[19] and because telegraphists frequently repeated the figures-shift and letters-shift characters[20] as their loss in an ordinary telegraph message could lead to gibberish.[21]

To quote the General Report on Tunny:

Turingery introduced the principle that the key differenced at one, now called ΔΚ, could yield information unobtainable from ordinary key. This Δ principle was to be the fundamental basis of nearly all statistical methods of wheel-breaking and setting.[10]

Tutte exploited this amplification of non-uniformity in the differenced values [nb 2] and by November 1942 had produced a way of discovering wheel starting points of the Tunny machine which became known as the "Statistical Method".[22] The essence of this method was to find the initial settings of the chi component of the key by exhaustively trying all positions of its combination with the ciphertext, and looking for evidence of the non-uniformity that reflected the characteristics of the original plaintext.[23][24] Because any repeated characters in the plaintext would always generate , and similarly   would generate whenever the psi wheels did not move on, and about half of the time when they did – some 70% overall.

As well as applying differencing to the full 5-bit characters of the ITA2 code, Tutte applied it to the individual impulses (bits).[nb 3] The current chi wheel cam settings needed to have been established to allow the relevant sequence of characters of the chi wheels to be generated. It was totally impracticable to generate the 22 million characters from all five of the chi wheels, so it was initially limited to 41 × 31 = 1271 from the first two. After explaining his findings to Max Newman, Newman was given the job of developing an automated approach to comparing ciphertext and key to look for departures from randomness. The first machine was dubbed Heath Robinson, but the much faster Colossus computer, developed by Tommy Flowers and using algorithms written by Tutte and his colleagues, soon took over for breaking codes.[25][26][27]

Doctorate and career edit

In late 1945, Tutte resumed his studies at Cambridge, now as a graduate student in mathematics. He published some work begun earlier, one a now famous paper that characterises which graphs have a perfect matching, and another that constructs a non-Hamiltonian graph.

Tutte completed a doctorate in mathematics from Cambridge in 1948 under the supervision of Shaun Wylie, who had also worked at Bletchley Park on Tunny. His thesis An Algebraic Theory of Graphs was considered ground breaking and was about the subject later known as matroid theory.[28]

The same year, invited by Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter, he accepted a position at the University of Toronto. In 1962, he moved to the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, where he stayed for the rest of his academic career. He officially retired in 1985, but remained active as an emeritus professor. Tutte was instrumental in helping to found the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo.

His mathematical career concentrated on combinatorics, especially graph theory, which he is credited as having helped create in its modern form, and matroid theory, to which he made profound contributions; one colleague described him as "the leading mathematician in combinatorics for three decades". He was editor in chief of the Journal of Combinatorial Theory until retiring from Waterloo in 1985.[28] He also served on the editorial boards of several other mathematical research journals.

Research contributions edit

Tutte's work in graph theory includes the structure of cycle spaces and cut spaces, the size of maximum matchings and existence of k-factors in graphs, and Hamiltonian and non-Hamiltonian graphs.[28] He disproved Tait's conjecture, on the Hamiltonicity of polyhedral graphs, by using the construction known as Tutte's fragment. The eventual proof of the four colour theorem made use of his earlier work. The graph polynomial he called the "dichromate" has become famous and influential under the name of the Tutte polynomial and serves as the prototype of combinatorial invariants that are universal for all invariants that satisfy a specified reduction law.

The first major advances in matroid theory were made by Tutte in his 1948 Cambridge PhD thesis which formed the basis of an important sequence of papers published over the next two decades. Tutte's work in graph theory and matroid theory has been profoundly influential on the development of both the content and direction of these two fields.[7] In matroid theory, he discovered the highly sophisticated homotopy theorem and founded the studies of chain groups and regular matroids, about which he proved deep results.

In addition, Tutte developed an algorithm for determining whether a given binary matroid is a graphic matroid. The algorithm makes use of the fact that a planar graph is simply a graph whose circuit-matroid, the dual of its bond-matroid, is graphic.[29]

Tutte wrote a paper entitled How to Draw a Graph in which he proved that any face in a 3-connected graph is enclosed by a peripheral cycle. Using this fact, Tutte developed an alternative proof to show that every Kuratowski graph is non-planar by showing that K5 and K3,3 each have three distinct peripheral cycles with a common edge. In addition to using peripheral cycles to prove that the Kuratowski graphs are non-planar, Tutte proved that every simple 3-connected graph can be drawn with all its faces convex, and devised an algorithm which constructs the plane drawing by solving a linear system. The resulting drawing is known as the Tutte embedding. Tutte's algorithm makes use of the barycentric mappings of the peripheral circuits of a simple 3-connected graph.[30]

The findings published in this paper have proved to be of much significance because the algorithms that Tutte developed have become popular planar graph drawing methods. One of the reasons for which Tutte's embedding is popular is that the necessary computations that are carried out by his algorithms are simple and guarantee a one-to-one correspondence of a graph and its embedding onto the Euclidean plane, which is of importance when parameterising a three-dimensional mesh to the plane in geometric modelling. "Tutte's theorem is the basis for solutions to other computer graphics problems, such as morphing."[31]

Tutte was mainly responsible for developing the theory of enumeration of planar graphs, which has close links with chromatic and dichromatic polynomials. This work involved some highly innovative techniques of his own invention, requiring considerable manipulative dexterity in handling power series (whose coefficients count appropriate kinds of graphs) and the functions arising as their sums, as well as geometrical dexterity in extracting these power series from the graph-theoretic situation.[32]

Tutte summarised his work in the Selected Papers of W.T. Tutte, 1979, and in Graph Theory as I have known it, 1998.[28]

Positions, honours and awards edit

Tutte's work in World War II and subsequently in combinatorics brought him various positions, honours and awards:

Tutte served as Librarian for the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada in 1959–1960, and asteroid 14989 Tutte (1997 UB7) was named after him.[37]

Because of Tutte's work at Bletchley Park, Canada's Communications Security Establishment named an internal organisation aimed at promoting research into cryptology, the Tutte Institute for Mathematics and Computing (TIMC), in his honour in 2011.[38]

In September 2014, Tutte was celebrated in his hometown of Newmarket, England, with the unveiling of a sculpture, after a local newspaper started a campaign to honour his memory.[39]

Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes celebrated Tutte's work with an exhibition Bill Tutte: Mathematician + Codebreaker from May 2017 to 2019, preceded on 14 May 2017 by lectures about his life and work during the Bill Tutte Centenary Symposium.[40][41]

Personal life and death edit

In addition to the career benefits of working at the new University of Waterloo, the more rural setting of Waterloo County appealed to Bill and his wife Dorothea. They bought a house in the nearby village of West Montrose, Ontario where they enjoyed hiking, spending time in their garden on the Grand River and allowing others to enjoy the beautiful scenery of their property.

They also had an extensive knowledge of all the birds in their garden. Dorothea, an avid potter, was also a keen hiker and Bill organised hiking trips. Even near the end of his life Bill still was an avid walker.[7][42] After his wife died in 1994, he moved back to Newmarket (Suffolk), but then returned to Waterloo in 2000, where he died two years later.[43] He is buried in West Montrose United Cemetery.[28]

Select publications edit

Books edit

  • Tutte, W. T. (1966), Connectivity in graphs, Mathematical expositions, vol. 15, Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press, Zbl 0146.45603
  • Tutte, W. T. (1966), Introduction to the theory of matroids, Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND Corporation report R-446-PR. Also Tutte, W. T. (1971), Introduction to the theory of matroids, Modern analytic and computational methods in science and mathematics, vol. 37, New York: American Elsevier Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0-444-00096-5, Zbl 0231.05027
  • Tutte, W. T., ed. (1969), Recent progress in combinatorics. Proceedings of the third Waterloo conference on combinatorics, May 1968, New York-London: Academic Press, pp. xiv+347, ISBN 978-0-12-705150-5, Zbl 0192.33101
  • Tutte, W. T. (1979), McCarthy, D.; Stanton, R. G. (eds.), Selected papers of W.T. Tutte, Vols. I, II., Winnipeg, Manitoba: Charles Babbage Research Centre, St. Pierre, Manitoba, Canada, pp. xxi+879, Zbl 0403.05028
  • Tutte, W. T. (1984), Graph theory, Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications, vol. 21, Menlo Park, California: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0-201-13520-6, Zbl 0554.05001 Reprinted by Cambridge University Press 2001, ISBN 978-0-521-79489-3
  • Tutte, W. T. (1998), Graph theory as I have known it, Oxford lecture series in mathematics and its applications, vol. 11, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 978-0-19-850251-7, Zbl 0915.05041 Reprinted 2012, ISBN 978-0-19-966055-1

Articles edit

  • Brooks, R. L.; Smith, C. A. B.; Stone, A. H.; Tutte, W. T. (1940), "The Dissection of Rectangles into Squares", Duke Math. J., 7: 312–340, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-40-00718-9
  • Tutte, W. T. (1963), "How to draw a graph", Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, Third Series, 13: 743–767, doi:10.1112/plms/s3-13.1.743, MR 0158387

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In more recent terminology, each impulse would be termed a "bit" with a mark being binary 1 and a space being binary 0. Punched paper tape had a hole for a mark and no hole for a space.
  2. ^ For this reason Tutte's 1 + 2 method is sometimes called the "double delta" method.
  3. ^ The five impulses or bits of the coded characters are sometimes referred to as five levels.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c W. T. Tutte at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ a b Hinsley & Stripp 1993, p. 8
  3. ^ a b Brzezinski 2005, p. 18
  4. ^ a b c d Younger 2012
  5. ^ a b c O'Connor & Robertson 2003
  6. ^ Johnson, Will. "Matroids" (PDF). Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d Hobbs, Arthur M.; James G. Oxley (March 2004). "William T. Tutte (1917–2002)" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 51 (3): 322.
  8. ^ Cheveley CofE Primary School, Park Road, Cheveley, Cambridgeshire, CB8 9DF http://www.cheveley.cambs.sch.uk/
  9. ^ Smith, Cedric A. B.; Abbott, Steve (March 2003), "The Story of Blanche Descartes", The Mathematical Gazette, 87 (508): 23–33, doi:10.1017/S0025557200172067, ISSN 0025-5572, JSTOR 3620560, S2CID 192758206
  10. ^ a b Good, Michie & Timms 1945, p. 6 in 1. Introduction: German Tunny
  11. ^ Tutte 2006, pp. 352–353
  12. ^ Hinsley, F.H. (2001) [1993]. "An Introduction to Fish". In F.H. Hinsley; Alan Stripp (eds.). Codebreakers: the inside story of Bletchley Park. Oxford University Press. pp. 141–148. ISBN 0-19-280132-5.
  13. ^ Sale, Tony, The Lorenz Cipher and how Bletchley Park broke it, retrieved 21 October 2010
  14. ^ Tutte 2006, p. 354
  15. ^ Bauer 2006, p. 375
  16. ^ Tutte 2006, pp. 356–357
  17. ^ Copeland 2006, pp. 348, 349
  18. ^ Tutte 2006, p. 357
  19. ^ Singh, Simon, The Black Chamber, retrieved 28 April 2012
  20. ^ Newman c. 1944 p. 387
  21. ^ Carter 2004, p. 3
  22. ^ Tutte 1998, pp. 7–8
  23. ^ Good, Michie & Timms 1945, pp. 321–322 in 44. Hand Statistical Methods: Setting – Statistical Methods
  24. ^ Budiansky 2006, pp. 58–59
  25. ^ Copeland 2011
  26. ^ Younger, Dan (August 2002). "Biography of Professor Tutte". CMS Notes. Retrieved 24 June 2018 – via University of Waterloo.
  27. ^ Roberts, Jerry (2017), Lorenz: Breaking Hitler's top secret code at Bletchley Park, Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press, ISBN 978-0-7509-7885-9
  28. ^ a b c d e . Archived from the original on 19 August 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  29. ^ W.T Tutte. An algorithm for determining whether a given binary matroid is graphic, Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, 11(1960)905–917
  30. ^ W.T. Tutte. How to draw a graph. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, 13(3):743–768, 1963.
  31. ^ Steven J. Gortle; Craig Gotsman; Dylan Thurston. "Discrete One-Forms on Meshes and Applications to 3D Mesh Parameterization", Computer Aided Geometric Design, 23(2006)83–112
  32. ^ C. St. J. A. Nash-Williams, A Note on Some of Professor Tutte's Mathematical Work, Graph Theory and Related Topics (eds. J.A Bondy and U. S. R Murty), Academic Press, New York, 1979, p. xxvii.
  33. ^ . ICA. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  34. ^ "Tutte honoured by cryptographic centre". University of Waterloo. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  35. ^ "Bill Tutte inducted into the Waterloo Region Hall of Fame | Combinatorics and Optimization". Combinatorics and Optimization. 25 April 2016.
  36. ^ "Mathematics professor and wartime code-breaker honoured". 12 May 2017.
  37. ^ . Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 14 June 2011. Archived from the original on 4 January 2015. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  38. ^ Freeze, Colin (7 September 2011). "Top secret institute comes out of the shadows to recruit top talent". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  39. ^ "The Bill Tutte Memorial". Bill Tutte Memorial Fund. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  40. ^ "The Bill Tutte Centenary Symposium (Bletchley Park)". 11 April 2017.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  42. ^ . Telegraph Group Limited. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  43. ^ van der Vat, Dan (10 May 2002), "Obituary: William Tutte", The Guardian, London, retrieved 28 April 2013

Sources edit

  • Bauer, Friedrich L. (2006), The Tiltman Break Appendix 5 in Copeland 2006, pp. 370–377
  • Brzezinski, Zbigniew (2005), "The Unknown Victors", in Ciechanowski, Stanisław (ed.), Marian Rejewski, 1905-1980: living with the Enigma secret, Bydgoszcz, Poland: Bydgoszcz City Council, pp. 15–18, ISBN 83-7208-117-4
  • Copeland, B. Jack, ed. (2006), Colossus: The Secrets of Bletchley Park's Codebreaking Computers, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-284055-4
  • Copeland, B. Jack (2011), Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age in Erskine & Smith 2011, pp. 305–327
  • Erskine, Ralph; Smith, Michael, eds. (2011) [2001], The Bletchley Park Codebreakers, Biteback Publishing Ltd, ISBN 978-1-84954-078-0 Updated and extended version of Action This Day: From Breaking of the Enigma Code to the Birth of the Modern Computer Bantam Press 2001
  • Good, Jack; Michie, Donald; Timms, Geoffrey (1945), General Report on Tunny: With Emphasis on Statistical Methods, UK Public Record Office HW 25/4 and HW 25/5, retrieved 15 September 2010 That version is a facsimile copy, but there is a transcript of much of this document in '.pdf' format at: Sale, Tony (2001), Part of the 'General Report on Tunny', the Newmanry History, formatted by Tony Sale (PDF), retrieved 20 September 2010, and a web transcript of Part 1 at: Ellsbury, Graham, General Report on Tunny With Emphasis on Statistical Methods, retrieved 3 November 2010
  • Good, Jack (1993), Enigma and Fish in Hinsley & Stripp 1993, pp. 149–166
  • Hinsley, F. H.; Stripp, Alan, eds. (1993) [1992], Codebreakers: The inside story of Bletchley Park, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-280132-6
  • O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. (2003), MacTutor Biography: William Thomas Tutte, University of St Andrews, retrieved 28 April 2013
  • Tutte, W. T. (19 June 1998), Fish and I (PDF), retrieved 7 April 2012 Transcript of a lecture given by Prof. Tutte at the University of Waterloo
  • Tutte, William T. (2006), My Work at Bletchley Park Appendix 4 in Copeland 2006, pp. 352–369
  • Ward, Mark (27 May 2011), "Code-cracking machine returned to life", BBC News, retrieved 28 April 2013
  • Younger, D. H. (2012), "Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society: William Thomas Tutte. 14 May 1917 – 2 May 2002", Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 58, The Royal Society: 283–297, doi:10.1098/rsbm.2012.0036, S2CID 73088374, retrieved 28 April 2013

