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$32 Million Program to Develop Holographic Storage Begins.


SAN JOSE San Jose, city, United States
San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850.
, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 14, 1995--A joint university/industry/government consortium has begun to develop holographic data storage See holographic storage.  systems that can hold more than 12 times the information of today's largest magnetic hard disk drives and maintain data input and output rates more than 10 times faster than is possible today.

The five-year, $32 million Holographic Data Storage System (HDSS HDSS Holographic Data-Storage System
HDSS Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale
HDSS Health and Disability Sector Standards (New Zealand)
HDSS High Definition Sound Standard (TBI Audio Systems LLC) 
) program is being supported 50 percent by the U.S. Defense Department's Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA ARPA - Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency ) and 50 percent by the 12 participants. ARPA's aim is to see if this technology could help provide modern soldiers and command centers with rapid access to the large amounts of information and visual images they expect to need to be successful in the 21st Century. The corporate participants anticipate significant applications in aviation, computing, image processing image processing

Set of computational techniques for analyzing, enhancing, compressing, and reconstructing images. Its main components are importing, in which an image is captured through scanning or digital photography; analysis and manipulation of the image, accomplished
 and telecommunications.

The project's principal technical investigators are Lambertus Hesselink, professor of electrical engineering electrical engineering: see engineering.
electrical engineering

Branch of engineering concerned with the practical applications of electricity in all its forms, including those of electronics.
 at Stanford University, and Glenn T. Sincerbox, a scientist in the optical storage technology department at IBM's Almaden Research Center The IBM Almaden Research Center, located near San Jose, California, is one of IBM's largest research centers, specializing in both basic research in material science and applied research in computer storage, where many refinements and improvements were made in hard disc drive . The financial and administrative aspects of the HDSS program are managed by the National Storage Industry Consortium (NSIC NSIC National Sport Information Centre (Australia)
NSIC National Storage Industry Consortium
NSIC National Strategy Information Center (US government)
NSIC Nuclear Safety Information Center
).

In addition to Stanford and IBM's Almaden Research Center, the HDSS participants are:

Carnegie-Mellon University (Pittsburgh, Pa.) GTE GTE General Telephone & Electronics
GTE Génie Thermique et Énergie (French)
GTE Gas Turbine Engine
GTE Global Tropospheric Experiment
GTE Geothermal Energy
GTE Gas Turbine Efficiency plc (Sweden & USA) 
 Corp. (Mountain View, Calif., and Rockville, Md.), IBM's Watson Research Center (Yorktown Heights, N.Y.), Kodak (Rochester, N.Y.), Optitek (Mountain View, Calif.), Rochester Photonics (Rochester, N.Y.), Rockwell (Thousand Oaks, Calif.), SDL (Specification and Description Language) A modeling language used to describe real time systems. It is widely used to model state machines in the telecommunications, aviation, automotive and medical industries. , Inc. (San Jose, Calif.), University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  (Tucson, Ariz.), and University of Dayton The University of Dayton is one of the ten largest Catholic schools in the United States and is the largest of the three Marianist universities in the nation. It is also home to one of the largest campus ministry programs in the world.  (Ohio).

Holographic data storage uses lasers to store information as "pages" of electronic patterns within the volume of special optical materials.

Because a million or more data bits are placed on each page and thousands of pages can be stored in material no larger than a small coin, holographic See holographic storage.  systems offer the possibility of compact devices holding many trillions of bytes of information. Since there are no moving parts and all the information in each page is accessed simultaneously in parallel, the technology also has the potential for very rapid access to any of the stored data. The HDSS program was formed to develop several key components and to integrate them into separate write-once and rewritable systems that demonstrate its extraordinary potential: a capacity of 1 trillion bits or more and a data-throughput rate of at least 1 billion bits a second.

The worldwide market for information storage and retrieval information storage and retrieval, the systematic process of collecting and cataloging data so that they can be located and displayed on request. Computers and data processing techniques have made possible the high-speed, selective retrieval of large amounts of  products is currently more than $50 billion and is widely expected to grow substantially in the future. Potential applications for holographic data storage systems include: satellite communications, airborne reconnaissance, high-speed digital libraries, rugged storage for tactical vehicles, and image processing for medical, video and military purposes.

