There are two essemtail phsical differences between
CD and DVD disc.First, thesmallest DVD pits are only 0.44 micron in diameter;
the equivalent CD pits are nearly twice as large, or 0.83 micron wide.And
DVD data tracks are only 0.74 micron apart, wherea 1.6 microns separate CD
data tracks. So although a DVD is the same size as a CD,its data spiral is
upward of 11 kilometers long-more than twice the length of a CD's data spiral.
To read the smallar pits, a DVD player's readout beam must achieve afiner
focus than a CD player's does. Inorder to do this, it uses a readsemiconductor
laser that has a wave length of 635 to 650 nanometer. In contrast, CD playrs
use infrared laser with a longer wavelength
of 780 nanometer. Also, DVD palyers employ
a more powerful focusing lens-one having a higher numericl aperture than
the lens in a CD payer.The se differences, together with the additional
efficiencies of the DVD format descrobed below, account for the huge 4.7-gigayte
capacity of each DVD information layer.
A DVD 's capacity can be douled to 9.4 gigabytes-and
nearly doubled agaain to about 17 gigabytes- by two more innovations.Although
DVDs and CDs have the same overall thickness-11.2 millimeter- DVDs possess
two subtrates that can carry information' whereas CDs have one. A DVD 's
substrates are bonded together so thet their pitted surfaces face each other
in the center of the of the disc.This setup shields the surfaces from the
danaging effects of dust particles and scratches.
In the simplest design, the second DVD side is accessed
by physically removig the disc from the palyer removing the disc from
the payer, tnrnig it over and reinserting it. An other variation-the mulilayer
designenables both information surfaaces to be payer from the side of the
disc.
In a mulilayer disc, the upper subsrate is coated with
a partially reflective, partially trasmissive layer. The reflectivity of
the upper layer is sussfficient to enable the laser to raed the pits in the
upper substrate;its transmissivity also permits the beam to focus on the
lower subsrate and read the pits on the in that layer. When the laser focuses
on pits in the upper infformation layer are out of focus and so do
not interfere.(To accommodate the small but unaviodable loss
of payerback quality in this approach, a slight capacity reducction to
8.5 gigabyter inescessary-which expalains why a
double-sided, double-layer DVD would hold about 17
gigabytes.)
| Spec | CD | DVD |
| Diameter | 12cm | 12cm |
| Thickness | 1.2mm | 1.2mm(.6mm*2) |
| Numerical aperture | .60 | .38 to .45 |
| Readout wavelength | 780nm | 650 or 635nm |
| track pitch | 1.6 micrometers | .74 micrometers |
| Pit length | .822 to 3.560 micrometers | .400 to 1.866 mirometers .440 to 2.054 micrometers |
| Capacity (per side) | 650MB | 4.7 GB (single layer), 8.5 GB ( daul layers) |
| Scanning speed | 1.2 to 1.4 m/s | 3.49m/s 3.84m/s |
| Rotational speed (1*) | 200 to 500 rpm | 570 to 1600 rpm |
| Reflectivity | 70% minimum | 45 to 85% |
| Modulation | 8/14(8/17 with merge bits) | 8/16 |
| User data rate (1*) | 1.41 Mbps | 11.08 Mbps |
| Error correction | CIRC | RS-PC |
| Error correction overhead | 23/34% | 13% |
| Format overhead | 252% | 136% |
For instance, sudden changes in temperatures or humidity
can cause swelling or shrinkage in the DVD's plastic subsrates. But because
of the DVD's symmetric construction,changes in one layer tend to countrerct
those in the other,reduing the overall effect of environmental chnges and
minimizing the resulting amount of tilt.
Because consumers have already invested agood amount
of money in their CD audio and CD-ROM collections, it was considered a top
design priority thet DVD palyrs read axisting CDs as well as new disc.To
make DVD payers with this ability required specific optical design features.
The simplest design is to mount two lenses in a single optical head-one optimized
for a 1.2 millimeter-thick substrate and another for a0.6 millimetre-thick
one -and then to switch mechanincally from one to the other as needed.
A more elegant solution that emerged uses a single
molded optic with a holographic element at its center.Theelement at its
center.The light passing throght the outer annulus of the lens is unaffected
by the hologram and focuses to a spot size in the plane small enough to be
suitable for DVDreadout.About one thid of the readout beam incident onthe
centralpart is focused by both the the and the hohgram to aspot suitable
for reading pits on the thicker CD.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar