Claims
- 1. A magnetic medium comprising:
a magnetic body defining a read surface having a plurality of tracks; and means extending along a servo sector of at least one of the plurality of tracks defining a servo pattern at a servo frequency.
- 2. The magnetic medium of claim 1, wherein the means defining a servo pattern comprises:
a plurality of irregularities in magnetic properties of the magnetic body extending along the servo sector, the irregularities being arranged along the servo sector in the servo pattern at the servo frequency, and a magnetic pattern recorded in the magnetic body along the servo sector, the magnetic pattern having a carrier frequency greater than the servo frequency.
- 3. The magnetic medium of claim 2, wherein the magnetic body is a magnetic disc and the irregularities in magnetic properties comprises surface irregularities in a read surface of the disc.
- 4. The magnetic medium of claim 2, wherein the magnetic body is a magnetic disc and the irregularities in magnetic properties comprises discontinuities in magnetic coercivity in the magnetic disc.
- 5. The magnetic medium of claim 2, wherein the carrier frequency is at least twice the servo frequency.
- 6. A process of manufacturing a magnetic disc for use with a read head in a disc drive, the read head being designed to fly a predetermined height from a read surface of the disc to provide a readback signal having amplitudes based on magnetic fields generated from the disc, the process comprising steps of:
(a) defining a plurality of tracks on the read surface, each track having at least one data sector and at least one servo sector; (b) forming a plurality of irregularities in magnetic properties of the magnetic disc in a pattern along each servo sector, the pattern having a servo frequency; and (c) writing a magnetic carrier in the magnetic disc along the servo sectors at a carrier frequency that is greater than the servo frequency.
- 7. The process of claim 6, wherein the irregularities in magnetic properties are surface irregularities having an elevation, h, different from the read surface such that
- 8. The process of claim 7, wherein step (c) comprises steps of:
(c1) positioning a write element to confront a first radius of the read surface, (c2) writing the magnetic carrier at the first radius along a circular region of the disc that includes a servo sector and at least a portion of a data sector, (c3) stepping the write element to confront a second radius of the read surface adjacent the first radius, (c4) locking a carrier signal to the write element onto the magnetic carrier written in step (c2), (c5) writing the magnetic carrier at the second radius along a circular region of the disc that includes a servo sector and at least a portion of a data sector, and (c6) repeating steps (c3) through (c5) until all of the servo sectors are written with the magnetic carrier.
- 9. The process of claim 7, wherein step (c3) is performed at half-track increments.
- 10. The process of claim 7, wherein step (c4) is performed by
(c4i) reading the magnetic carrier written in step (c2), and (c4ii) selectively delaying the read magnetic carrier to derive the carrier signal.
- 11. The process of claim 7, further including before step (b), steps of:
(d) selecting a ratio for V2/V1 adequate to demodulate the readback signal, and (e) selecting a magnetic carrier having a small wavelength λ, to minimize the effect of the surface irregularities on flying characteristics of the head.
- 12. The process of claim 6, wherein the magnetic disc has a magnetic coercivity and step (b) comprises steps of:
(b1) defining first regions in a pattern along each servo sector, the pattern of regions defining a servo frequency, (b2) reducing the magnetic coercivity of the magnetic disc in the first regions so that 11V2V1∝HC2HC1,where HC2 is a magnetic coercivity of the magnetic disc, HC1 is the reduced magnetic coercivity, V1 is a first readback signal peak amplitude provided by the read head confronting a first region of reduced coercivity and V2 is a second readback signal peak amplitude provided by the read head confronting a region of the magnetic disc outside the first region.
- 13. The process of claim 12, wherein step (c) comprises steps of:
(c1) positioning a write element to confront a first radius of the read surface, (c2) writing the magnetic carrier at the first radius along a circular region of the disc that includes a servo sector and at least a portion of a data sector, (c3) stepping the write element to confront a second radius of the read surface adjacent the first radius, (c4) locking a carrier signal to the write element onto the magnetic carrier written in step (c2), (c5) writing the magnetic carrier at the second radius along a circular region of the disc that includes a servo sector and at least a portion of a data sector, and (c6) repeating steps (c3) through (c5) until all of the servo sectors are written with the magnetic carrier.
- 14. The process of claim 13, wherein step (c3) is performed at half-track increments.
- 15. The process of claim 13, wherein step (c4) is performed by
(c4i) reading the magnetic carrier written in step (c2), and (c4ii) selectively delaying the read magnetic carrier to derive the carrier signal.
- 16. The process of claim 6, wherein the magnetic disc has a first magnetic coercivity, HC2, and step (b) comprises steps of:
(b1) forming a mask on the read surface of the disk defining first and second regions on the disc surface in a pattern defining a servo frequency along each servo sector, and (b2) applying an ion beam to the second regions to change the magnetic coercivity of the magnetic disc in the second regions to a second coercivity, HC1, so that 12V2V1∝HC2HC1,where V2 is a first readback signal peak amplitude provided by the read head confronting the first region and V1 is a second readback signal peak amplitude provided by the read head confronting the second region.
- 17. A process of recovering servo data from a magnetic disc having a read surface containing a plurality of tracks each having servo sectors containing a plurality of irregularities in magnetic properties of the disc arranged in servo patterns at a predetermined servo frequency, and a magnetic carrier recorded in the servo sectors at a predetermined carrier frequency, the process comprising steps of:
(a) reading a magnetic field from a servo sector of a selected track on the disc to derive a readback signal; (b) recovering a servo signal from the readback signal; and (c) demodulating the servo signal with a demodulating signal at the servo frequency to derive servo data.
- 18. The process of claim 17, wherein step (b) is performed by demodulating the readback signal with a second demodulating signal at the carrier frequency.
- 19. The process of claim 17, wherein step (b) is performed by detecting peaks in the readback signal.
- 20. The process of claim 17, wherein the irregularities in magnetic properties are selected from the group comprising surface irregularities at an elevation different from a nominal surface of the read surface and discontinuities in magnetic coercivity of the magnetic disc.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO CO-PENDING APPLICATION
[0001] This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/170,239, filed Dec. 10, 1999 by Alexei H. Sacks and Timothy F. Ellis for “Method of Generating Servo Data with Servo Patterned Media”. This application is also a continuation of International Application No. PCT/US00/ (Atty docket S01.13-0643/STL9404PC), filed on even date herewith by Seagate Technology LLC for “Magnetic Disc Having Physical Servo Patterns with a Magnetic Carrier, and Method of Making and Using the Same”, which in turn claims priority of the aforementioned U.S. Provisional Application.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60170239 |
Dec 1999 |
US |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
PCT/US00/42493 |
Nov 2000 |
US |
Child |
09726786 |
Nov 2000 |
US |