Optical Recording and Communications 1 Optical Recording and

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Optical Recording and Communications 1 Optical Recording and Communications

Optical Recording and Communications 1 Optical Recording and Communications

Optical Recording and Communications 2 Introductory Question n When you submerge a digital watch

Optical Recording and Communications 2 Introductory Question n When you submerge a digital watch in water and tilt it just right, the watch’s face appears to be a perfect mirror. This mirror reflection is from A. the outer (front) surface of the watch face the inner (back) surface of the watch face B.

Optical Recording and Communications 3 Review of Digital Representation A physical quantity is measured

Optical Recording and Communications 3 Review of Digital Representation A physical quantity is measured n Measured value is represented by several digits n Binary digits are most common n Binary digits have only two values: 0 and 1 n Each digit is represented by a physical quantity n Discrete values represent a digit n Good noise-immunity and error correction n

Optical Recording and Communications 4 Digital Audio Represent air pressure fluctuations as current n

Optical Recording and Communications 4 Digital Audio Represent air pressure fluctuations as current n Measure current many times per second n Convert current measurements to binary n Use these binary values to represent sound n

Optical Recording and Communications 5 Optical Recording n Media types: Compact Disc (CD) n

Optical Recording and Communications 5 Optical Recording n Media types: Compact Disc (CD) n Laser Disc n Digital Video/Versatile Disc (DVD) n n Reading technique: Reflect laser light from optical surface n Measure reflected intensity to obtain information n

Optical Recording and Communications 6 CD and DVD optics is diffraction limited n Pit

Optical Recording and Communications 6 CD and DVD optics is diffraction limited n Pit sizes are comparable to the light’s wavelength.

Optical Recording and Communications 7 Playback Techniques Laser light is focused on disc aluminum

Optical Recording and Communications 7 Playback Techniques Laser light is focused on disc aluminum layer n Reflection is weaker from ridge than flat n Reflected light is directed to photodiodes n Light intensity indicates ridges or flats n

Optical Recording and Communications 8 Playback Issues n Light must hit ridges perfectly n

Optical Recording and Communications 8 Playback Issues n Light must hit ridges perfectly n n Feedback optimizes position of light spot Light must hit only one ridge Use laser light n Focuses laser to diffraction limit n Feedback focuses laser on layer n n Ridge must be large enough to detect n Ridge can’t be much smaller than light wavelength

Optical Recording and Communications 9 Advantages of Digital Recording n Freedom from noise and

Optical Recording and Communications 9 Advantages of Digital Recording n Freedom from noise and media damage issues Digital representation avoids information loss n Error correction ensures clean information n Surface contamination doesn’t matter (much) n n High information density Optical density greatly exceeds mechanical density n Data compression is possible n n Perfect, loss-less copies are possible

Optical Recording and Communications 10 Optical Communication Light transfers info from source to destination

Optical Recording and Communications 10 Optical Communication Light transfers info from source to destination n Both analog and digital representations possible n Analog is used to monitor some processes remotely n Digital is the dominant representation n n Noise immunity and error correction n Compression n Sharing a single communication channel is common

Optical Recording and Communications 11 Transmission Techniques n Basic Concept Light source intensity encodes

Optical Recording and Communications 11 Transmission Techniques n Basic Concept Light source intensity encodes information n Light sensor detects and decodes information n n Direct line-of-sight Infrared remote controls n Infrared computer links n n Fiber transmission systems n Optical cables and networks

Optical Recording and Communications 12 Components n Transmitters n n Receivers n n n

Optical Recording and Communications 12 Components n Transmitters n n Receivers n n n Incandescent lamps (poor performance) Light Emitting Diodes (adequate performance) Laser Diodes (high performance) Photoresistive cells (poor performance) Photodiodes (high performance) Conduits n Optical Fibers (ranging from poor to high performance)

Optical Recording and Communications 13 Total Internal Reflection As light goes into material with

Optical Recording and Communications 13 Total Internal Reflection As light goes into material with a lower index of refraction, it bends away from the perpendicular n When the bend exceeds 90 degrees, the light reflects instead n The reflection is perfect – total internal reflection n

Optical Recording and Communications 14 Introductory Question (revisited) n When you submerge a digital

Optical Recording and Communications 14 Introductory Question (revisited) n When you submerge a digital watch in water and tilt it just right, the watch’s face appears to be a perfect mirror. This mirror reflection is from A. the outer (front) surface of the watch face the inner (back) surface of the watch face B.

Optical Recording and Communications 15 Optical Fibers An optical fiber consists of a high-index

Optical Recording and Communications 15 Optical Fibers An optical fiber consists of a high-index glass core in a low-index glass sheath n When light tries to leave the high-index core at a shallow angle, it experiences total internal reflection n Light bounces endlessly through the core and emerges from the end of the fiber n If the glass is pure and perfect enough, the light may travel for many kilometers through the fiber n

Optical Recording and Communications 16 Optical Fiber Types

Optical Recording and Communications 16 Optical Fiber Types

Optical Recording and Communications 17 Communication Issues n Light must remain together during passage

Optical Recording and Communications 17 Communication Issues n Light must remain together during passage Dispersion and path differences are bad n Use laser light (monochromatic) n Use low-dispersion glass at its best wavelength n Use narrow (single-mode) fiber n n Light attenuates during the trip Use low-loss glass n Amplify the light periodically n Use fiber laser amplifiers n

Optical Recording and Communications 18 Advantages of Digital Comm n Freedom from noise Digital

Optical Recording and Communications 18 Advantages of Digital Comm n Freedom from noise Digital representation avoids information loss n Error correction ensures clean transfer of information n n High information density Optical density greatly exceeds electronic density n Data compression is possible n