holographic storage
An optical technology that records data as digital holograms that fill up the entire volume of a small optical cylinder one millimeter in diameter. It truly is an amazing technology.
Two Lasers Write the Hologram
The first laser (the data laser) is beamed through a matrix of LCD shutters, called a "spatial light modulator," into an optical cylinder or section of an optical disc. The shutters are opened or closed based on the binary pattern of the data matrix (data page) being stored. For example, using a matrix of 1,200 pixels on each side, the page would hold one 1.44 megabits.
Theoretically, thousands of holograms (pages) can be written into and overlap each other in the same optical space; however, the first devices on the market are limited to only a few hundred overlapping holograms.
One Laser Reads the Hologram
The page is read by directing just the reference laser back into the hologram. The light is diffracted into a copy of the data that is sensed by a matrix of CCD sensors.
Optical - Yes, But Not Like CDs and DVDs
Although lasers are used in both holographic and CD/DVD technologies, the storage media are intrinsically different and function differently. The holographic medium stores wavelengths of light as a 3-D hologram that occupies the entire volume of a particular region of the material. For reading, the hologram is decoded back into its binary page. On CDs and DVDs, lasers alter the molecules on the disk's surface to represent a 0 or 1 digit, which are themselves the binary data.
Back to the Sixties
Holographic devices that hold terabytes of data on a single CD-sized disk are expected to become the high-capacity storage medium by 2015. Although research in this area dates back to the 1960s, holographic storage was not announced as a commercial product until 2002, when InPhase demonstrated its Tapestry holographic disk drive and media. See Tapestry, PRISM, HVD and optical disc.
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