External links edit

  • Professor William T. Tutte
  • W. T. Tutte at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • William Tutte, 84, Mathematician and Code-breaker, Dies – Obituary from The New York Times
  • William Tutte: Unsung mathematical mastermind – Obituary from The Guardian
  • CRM-Fields-PIMS Prize – 2001 – William T. Tutte
  • "60 Years in the Nets" – a lecture (audio recording) given at the Fields Institute on 25 October 2001 to mark the receipt of the 2001 CRM-Fields Prize
  • , Ian Douglas, The Daily Telegraph, 25 December 2012
  • Murty, U. S. R. (2004), "Dedication: Professor W.T. Tutte", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 92 (2): 191–192, doi:10.1016/j.jctb.2004.08.002.
  • Younger, D. H. (2004), "Dedication: Professor W.T. Tutte", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 92 (2): 193–198, doi:10.1016/j.jctb.2004.09.002.
  • The Tutte Institute for Research in Mathematics and Computer Science

tutte, william, thomas, tutte, frsc, 1917, 2002, english, canadian, codebreaker, mathematician, during, second, world, made, brilliant, fundamental, advance, cryptanalysis, lorenz, cipher, major, nazi, german, cipher, system, which, used, secret, communication. William Thomas Tutte OC FRS FRSC t ʌ t 14 May 1917 2 May 2002 was an English and Canadian codebreaker and mathematician During the Second World War he made a brilliant and fundamental advance in cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher a major Nazi German cipher system which was used for top secret communications within the Wehrmacht High Command The high level strategic nature of the intelligence obtained from Tutte s crucial breakthrough in the bulk decrypting of Lorenz enciphered messages specifically contributed greatly and perhaps even decisively to the defeat of Nazi Germany 2 3 He also had a number of significant mathematical accomplishments including foundation work in the fields of graph theory and matroid theory 4 5 W T TutteBorn 1917 05 14 14 May 1917Newmarket Suffolk EnglandDied2 May 2002 2002 05 02 aged 84 Kitchener Ontario CanadaAlma materTrinity College Cambridge PhD Known forBEST theorem Hanani Tutte theorem Peripheral cycle Tutte 12 cage Tutte embedding Tutte graph Tutte homotopy theorem Tutte matrix Tutte polynomial Tutte theorem Tutte Berge formula Tutte Coxeter graph Tutte Grothendieck invariant Tutte s 1 2 break in Tutte s 1 factor theorem Tutte s fragment Tutte s linking theorem Tutte s planarity criterion Tutte s statistical method Tutte s triangle lemma Tutte s unimodular representation theorem Tutte s wheel theoremSpouseDorothea Geraldine Mitchell m 1949 1994 her death AwardsJeffery Williams Prize 1971 Henry Marshall Tory Medal 1975 Isaak Walton Killam Award 1982 CRM Fields PIMS prize 2001 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsUniversity of TorontoUniversity of WaterlooThesisAn Algebraic Theory of Graphs 1 1948 Doctoral advisorShaun Wylie 1 Doctoral studentsW G Brown Neil Robertson 1 Tutte s research in the field of graph theory proved to be of remarkable importance At a time when graph theory was still a primitive subject Tutte commenced the study of matroids and developed them into a theory by expanding from the work that Hassler Whitney had first developed around the mid 1930s 6 Even though Tutte s contributions to graph theory have been influential to modern graph theory and many of his theorems have been used to keep making advances in the field most of his terminology was not in agreement with their conventional usage and thus his terminology is not used by graph theorists today 7 Tutte advanced graph theory from a subject with one text D Konig s toward its present extremely active state 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Second World War 2 1 Diagnosing the cipher machine 2 2 Tutte s statistical method 3 Doctorate and career 4 Research contributions 5 Positions honours and awards 6 Personal life and death 7 Select publications 7 1 Books 7 2 Articles 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly life and education editTutte was born in Newmarket in Suffolk He was the younger son of William John Tutte 1873 1944 an estate gardener and Annie nee Newell 1881 1956 a housekeeper Both parents worked at Fitzroy House stables where Tutte was born 5 The family spent some time in Buckinghamshire County Durham and Yorkshire before returning to Newmarket where Tutte attended Cheveley Church of England primary school 8 in the nearby village of Cheveley 4 In 1927 when he was ten Tutte won a scholarship to the Cambridge and County High School for Boys He took up his place there in 1928 In 1935 he won a scholarship to study natural sciences at Trinity College Cambridge where he specialized in chemistry and graduated with first class honours in 1938 4 He continued with physical chemistry as a graduate student but transferred to mathematics at the end of 1940 4 As a student he along with three of his friends became one of the first to solve the problem of squaring the square and the first to solve the problem without a squared subrectangle Together the four created the pseudonym Blanche Descartes under which Tutte published occasionally for years 9 Second World War editSee also Cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher nbsp The Lorenz SZ machines had 12 wheels each with a different number of cams or pins Wheel number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 BP wheel name 10 ps 1 displaystyle psi 1 nbsp ps 2 displaystyle psi 2 nbsp ps 3 displaystyle psi 3 nbsp ps 4 displaystyle psi 4 nbsp ps 5 displaystyle psi 5 nbsp m displaystyle mu nbsp 37 m displaystyle mu nbsp 61 x 1 displaystyle chi 1 nbsp x 2 displaystyle chi 2 nbsp x 3 displaystyle chi 3 nbsp x 4 displaystyle chi 4 nbsp x 5 displaystyle chi 5 nbsp Number of cams pins 43 47 51 53 59 37 61 41 31 29 26 23 Soon after the outbreak of the Second World War Tutte s tutor Patrick Duff suggested him for war work at the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park BP He was interviewed and sent on a training course in London before going to Bletchley Park where he joined the Research Section At first he worked on the Hagelin cipher that was being used by the Italian Navy This was a rotor cipher machine that was available commercially so the mechanics of enciphering was known and decrypting