Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
Researchers at the University of Chicago and Argonne National Lab have developed a new type of optical memory that stores data by transferring light from rare-earth element atoms embedded in a solid material to nearby quantum defects. They published their study in Physical Review Research.
The problem that the researchers aim to solve is the diffraction limit of light in standard CDs and DVDs. Current optical storage has a hard cap on data density because each single bit can't be smaller than the wavelength of the reading/writing laser.
The researchers propose bypassing this limit by stuffing the material with rare-earth emitters, such as magnesium oxide (MgO) crystals. The trick, called wavelength multiplexing, involves having each emitter use a slightly different wavelength of light. They theorized that this would allow cramming far more data into the same storage footprint.
The researchers first had to tackle the physics and model all the requirements to build a proof of concept. They simulated a theoretical solid material filled with rare-earth atoms that absorb and re-emit light. The models then showed how the nearby quantum defects could capture and store the returned light.
One of the fundamental discoveries was that when a defect absorbs the narrow wavelength energy from those nearby atoms, it doesn't just get excited – its spin state flips. Once it flips, it is nearly impossible to revert, meaning those defects could legitimately store data for a long time.
While it's a promising first step, some crucial questions still need answers. For example, verifying how long those excited states persist is essential. Details were also light on capacity estimates – the scientists touted "ultra-high-density" but didn't provide any projections against current disc capacities. Yet, despite the remaining hurdles, the researchers are hyped, calling it a "huge first step."
Of course, turning all this into an actual commercial storage product will likely take years of additional research and development.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by VLM on Wednesday October 30, @06:32PM (3 children)
My public library used to have two rows of microfilm and microfiche machines and they got rid of all of them and now have a single computer hooked up to what looks like a microscope as its replacement.
I think they got rid of all the microfilm except for the very local (down the road) newspaper archive.
They used to have microfilms of numerous magazines including Scientific American and these 35 mm film rolls dated back to IIRC either right before or right after WWII and the quality was fine when I was looking at them in the 80s. Some of the oldest newspaper film rolls at my library would be 80 years old now.
Interesting sociology where during summer break during the day, the film readers were 90%+ genealogy old people and I was the only young person there. I read all the Scientfic American Amateur Scientist articles on microfilm and the Mathematical Recreations column and in the early 80s they had a possibly short lived computer column.
The newest nicest microfilm machine (in, lets say, 1983, maybe 1986 don't recall exactly) had what amounts to a Xerox printer hooked up where the light from the microfilm directly developed on the photocopier drum for IIRC exactly three nickels per page. I still have some microfilm printouts, but you wouldn't know it, they look exactly like a 1980s xerox copier, which, I guess, they were in a fundamental sense.
IIRC there were multiple pages per 35 mm frame, it wasn't one magazine page per 35mm frame. At least 2 maybe was it 8? Microfiche were a different kettle of fish and on a single large slide the size of a postcard you could quite easily hold an entire 100+ page magazine in row-column format.
For kids these days, magazine columns were kind of like a once-a-month blogpost they'd print out and mail to you for a fee. Oh shit I guess in 2024 I have to explain to kids these days what a blogpost was, well imagine a tiktok but for literate people.
Portable readers for microfilm and fiche existed and I always wanted one as a kid to do basically what we use a Kindle for today, except somewhat less conveniently. IIRC some technical magazines like QST, QEX, maybe Circuit Cellar used to have a little ad in the back explaining you could obtain issues on fiche for a nominal fee, imagine having the entire print run of QST magazine in a tiny little box on your desk... Ironically ARRL sold QST on CDROM sets around Y2K and at one time or another I had most of those. QEX had better articles LOL.
Imagine humanity when everyone has cheap desktop access to entire libraries of human knowledge. Well, instead of that we got Rule 34 and bots and ads. But the future sure LOOKED great, at least from a distance.
(Score: 2) by acid andy on Thursday October 31, @08:07PM (1 child)
Some years ago I had a motorcycle workshop manual on microfiche, so I bought a small used microfiche reader to look at it. No idea what happened to that. The magnification and fidelity on it wasn't great, to the point that the small technical details I needed from the diagrams couldnt really be discerned.
If I was in charge of that library I would have insisted those microfilms were digitized before they were got rid of, at least the ones that were out of copyright. I hope they weren't just thrown in the garbage!
Welcome to Edgeways. Words should apply in advance as spaces are highly limite—
(Score: 2) by VLM on Friday November 01, @01:54PM
They do have site licenses for newspaper.com and ancestry.com so that's probably why they chucked them.
(Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Sunday November 03, @12:27AM
Many courts still hold a lot of data on microfilm. If you want copies of deeds recorded 40 years ago for instance, you might have to put in a request for the data to be retrieved and wait for it.