Compact Disc
Compact Disc
Abstract
Everyone is familiar these days with Compact Disk (CD) and Digital
Versatile Disk (DVD) systems. In case familiarity has bred contempt for
these marvels of modern technology, we will try to explain in simple
terms the complex set of ideas and techniques that have made possible
the construction of these Optical Data Storage devices. Information, be it
analog (such as voice, still images, video) or digital (e.g., text, computer
files, internet traffic) can be represented in binary format as a string of 0's
and 1's. These binary strings can be stored on optical disks and retrieved
(for reproduction) using lasers and other sophisticated opto-electronic
instruments. In this presentation we describe methods of conversion of
the various forms of information into binary sequences, discuss methods
of storing these sequences on CD and DVD platters, and explain how this
information is recovered/reconstructed during playback.
A Little History
The history of the compact disk (CD) started in the 1970’s with the videodisk
in the form of Video Long Play (VLP) read-only systems. The videodisk did
not become a commercial success, even after write-once optical disks of
different formats and sizes were introduced. These were analog systems. In
1982 the CD-DA (compact disk-digital audio) was introduced to the market
jointly by Phillips and Sony. It stored a high-quality stereo audio signal in a
digital format. These systems became a huge success. In 1985, the technology
was extended to computer storage, again in a collaboration between Phillips
and Sony. This was called a CD-ROM (compact disk-read only memory).
Early in 1995, two major groups were competing to develop the next
generation of high-density compact disks. Under the partnership of Philips
and Sony, there began the development of one such format. Concurrently, a
group led by Toshiba and Time Warner was working on another format. In
September of 1995 the two camps agreed to develop a single standard for a
high-density compact disk. The first DVD-video players were sold in Tokyo
in November’96, followed by their US introduction in August’97.
CD Under a Microscope
Spiral track
Track direction
Fingerprint (15mm)
Track Density and Data Density
The CD is 12 cm in diameter, 1.2 mm thick, has a center
hole 1.5 cm in diameter, and spins at a constant linear
velocity (CLV) or constant angular velocity (CAV).
There is only one track on the optical disk and all data are
stored in a spiral of about 2 billion small pits on the
surface. There are about 30,000 windings on a CD - all
part of the same track. This translates into about 16,000
tracks per inch and an areal density of 1 Mb/mm2.
The total length of the track on a CD is almost 3 miles.
CD Versus DVD
CD in Cross-section
On the top and bottom frames, the central spot B has drifted to one side
of the track and the modulation is greatest in one of the side beams A or
C. In the center frame, the central spot B is correctly located over the
track and the modulation from the central spot is a maximum.
Focus Actuator
Inside the drive, the disk and the drive's optics are separated by a
distance of about 1 mm, making mechanical interaction and crashes,
even with wavy disks and imperfect clamping almost impossible.
Automatic Focusing
Automatic Focusing
Automatic Focusing
How Many 8-letter Words Are There?
AAAAAAAA 00000000
28 =256
AAAAAAAB 00000001
AAAAAAAC 00000010
. .
BROADWAY 00100010
. .
CONSTANT 01001011
. .
. .
WILDCATS 11100010
. .
ZZZZZZZZ 268 =208,827,064,576 11111111
The ASCII Code
A 00101101
B 00101110
.
Z 11011001
0 11011100
1 01010101 Any English text can therefore be
2 10101111 translated into the language of 0’s
. and 1’s (the Binary Language)
9 11001100 with the aid of the ASCII code.
? 10101001
00101001
( 11100010
.
.
Audio Signal
Electrical Waveform
Sampling and Analog to Digital Conversion (ADC)
● 25 GB (1-layer)
● 50 GB (2-layers)
● 700MB ● 1x = 36 Mbits/s
● 1x-72x speeds ● 1x–14x speeds
● 405 nm laser