messages only required working out how the machine was set up 11 In the summer of 1941 Tutte was transferred to work on a project called Fish Intelligence information had revealed that the Germans called the wireless teleprinter transmission systems Sagefisch sawfish This led the British to use the code Fish for the German teleprinter cipher system The nickname Tunny tunafish was used for the first non Morse link and it was subsequently used for the Lorenz SZ machines and the traffic that they enciphered 12 Telegraphy used the 5 bit International Telegraphy Alphabet No 2 ITA2 Nothing was known about the mechanism of enciphering other than that messages were preceded by a 12 letter indicator which implied a 12 wheel rotor cipher machine The first step therefore had to be to diagnose the machine by establishing the logical structure and hence the functioning of the machine Tutte played a pivotal role in achieving this and it was not until shortly before the Allied victory in Europe in 1945 that Bletchley Park acquired a Tunny Lorenz cipher machine 13 Tutte s breakthroughs led eventually to bulk decrypting of Tunny enciphered messages between the German High Command OKW in Berlin and their army commands throughout occupied Europe and contributed perhaps decisively to the defeat of Germany 2 3 Diagnosing the cipher machine edit On 31 August 1941 two versions of the same message were sent using identical keys which constituted a depth This allowed John Tiltman Bletchley Park s veteran and remarkably gifted cryptanalyst to deduce that it was a Vernam cipher which uses the Exclusive Or XOR function symbolised by and to extract the two messages and hence obtain the obscuring key After a fruitless period during which Research Section cryptanalysts tried to work out how the Tunny machine worked this and some other keys were handed to Tutte who was asked to see what you can make of these 14 nbsp The Lorenz SZ42 machine with its covers removed Bletchley Park museum At his training course Tutte had been taught the Kasiski examination technique of writing out a key on squared paper starting a new row after a defined number of characters that was suspected of being the frequency of repetition of the key 15 If this number was correct the columns of the matrix would show more repetitions of sequences of characters than chance alone Tutte knew that the Tunny indicators used 25 letters excluding J for 11 of the positions but only 23 letters for the other He therefore tried Kasiski s technique on the first impulse of the key characters using a repetition of 25 23 575 He did not observe a large number of column repetitions with this period but he did observe the phenomenon on a diagonal He therefore tried again with 574 which showed up repeats in the columns Recognising that the prime factors of this number are 2 7 and 41 he tried again with a period of 41 and got a rectangle of dots and crosses that was replete with repetitions 16 It was clear however that the first impulse of the key was more complicated than that produced by a single wheel of 41 key impulses Tutte called this component of the key x 1 displaystyle chi 1 nbsp chi1 He figured that there was another component which was XOR ed with this that did not always change with each new character and that this was the product of a wheel that he called ps 1 displaystyle psi 1 nbsp psi1 The same applied for each of the five impulses x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 x 5 displaystyle chi 1 chi 2 chi 3 chi 4 chi 5 nbsp and ps 1 ps 2 ps 3 ps 4 ps 5 displaystyle psi 1 psi 2 psi 3 psi 4 psi 5 nbsp So for a single character the whole key K consisted of two components K x ps displaystyle K chi oplus psi nbsp At Bletchley Park mark impulses were signified by x and space impulses by nb 1 For example the letter H would be coded as x x 17 Tutte s derivation of the chi and psi components was made possible by the fact that dots were more likely than not to be followed by dots and crosses more likely than not to be followed by crosses This was a product of a weakness in the German key setting which they later eliminated Once Tutte had made this breakthrough the rest of the Research Section joined in to study the other impulses and it was established that the five chi wheels all advanced with each new character and that the five psi wheels all moved together under the control of two mu or motor wheels Over the following two months Tutte and other members of the Research Section worked out the complete logical structure of the machine with its set of wheels bearing cams that could either be in a position raised that added x to the stream of key characters or in the alternative position that added in 18 Diagnosing the functioning of the Tunny machine in this way was a truly remarkable cryptanalytical achievement which in the citation for Tutte s induction as an Officer of the Order of Canada was described as one of the greatest intellectual feats of World War II 5 Tutte s statistical method edit See also Tutte s 1 2 break in To decrypt a Tunny message required knowledge not only of the logical functioning of the machine but also the start positions of each rotor for the particular message The search was on for a process that would manipulate the ciphertext or key to produce a frequency distribution of characters that departed from the uniformity that the enciphering process aimed to achieve While on secondment to the Research Section in July 1942 Alan Turing worked out that the XOR combination of the values of successive characters in a stream of ciphertext and key emphasised any departures from a uniform distribution The resultant stream symbolised by the Greek letter delta D was called the difference because XOR is the same as modulo 2 subtraction The reason that this provided a way into Tunny was that although the frequency distribution of characters in the ciphertext could not be distinguished from a random stream the same was not true for a version of the ciphertext from which the chi element of the key had been removed This was the case because where the plaintext contained a repeated character and the psi wheels did not move on the differenced psi character D ps displaystyle Delta psi nbsp would be the null character at Bletchley Park When XOR ed with any character this character has no effect Repeated