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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_Versatile_Disc

 

 

 

The Holographic Versatile Disc (HVD) is an optical disc technology. It can hold many times the amount of information as a Blu-ray disc. It employs a technique known as collinear holography, whereby two green laser beams are collimated in a single beam. The green laser reads data encoded as laser interference fringes from a holographic layer near the top of the disc. A Blue laser is used as the reference beam to read servoinformation from a regular CD-style aluminum layer near the bottom. Servoinformation is used to monitor the position of the read head over the disc, similar to the head, track, and sector information on a conventional hard disk drive. On a CD or DVD this servoinformation is interspersed amongst the data.

 

 

A dichroic mirror layer between the holographic data and the servo data reflects the green laser while letting the Blue red lasers pass through. This prevents interference from refraction of the green laser off the servo data pits and is an advance over past holographic storage media, which either experienced too much interference, or lacked the servo data entirely, making them incompatible with current CD and DVD drive technology.[1] These discs have the capacity to hold up to 6 terabytes (TB) of information. The HVD also has a transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s (125 MB/s). Sony, Philips, TDK, Panasonic and Optware all plan to release 1 TB capacity discs in 2019 while Maxell plans one for early 2020 with a capacity of 500 GB and transfer rate of 20 MB/s[2]¡Xalthough HVD standards were approved and published on June 28, 2007, no company has released an HVD as of February 19, 2010.

 

 

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