The present invention relates to a data page for optical data storage in an optical storage system, e.g. a holographic storage system, with an increased insensitivity against movement, to an optical storage medium, e.g. a holographic storage medium comprising such data pages, to an apparatus for reading from and/or writing to an optical storage medium comprising such data pages, and to a method for reading and/or writing such data pages.
The invention is described below using a holographic storage system as an example. It is apparent to a person skilled in the art that the invention is applicable within other optical storage systems.
In holographic data storage digital data are stored by encoding the interference pattern produced by the superposition of two coherent laser beams, where one beam, the so-called ‘object-beam’, is modulated by a spatial light modulator (SLM) and carries the information to be recorded. The second beam serves as a reference beam. The interference pattern leads to modifications of specific properties of the storage material, which depend on the local intensity of the interference pattern. Reading of a recorded hologram is performed by illuminating the hologram with the reference beam using the same conditions as during recoding. This results in the reconstruction of the recorded object beam.
One advantage of holographic data storage is an increased data capacity. Contrary to conventional optical storage media, the volume of the holographic storage medium is used for storing information, not just a single or few two-dimensional layers. One further advantage of holographic data storage is the possibility to store multiple data in the same volume, e.g. by changing the angle between the two beams or by using shift multiplexing, etc. Furthermore, instead of storing single bits, data are stored as data pages. Typically a data page consists of a matrix of light-dark-patterns, i.e. a two dimensional binary array or an array of grey values, which code multiple bits. Data pages consisting of patterns showing different phases can also be used. This allows to achieve increased data rates in addition to the increased storage density. The data page is imprinted onto the object beam by the SLM and detected with an array detector.
Increasing the data capacity and the data rate are two of the main tasks when developing holographic data storage systems. Increasing the data capacity is closely related to decreasing the access time to a certain data page or volume of the optical storage medium.
The holographic medium is read-out out while being illuminated by the reference beam as described above. The position of the medium with respect to the optics during reading of a hologram has to be exactly the same as during the writing of the hologram. A displacement of the medium from the ideal read-out position decreases the intensity of the read-out pattern on the detector array. Further, the image sharpness is reduced and hence the image is blurred. In addition, the retrieved data page image is misaligned relative to the detector.
The principle behaviour of image intensity and relative image displacement on the detector as a function of the hologram displacement is shown in
Regarding these effects, a not so precise positioning of the hologram will degrade the data page image on the detector. Especially in systems with continuously rotating disks the exposure time of the hologram has to be short enough to freeze the movement. Pulsed lasers, fast shutters and fast detectors are required. Long exposures or fast movement of the medium lead to a blurred image.
It is an object of the invention to propose a data page which is less sensitive concerning movement.
According to the invention, on a data page there are one or more areas including data which is less sensitive to movement or inaccurate positioning during read-out. This allows read-out of the information stored in these areas of the data page during fast movement of the storage medium, for example a holographic storage medium. This is achieved for example by the use of special modulation or coding of data in these areas. Misalignment or movement in general leads to lower signal-to-noise ratios (SNR), which can partly be compensated by the modulation or coding of the data in these areas.
According to a further improvement of the invention, data pixels are enlarged in movement direction in a shift insensitive area. In this way they are much better detected even if blurring in this direction happens due to the movement of the medium parallel to the detector surface. On a rotating media like for example a disk, at each point a movement vector perpendicular to the radius and perpendicular to the optical axis of the detector defines the direction of movement. Crosstalk from one pixel to another during fast moving is reduced. This corresponds to a data modulation with reduced spatial frequencies, which makes accurate alignment to a certain extent less important.
In an advantageous manner, ‘on’-pixels in the shift insensitive area have the same size in movement direction. In other words, each ‘on’-pixel has the same length. Therefore, each ‘on’-pixel has the same spatial frequency in moving direction. Pixel estimation in case of blurred images is facilitated because the pixel length and the spatial frequency of the pixels are known.
In an advantageous manner, the modulation scheme does not allow two ‘on’-pixels, e.g. two illuminated pixels, side by side. This improves detectability of each pixel by reducing crosstalk from one pixel to another. Edges of a detected signal can be used to improve alignment.