characters in the plaintext were more frequent both because of the characteristics of German EE TT LL and SS are relatively common 19 and because telegraphists frequently repeated the figures shift and letters shift characters 20 as their loss in an ordinary telegraph message could lead to gibberish 21 To quote the General Report on Tunny Turingery introduced the principle that the key differenced at one now called DK could yield information unobtainable from ordinary key This D principle was to be the fundamental basis of nearly all statistical methods of wheel breaking and setting 10 Tutte exploited this amplification of non uniformity in the differenced values nb 2 and by November 1942 had produced a way of discovering wheel starting points of the Tunny machine which became known as the Statistical Method 22 The essence of this method was to find the initial settings of the chi component of the key by exhaustively trying all positions of its combination with the ciphertext and looking for evidence of the non uniformity that reflected the characteristics of the original plaintext 23 24 Because any repeated characters in the plaintext would always generate and similarly D ps 1 D ps 2 displaystyle Delta psi 1 oplus Delta psi 2 nbsp would generate whenever the psi wheels did not move on and about half of the time when they did some 70 overall As well as applying differencing to the full 5 bit characters of the ITA2 code Tutte applied it to the individual impulses bits nb 3 The current chi wheel cam settings needed to have been established to allow the relevant sequence of characters of the chi wheels to be generated It was totally impracticable to generate the 22 million characters from all five of the chi wheels so it was initially limited to 41 31 1271 from the first two After explaining his findings to Max Newman Newman was given the job of developing an automated approach to comparing ciphertext and key to look for departures from randomness The first machine was dubbed Heath Robinson but the much faster Colossus computer developed by Tommy Flowers and using algorithms written by Tutte and his colleagues soon took over for breaking codes 25 26 27 Doctorate and career editIn late 1945 Tutte resumed his studies at Cambridge now as a graduate student in mathematics He published some work begun earlier one a now famous paper that characterises which graphs have a perfect matching and another that constructs a non Hamiltonian graph Tutte completed a doctorate in mathematics from Cambridge in 1948 under the supervision of Shaun Wylie who had also worked at Bletchley Park on Tunny His thesis An Algebraic Theory of Graphs was considered ground breaking and was about the subject later known as matroid theory 28 The same year invited by Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter he accepted a position at the University of Toronto In 1962 he moved to the University of Waterloo in Waterloo Ontario where he stayed for the rest of his academic career He officially retired in 1985 but remained active as an emeritus professor Tutte was instrumental in helping to found the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo His mathematical career concentrated on combinatorics especially graph theory which he is credited as having helped create in its modern form and matroid theory to which he made profound contributions one colleague described him as the leading mathematician in combinatorics for three decades He was editor in chief of the Journal of Combinatorial Theory until retiring from Waterloo in 1985 28 He also served on the editorial boards of several other mathematical research journals Research contributions editTutte s work in graph theory includes the structure of cycle spaces and cut spaces the size of maximum matchings and existence of k factors in graphs and Hamiltonian and non Hamiltonian graphs 28 He disproved Tait s conjecture on the Hamiltonicity of polyhedral graphs by using the construction known as Tutte s fragment The eventual proof of the four colour theorem made use of his earlier work The graph polynomial he called the dichromate has become famous and influential under the name of the Tutte polynomial and serves as the prototype of combinatorial invariants that are universal for all invariants that satisfy a specified reduction law The first major advances in matroid theory were made by Tutte in his 1948 Cambridge PhD thesis which formed the basis of an important sequence of papers published over the next two decades Tutte s work in graph theory and matroid theory has been profoundly influential on the development of both the content and direction of these two fields 7 In matroid theory he discovered the highly sophisticated homotopy theorem and founded the studies of chain groups and regular matroids about which he proved deep results In addition Tutte developed an algorithm for determining whether a given binary matroid is a graphic matroid The algorithm makes use of the fact that a planar graph is simply a graph whose circuit matroid the dual of its bond matroid is graphic 29 Tutte wrote a paper entitled How to Draw a Graph in which he proved that any face in a 3 connected graph is enclosed by a peripheral cycle Using this fact Tutte developed an alternative proof to show that every Kuratowski graph is non planar by showing that K5 and K3 3 each have three distinct peripheral cycles with a common edge In addition to using peripheral cycles to prove that the Kuratowski graphs are non planar Tutte proved that every simple 3 connected graph can be drawn with all its faces convex and devised an algorithm which constructs the plane drawing by solving a linear system The resulting drawing is known as the Tutte embedding Tutte s algorithm makes use of the barycentric mappings of the peripheral circuits of a simple 3 connected graph 30 The findings published in this paper have proved to be of much significance because the algorithms that Tutte developed have become popular planar graph drawing methods One of the reasons for which Tutte s embedding is popular is that the necessary computations that are carried out by his algorithms are simple and guarantee a one to one correspondence of a graph and its embedding onto the Euclidean plane which is of importance when parameterising a three dimensional mesh to the plane in geometric