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[PSUs]| Wednesday 5th January 2005 |
Holographic storage has been something of a holy grail amongst storage manufacturers for some years. Instead of storing data on the surface of a disc, a holographic drive will store data through the thickness of the drive itself. It is created by an interference pattern created by two light beams being fixed within the storage medium itself. Afterwards, one beam shining through the medium can recreate the pattern and read data back.
The key to creating holographic storage lies within the light source and the medium itself. The storage material used to construct the
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The other key component is a 407nm blue laser to provide the necessary wavelength required for high capacity holographic storage, which has only recently become commercially affordable. Finally, collection of the data is via a CMOS active pixel sensor arrays.
Inphase says that the prototype drive includes all drive subsystems such as the auto load/unload mechanics, servo system, holographic read/write head, data channel and electronics.
The company claims that the prototype can fit more than one million bits of data into a single page, which is recorded with a single flash of the 407 nm laser beam. Multiple pages of data, referred to as a book, are recorded in one spot on the disk providing approximately 12MB of data in a single book location.
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