To improve tracking and alignment perpendicular to the moving direction, the shift insensitive area preferably includes a line in moving direction only containing ‘on’-pixels or only containing ‘off’-pixels. Alignment perpendicular to the moving direction can be ensured while the medium is arbitrarily shifted in moving direction, and can be performed independent of the moving speed.
In an advantageous manner, the shift insensitive area contains at least one of address information, content information, tracking control information or focusing control information. This information is usually necessary to locate a certain data page, to obtain an overview of the whole content of the stored data or to prepare read-out of the data. Usually, this information has a lower data volume and has to be obtained fast because it is needed before read-out of the whole data can be started. After reading this data, the well known standard read-out process is used to obtain the data of interest from an area with a known data page format. This leads to fast access to a specific data page, fast search routines and fast setup of the reading process.
A data page containing only shift insensitive areas is preferably stored between two data pages. This improves the read-out process during continuously moving the storage medium.
In another advantageous manner, a data page contains multiple shift insensitive areas with different degrees of shift insensitivity. Various read-out speeds and various misalignment tolerances are supported by such a medium dependent on the requirements of the application for which the stored data are used. Different coding schemes are supported in these areas.
Favourably, the described data pages are used for holographic data storage systems. Multiple data pages are stored within a holographic storage medium. Alignment requirements to reduce crosstalk and to enhance SNR are high in these systems. Using shift insensitive areas, which reduce alignment requirements, provide a big advantage.
It is a further object of the invention to propose an apparatus for reading from an optical storage medium containing data pages according to the invention. The apparatus has means for detecting and decoding shift insensitive areas.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention an apparatus for reading a data page according to the invention from an optical storage medium provides an additional optical path optimized for reading the shift insensitive areas. This further enhances the read-out speed and lowers the error rate. The apparatus includes a CCD for reading data of the data area and a CCD for reading data of the shift insensitive area. The CCD for detecting the shift insensitive data is for example a two dimensional CCD. It is also within the scope of the invention, to provide for example a lens system and a one dimensional CCD for reading the shift insensitive area. The read out signal is a time dependant one dimensional signal. It is also within the scope of the invention to use a common CCD and to adapt signal processing to the specific characteristic of the read out data of the shift insensitive area, for example, to use specific error correction or to adapt oversampling.
It is a further object of the invention to propose an apparatus for writing to an optical storage medium containing data pages according to the invention. The apparatus has means for coding the data for the shift insensitive area. It is also within the scope of the invention to provide distinctive SLMs for writing the shift insensitive area and for writing the data area of a data page.
It is a further object of the invention to propose a method for reading and/or writing a data page according to the invention. The method contains steps for detecting the optical storage media, identifying the shift insensitive areas within the data pages, detecting the pixels within the shift insensitive areas and decoding the derived data from these areas or coding data to be written to shift insensitive areas.
For better understanding the invention shall now be explained in more detail in the following description with reference to the figures. It is understood that the invention is not limited to this exemplary embodiment and that specified features can also expediently be combined and/or modified without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Unlike,
In
The stored data are retrieved from the holographic storage medium 19 by illuminating a recorded hologram with the reference beam 17 only. The reference beam 17 is diffracted by the hologram structure and produces a copy of the original object beam 16. Schematically depicted object beam 20 represents the reconstructed beam part containing information from the data area 4. Depicted object beam 23 represents the reconstructed beam part containing information from the shift insensitive area 5. These reconstructed object beams 20, 23 are collimated by the objective lens 12 and directed onto two array detectors 22, 24, e.g. CCD-arrays, by a second beam splitter 21. The array detectors 22, 24 allow to reconstruct the recorded data. Detector 22 is optimized to reconstruct data stored in the data area 4, detector 24 is optimized to reconstruct data stored the shift insensitive area 5. It is understood by someone skilled in the art that an apparatus for reading and/or recording data pages 3 according to the invention can be realized in many ways. For example a further beam splitter and a further SLM can be used to completely separate the optical paths of shift insensitive data and commonly known data.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07120784.9 | Nov 2007 | EP | regional |