One of the main application for higher-capacity optical storage is recording high-definition TV, which takes an incredible amount of storage. Current DVD recorders can't store enough data to handle high-definition video. Blu-ray, on the other hand, is designed to store up to 2 hours of high-definition video (or more than 13 hours of standard broadcast-quality TV) on a single-layer disc, or double that when dual-layer versions become available. As with DVD, Blu-ray uses the industry-standard MPEG-2 compression technology.
The Blu-ray Disc 1.0 specification includes the following formats:
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BD-ROM. Read-only for prerecorded content
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BD-R. Recordable for PC data storage
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BD-RW. Rewritable for PC data storage
As of January 2006, only the BD-RE format, which is a rewritable format for HDTV recording, had been revised. The current specification is BD-RE 2.0.
Standard CDs use a 780nm (infrared) laser combined with a 0.45 numerical aperture lens, whereas DVDs use a 650nm (red) laser combined with a 0.60 numerical aperture lens. Blu-ray uses a much shorter 405nm (blue-violet) laser with a 0.85 numerical aperture lens. Numerical aperture is a measurement of the light-gathering capability of a lens, as well as the focal length and relative magnification. The numerical aperture of a lens is derived by taking the sine of the maximum angle of light entering the lens. For example, the lens in a CD-ROM drive gathers light at up to a 26.7° angle, which results in a numerical aperture of SIN(26.7) = 0.45. By comparison, the lens in a DVD drive gathers light at up to a 36.9° angle, resulting in a numerical aperture of SIN(36.9) = 0.60. Blu-ray drives gather light at up to a 58.2° angle, resulting in a numerical aperture of SIN(58.2) = 0.85. Higher numerical apertures allow increasingly oblique (angled) rays of light to enter the lens and therefore produce a more highly resolved image.
The higher the aperture, the shorter the focal length and the greater the magnification. The lens in a CD-ROM drive magnifies roughly 20 times, whereas the lens in a DVD drive magnifies about 40 times. The Blu-ray lens magnifies about 60 times. This greater magnification is necessary because the distance between tracks on a Blu-ray disc is reduced to 0.32um, which is almost half of that of a regular DVD. Because of the very high densities involved, a simple cartridge is normally used to hold the disc, which prevents it from being impaired by dust, fingerprints, or scratches.
The most important features of a Blu-ray disc are summarized:
Specification | Value | Specification | Value |
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Capacity (single-layer) | 23.3GB/25GB/27GB | Tracking pitch | 0.32um |
Capacity (dual-layer) | 46.6GB/50GB/54GB | Shortest pit length | 0.160/0.149/0.138um |
Laser wavelength | 405nm (blue-violet) | Recording density | 16.8/18.0/19.5Gb/sq. in. |
Lens numerical aperture | 0.85 | Data transfer rate | 36Mbps |
Cartridge dimensions | Approximately 129x131x7mm | Recording format | Phase change recording |
Disc diameter | 120mm | Tracking format | Groove recording |
Disc thickness | 1.2mm | Video format | MPEG2 |
Optical protection layer | 0.1mm |
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