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posted by martyb on Thursday February 18 2016, @10:53AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-if-the-readers-are-only-good-for-ONE-billion-years? dept.

Researchers at the UK's Southampton University have created a storage scheme that could supposedly store hundreds of terabytes for billions of years:

Researchers, led by Martynas Beresna, in the university's Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) have built five-dimensional photonic structures in nano-structured fuzed quartz glass with femtosecond pulses of light; meaning one quadrillionth (one millionth of one billionth) of a second. Data is written in three layers of nano-structured dots, voxels, separated by five micrometres (one millionth of a metre).

A voxel is an optical vortex, a polarisation vortex using nano-gratings, and a paper by the researchers, "Radially polarized optical vortex converter created by femtosecond laser nanostructuring of glass" (pdf), explains how they: "...demonstrate a polarization vortex converter, which produces radially or azimuthally polarized visible vortices from a circularly polarized beam, using femtosecond laser imprinting of space-variant self-assembled form birefringence in silica glass."

When the femtolaser pulse hits the glass it causes polarisation vortices to be created which change the way light passes through the glass, modifying its polarisation. This polarisation can be detected using a combined optical microscope and polariser. The dimensions of the three-layered nano-structured dot voxel are length, width, depth, size and orientation.

We're told an optical disk, using this technology, could hold 360TB of data for 13.8 billion years at 190°C, meaning a virtually unlimited lifetime at room temperature. [...] Altechna, a Lithuanian laser optics company, is working on commercialising the technology.

This story is a bit of a throwback since the researchers originally published these claims back in 2013. However they are presenting their results under the title "Eternal 5D data storage by ultrafast laser writing in glass" on February 17, 2016 at the SPIE Photonics West 2016 conference in San Francisco.

5D Data Storage by Ultrafast Laser Nanostructuring in Glass


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  • (Score: 2) by Unixnut on Friday February 19 2016, @10:41AM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Friday February 19 2016, @10:41AM (#306801)

    Once you work out that you can store data in glass, you can look at other glass for similar patterns, even if you don't have the original schematics for what wrote it. You just have to wait for the new life form to reach a certain technological level.

    I mean, I don't have the schematics for a vinyl player, but could probably build a machine to read the data off it. It might not look anything like the original vinyl player, but it would work (would probably use high resolution cameras, and reconstruct digitally).

    If some archaeologist came up to me with a plate with what looks like grooves on it, at our current tech level we could analyse it, and discover said grooves have patterns in them, and then work on a machine to extract the patterns. Even if you can never decipher what is on it, the fact that a past civilisation was able to do this is in itself interesting.

    Rest assured though, that like the decades of effort people put into hieroglyphs to decipher them, people would do the same with whatever else we find. Human nature is like that when dealt a curiosity.

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