modelling Tutte s theorem is the basis for solutions to other computer graphics problems such as morphing 31 Tutte was mainly responsible for developing the theory of enumeration of planar graphs which has close links with chromatic and dichromatic polynomials This work involved some highly innovative techniques of his own invention requiring considerable manipulative dexterity in handling power series whose coefficients count appropriate kinds of graphs and the functions arising as their sums as well as geometrical dexterity in extracting these power series from the graph theoretic situation 32 Tutte summarised his work in the Selected Papers of W T Tutte 1979 and in Graph Theory as I have known it 1998 28 Positions honours and awards editTutte s work in World War II and subsequently in combinatorics brought him various positions honours and awards 1958 Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada FRSC 1971 Jeffery Williams Prize by the Canadian Mathematical Society 1975 Henry Marshall Tory Medal by the Royal Society of Canada 1977 A conference on Graph Theory and Related Topics was held at the University of Waterloo in his honour on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday 1982 Isaak Walton Killam Award by the Canada Council 1987 Fellow of the Royal Society FRS 1990 1996 First President of the Institute of Combinatorics and its Applications 33 1998 Appointed honorary director of the Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research at the University of Waterloo 34 2001 Officer of the Order of Canada OC 2001 CRM Fields PIMS prize 2016 Waterloo Region Hall of Fame 35 2017 Waterloo William Tutte Way road naming 36 Tutte served as Librarian for the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada in 1959 1960 and asteroid 14989 Tutte 1997 UB7 was named after him 37 Because of Tutte s work at Bletchley Park Canada s Communications Security Establishment named an internal organisation aimed at promoting research into cryptology the Tutte Institute for Mathematics and Computing TIMC in his honour in 2011 38 In September 2014 Tutte was celebrated in his hometown of Newmarket England with the unveiling of a sculpture after a local newspaper started a campaign to honour his memory 39 Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes celebrated Tutte s work with an exhibition Bill Tutte Mathematician Codebreaker from May 2017 to 2019 preceded on 14 May 2017 by lectures about his life and work during the Bill Tutte Centenary Symposium 40 41 Personal life and death editIn addition to the career benefits of working at the new University of Waterloo the more rural setting of Waterloo County appealed to Bill and his wife Dorothea They bought a house in the nearby village of West Montrose Ontario where they enjoyed hiking spending time in their garden on the Grand River and allowing others to enjoy the beautiful scenery of their property They also had an extensive knowledge of all the birds in their garden Dorothea an avid potter was also a keen hiker and Bill organised hiking trips Even near the end of his life Bill still was an avid walker 7 42 After his wife died in 1994 he moved back to Newmarket Suffolk but then returned to Waterloo in 2000 where he died two years later 43 He is buried in West Montrose United Cemetery 28 Select publications editBooks edit Tutte W T 1966 Connectivity in graphs Mathematical expositions vol 15 Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press Zbl 0146 45603 Tutte W T 1966 Introduction to the theory of matroids Santa Monica Calif RAND Corporation report R 446 PR Also Tutte W T 1971 Introduction to the theory of matroids Modern analytic and computational methods in science and mathematics vol 37 New York American Elsevier Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 444 00096 5 Zbl 0231 05027 Tutte W T ed 1969 Recent progress in combinatorics Proceedings of the third Waterloo conference on combinatorics May 1968 New York London Academic Press pp xiv 347 ISBN 978 0 12 705150 5 Zbl 0192 33101 Tutte W T 1979 McCarthy D Stanton R G eds Selected papers of W T Tutte Vols I II Winnipeg Manitoba Charles Babbage Research Centre St Pierre Manitoba Canada pp xxi 879 Zbl 0403 05028 Volume I ISBN 978 0 969 07781 7 Volume II ISBN 978 0 969 07782 4 Tutte W T 1984 Graph theory Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications vol 21 Menlo Park California Addison Wesley Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 201 13520 6 Zbl 0554 05001 Reprinted by Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 521 79489 3 Tutte W T 1998 Graph theory as I have known it Oxford lecture series in mathematics and its applications vol 11 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 850251 7 Zbl 0915 05041 Reprinted 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 966055 1 Articles edit Brooks R L Smith C A B Stone A H Tutte W T 1940 The Dissection of Rectangles into Squares Duke Math J 7 312 340 doi 10 1215 s0012 7094 40 00718 9 Tutte W T 1963 How to draw a graph Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society Third Series 13 743 767 doi 10 1112 plms s3 13 1 743 MR 0158387See also editList of University of Waterloo people Systolic geometryNotes edit In more recent terminology each impulse would be termed a bit with a mark being binary 1 and a space being binary 0 Punched paper tape had a hole for a mark and no hole for a space For this reason Tutte s 1 2 method is sometimes called the double delta method The five impulses or bits of the coded characters are sometimes referred to as five levels References edit a b c W T Tutte at the Mathematics Genealogy Project a b Hinsley amp Stripp 1993 p 8 a b Brzezinski 2005 p 18 a b c d Younger 2012 a b c O Connor amp Robertson 2003 Johnson Will Matroids PDF Retrieved 16 October 2014 a b c d Hobbs Arthur M James G Oxley March 2004 William T Tutte 1917 2002 PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 51 3 322 Cheveley CofE Primary School Park Road Cheveley Cambridgeshire CB8 9DF http www cheveley cambs sch uk Smith Cedric A B Abbott Steve March 2003 The Story of Blanche Descartes The Mathematical Gazette 87 508 23 33 doi 10 1017 S0025557200172067 ISSN 0025 5572 JSTOR 3620560 S2CID 192758206 a b Good Michie amp Timms 1945 p 6 in 1 Introduction German Tunny Tutte 2006 pp 352 353 Hinsley F H 2001 