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Article on Silica Glass Disc

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Scientists at the University of Southampton in the UK have succeeded in creating
five-dimensional (5D), ultra-high-density storage on standard silica glass discs that, unlike
DVDs or Blu-rays, seem to be capable of storing data for an unlimited period of time
without a reduction in data integrity. The scientists say that 5D optical storage could allow
for densities as high as 360 terabytes per disc, and unless you crush it in a vice, these
discs are so non-volatile that data stored on them should survive the human race.
At first glance, five-dimensional storage might sound a bit like pseudoscience but, in
this case, the data really is stored on five different dimensions (surfaces, planes). There
are the usual two dimensions (width, height) provided by a piece of silica glass, and depth
is provided by writing at three different depths (layers) within the glass. The fourth and fifth
dimensions are provided by nanostructuring the surface of the glass, so that it refracts and
polarizes light in interesting ways.
To record data, spots are imprinted on the glass (pictured below) using a femtosecond
laser. A femtosecond laser, in this case, produces bursts of laser light that last for just 280
femtoseconds (280 quadrillionths of a second). These spots, thanks to the nanostructuring
of the surface, and some hologram cleverness, are capable of recording up to three bits of
data in two dimensions. By varying the focus of the laser, the team are able to create
layers of dots that are separated by five micrometers (0.005mm) in the z-axis (the third
dimension). Then, by simply moving the laser horizontally and vertically, these tri-bits can
be stored in two more dimensions, bringing the total to 5D. The image at the top of the
story helps illustrate this concept.

To read these spots, an optical microscope thats capable of untangling the polarized light
reflected by the three-bit spots is used. Theres no word on whether these silica glass discs
can be rewritten, but the research paper [PDF] makes it sound like this is a
write-once-read-many (WORM) storage method.
As you can imagine, storing a tri-bit in a single dot, and then storing these dots in a
three-dimensional medium, allows for utterly insane storage densities. The researchers say
that 360 terabytes could be stored on a single 5D disc by comparison, quad-layer
Blu-ray discs that store just a single bit per pit have a total capacity of 128 gigabytes, or
almost 3,000 times less. The best hard drive technology, heat-assisted magnetic recording
(HAMR), which will soon make its way into commercial drives, will max out at around 20
terabytes per disc.
Furthermore, the scientists report that their glass discs are thermally stable at temperatures
up to 1000 degrees Celsius, and the imprinted spots dont seem to degrade over time.
This led Peter Kazansky, the groups supervisor, to pipe up with this particularly
memorable/questionable soundbite: It is thrilling to think that we have created the first
document which will likely survive the human race. This technology can secure the last
evidence of civilisation: all weve learnt will not be forgotten.
Moving forward, the University of Southampton is now looking for industry partners to
commercialize this technology. Obvious applications include archival storage, where the
management of huge repositories of tapes and hard drives is expensive, complex, and
time-consuming business. Eventually, assuming the complex laser/microscope setup can
be miniaturized, these discs might offer an upgrade path from DVDs and Blu-rays.
Article Source:
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/160928-five-dimensional-glass-memory-can-store-360tb-per-d
isc-rugged-enough-to-outlive-the-human-race

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