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Terabyte DVD

Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2010 8:41 am
by hotheat
[center]In the Race Between Optical and Magnetic Storage, We Win


Image
A Sketch of the atomic structure of
Darrell Schlom's novel ferroelectric material
as stored in a film made of the
same substance.
[/center]

Two new advances could soon allow speedier, more efficient access to computer memory and achieve storage of tremendous amounts of data in a compact space.

One finding builds on the technology used in today’s “smart cards,” which enable carriers to access a building by holding the card near a reader. In these cards, memory is provided by ferroelectric materials, substances that hold an electric state without additional power. But engineers have not yet been able to take advantage of this property in most computers because of the difficulties in directly integrating ferroelectric substances with silicon.

Recently, materials scientist Darrell Schlom of Cornell University and his colleagues did just that, applying a several-atoms-thick layer of a compound called strontium titanate to silicon. Interactions between the atomic structures of the materials caused the strontium titanate to become ferroelectric. Theory predicts this effect, but it had never been achieved before. Ferroelectrics could significantly reduce time spent booting up by allowing a computer to keep a browser or document open without using energy, according to materials scientist Jonathan Spanier of Drexel University.

In a separate project, researchers made a leap in the ability to store huge quantities of data optically. James Chon, a nanophotonics scientist at Swinburne University of Technology in Australia, demonstrated that data could be stored in five dimensions, enabling more than a terabyte of information to be packed onto a single DVD-size disk.

Chon’s group embedded the disk with tiny gold particles known as nanorods. By varying the length and orientation of the rods, the researchers were able to record data based on the three dimensions of space, plus polarization (the orientation of light waves) and color. When the process is refined, Chon believes one disk could potentially hold 10 terabytes of information—more than 500 times as much as today’s DVDs. This technology could be useful for storing massive collections, such as the 100 terabytes of data the Library of Congress has gathered for its Web site archive.

source: -http://discovermagazine.com

Re: Terabyte DVD

Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2010 7:02 pm
by ¡ñ±£¿®∆L Ф¶†ïς@п
Dude, thanks for the article. It's truly amazing the amount of storage scientists are uncovering, and at the rate they are doing so. Ten years ago, Yahoo! mail allowed an "amazing" allotment of 512 kb of personal data, but to be even more bold, within the year they doubled the archive storage to 1 mb.
Now, it is well over 6 GB of storage the most forward of e-mail services provide to users, even going so far to state it is "unlimited" (not true, but they still tout it).

Also great to keep updated on one of my favorite magazines, both literal and online. I love Discover Mag.

Re: Terabyte DVD

Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2010 7:37 am
by hotheat
i, too, am fond of science magazines (especially Discover and Scientific American).

if u have issues of Discover magazine, please do post.

i have links for Scientific American, i can post if anybody's interested.

Re: Terabyte DVD

Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 2:13 am
by jdog
I can only imagine how many weeks it will take to burn one disc. The limitations of DVD bandwidth transfer rate and having to burn at lower speeds just to get a quality burn...no thanks. It looks like HDDs are just getting bigger and bigger. 2TB drives out now and prices will keep dropping. I got my 1.5TB Samsung F2 for $89.

Re: Terabyte DVD

Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 3:26 pm
by AYHJA
I'm with you j, this is just an amazing time we live in if you love science...Thanks for this article h2...I more and more get the sense that somewhere, a scientist is reverse engineering an alien life form...I don't know how else to explain the vast leaps in science and technology we've experienced...The computer is nothing new, but these days, we are holding more processing power in our pockets than was available 15 years ago in a desktop computer...