1993 An Introduction to Fish In F H Hinsley Alan Stripp eds Codebreakers the inside story of Bletchley Park Oxford University Press pp 141 148 ISBN 0 19 280132 5 Sale Tony The Lorenz Cipher and how Bletchley Park broke it retrieved 21 October 2010 Tutte 2006 p 354 Bauer 2006 p 375 Tutte 2006 pp 356 357 Copeland 2006 pp 348 349 Tutte 2006 p 357 Singh Simon The Black Chamber retrieved 28 April 2012 Newman c 1944 p 387 Carter 2004 p 3harvnb error no target CITEREFCarter2004 help Tutte 1998 pp 7 8 Good Michie amp Timms 1945 pp 321 322 in 44 Hand Statistical Methods Setting Statistical Methods Budiansky 2006 pp 58 59harvnb error no target CITEREFBudiansky2006 help Copeland 2011 Younger Dan August 2002 Biography of Professor Tutte CMS Notes Retrieved 24 June 2018 via University of Waterloo Roberts Jerry 2017 Lorenz Breaking Hitler s top secret code at Bletchley Park Stroud Gloucestershire The History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 7885 9 a b c d e Biography of Professor Tutte Combinatorics and Optimization University of Waterloo Archived from the original on 19 August 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2017 W T Tutte An algorithm for determining whether a given binary matroid is graphic Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 11 1960 905 917 W T Tutte How to draw a graph Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 13 3 743 768 1963 Steven J Gortle Craig Gotsman Dylan Thurston Discrete One Forms on Meshes and Applications to 3D Mesh Parameterization Computer Aided Geometric Design 23 2006 83 112 C St J A Nash Williams A Note on Some of Professor Tutte s Mathematical Work Graph Theory and Related Topics eds J A Bondy and U S R Murty Academic Press New York 1979 p xxvii The Institute of Combinatorics amp Its Applications ICA Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 28 September 2013 Tutte honoured by cryptographic centre University of Waterloo Retrieved 28 September 2013 Bill Tutte inducted into the Waterloo Region Hall of Fame Combinatorics and Optimization Combinatorics and Optimization 25 April 2016 Mathematics professor and wartime code breaker honoured 12 May 2017 Asteroid 14989 Tutte Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 14 June 2011 Archived from the original on 4 January 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2014 Freeze Colin 7 September 2011 Top secret institute comes out of the shadows to recruit top talent The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved 25 September 2014 The Bill Tutte Memorial Bill Tutte Memorial Fund Retrieved 13 December 2014 The Bill Tutte Centenary Symposium Bletchley Park 11 April 2017 Bletchley Park News New exhibition to tell story of Bill Tutte Archived from the original on 6 June 2017 Retrieved 11 May 2017 Bill Tutte Telegraph Group Limited Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2013 van der Vat Dan 10 May 2002 Obituary William Tutte The Guardian London retrieved 28 April 2013Sources editBauer Friedrich L 2006 The Tiltman Break Appendix 5 in Copeland 2006 pp 370 377 Brzezinski Zbigniew 2005 The Unknown Victors in Ciechanowski Stanislaw ed Marian Rejewski 1905 1980 living with the Enigma secret Bydgoszcz Poland Bydgoszcz City Council pp 15 18 ISBN 83 7208 117 4 Copeland B Jack ed 2006 Colossus The Secrets of Bletchley Park s Codebreaking Computers Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 284055 4 Copeland B Jack 2011 Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age in Erskine amp Smith 2011 pp 305 327 Erskine Ralph Smith Michael eds 2011 2001 The Bletchley Park Codebreakers Biteback Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 84954 078 0 Updated and extended version of Action This Day From Breaking of the Enigma Code to the Birth of the Modern Computer Bantam Press 2001 Good Jack Michie Donald Timms Geoffrey 1945 General Report on Tunny With Emphasis on Statistical Methods UK Public Record Office HW 25 4 and HW 25 5 retrieved 15 September 2010 That version is a facsimile copy but there is a transcript of much of this document in pdf format at Sale Tony 2001 Part of the General Report on Tunny the Newmanry History formatted by Tony Sale PDF retrieved 20 September 2010 and a web transcript of Part 1 at Ellsbury Graham General Report on Tunny With Emphasis on Statistical Methods retrieved 3 November 2010 Good Jack 1993 Enigma and Fish in Hinsley amp Stripp 1993 pp 149 166 Hinsley F H Stripp Alan eds 1993 1992 Codebreakers The inside story of Bletchley Park Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280132 6 O Connor J J Robertson E F 2003 MacTutor Biography William Thomas Tutte University of St Andrews retrieved 28 April 2013 Tutte W T 19 June 1998 Fish and I PDF retrieved 7 April 2012 Transcript of a lecture given by Prof Tutte at the University of Waterloo Tutte William T 2006 My Work at Bletchley Park Appendix 4 in Copeland 2006 pp 352 369 Ward Mark 27 May 2011 Code cracking machine returned to life BBC News retrieved 28 April 2013 Younger D H 2012 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society William Thomas Tutte 14 May 1917 2 May 2002 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 58 The Royal Society 283 297 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2012 0036 S2CID 73088374 retrieved 28 April 2013External links editProfessor William T Tutte W T Tutte at the Mathematics Genealogy Project William Tutte 84 Mathematician and Code breaker Dies Obituary from The New York Times William Tutte Unsung mathematical mastermind Obituary from The Guardian CRM Fields PIMS Prize 2001 William T Tutte 60 Years in the Nets a lecture audio recording given at the Fields Institute on 25 October 2001 to mark the receipt of the 2001 CRM Fields Prize Tutte s disproof of Tait s conjecture Bletchley s forgotten heroes Ian Douglas The Daily Telegraph 25 December 2012 Murty U S R 2004 Dedication Professor W T Tutte Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B 92 2 191 192 doi 10 1016 j jctb 2004 08 002 Younger D H 2004 Dedication Professor W T Tutte Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B 92 2 193 198 doi 10 1016 j jctb 2004 09 002 The Tutte Institute for Research in Mathematics and Computer Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W T Tutte amp oldid 1218786891, 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