The HDSS program is the natural complement to the Photorefractive photorefractive /pho·to·re·frac·tive/ (-re-frak´tiv) pertaining to the refraction of light.  Information Storage Materials (PRISM) program that involves many of the same participants, has the same principal technical investigators and is also funded by ARPA and the participants. The PRISM project is developing optically sensitive materials optimized for storing holograms and an understanding of the various tradeoffs that must be made between mutually exclusive performance parameters. HDSS takes the next step: developing the other hardware technologies needed for practical holographic data storage systems and integrating them into demonstration systems.

The initial goals of the HDSS project are to develop several key components for the system, including a high-capacity, high-bandwidth spatial light modulator (1) A matrix of movable mirrors used to reflect a digital image to the viewer. See DLP.

(2) A matrix of shutters that represents a page of binary data. It is used to modulate a laser beam for holographic storage. See holographic storage.
 used for data input; optimized sensor arrays for data output; and a high-power red-light, semiconductor laser. At the same time, the HDSS researchers will explore issues relating to the optical systems architecture (such as multiplexing schemes and access modes), data encoding/decoding methods, signal processing techniques, and the requirements of target applications.

The program's ultimate goal is to integrate all the components into separately optimized systems that will demonstrate write-once and rewritable holographic data storage. Demonstration systems will be located at IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries)  Almaden, Optitek/GTE and Rockwell.

IBM will focus on applications that would benefit from high-speed random access to large databases -- such as image retrieval and processing -- as well as enhancing the performance of hierarchical storage systems. Optitek/GTE will focus on telecommunications services and systems -- such as video-on-demand, large image repositories and digital motion pictures -- with an emphasis on enhancing overall system performance. Rockwell's targeted applications include system demonstrations on aerospace platforms where compact, lightweight and robust systems are needed for future in-flight information systems.

Hesselink is a pioneer in the area of holographic data storage and most recently has led development of the first digital holographic display system for storage and retrieval of video and data. (The system was described in the August 5, 1994 issue of Science magazine.) Sincerbox's involvement with holographic data storage dates back to the early 1960s -- even before the invention of the laser -- when he helped IBM develop the world's first working holographic data storage system, a write-once system using photographic film, for the U.S. Air Force.

"In the past, efforts to develop holographic storage systems have taken place independently in academic and industrial laboratories," says Hesselink. "Because no individual organization has the resources or technical breadth to develop all the enabling technologies, the systems that resulted were often compromised in performance and cost effectiveness."

"For the HDSS program, we have assembled a broadly based team of experts with the skills to optimize the various components' technologies and integrate them into data-storage systems," adds Sincerbox. "We've recognized the potential of holographic data storage systems for decades. But only recently have some of the essential components and technologies -- such as those used in mass-market camcorders and portable computer displays -- become available and affordable."

NSIC is a San Diego, Calif.-based organization whose 36 industrial and 27 university members conduct joint, pre-competitive research in digital recording technologies through a variety of separate projects.

ADDITIONAL MEDIA CONTACTS:

- Carnegie-Mellon U. -- Don Hale, 412/268-2900 - GTE Corp. -- Al Rabassa, 301/294-8621; aor@mail.rock.gtegsc.com - Kodak -- Michael McCreary, 716/477-7053; fax: 716/477-4947 - Optitek -- Bert Hesselink, 415/966-3191; bhesselink@optitek.com - Rochester Photonics -- G. Michael Morris, 716/272-3010;

rpc@eznet.net - Rockwell --Paula Ross, 805/373-4558 - SDL, Inc. -- Dave Evans, 408/943-4355 - U. of Arizona -- Ed Stiles Stiles can refer to: People
  • Bert Stiles, short story writer
  • Charles Wardell Stiles, American zoologist
  • Edgar Stiles, character on the popular drama 24
  • Ezra Stiles, president of Yale College
  • Innis Stiles, singer, musician
, 520/621-3754;

stiles@master.engr.arizona.edu - U. of Dayton -- Steve Gustafson, 513/229-3978;

gustafson@udri.udayton.edu - NSIC -- Dale Hollabaugh, 619/621-2047

73732.1405@compuserve.com - ARPA -- L.N. Durvasula, 703/696-2243 ldurvasula@arpa.mil

-0- Note to Editors: Color photos of laser apparatus available from IBM.

CONTACT: IBM

Michael Ross, 408/927-1283, 408/927-3011 (fax)

mikeross@almaden.ibm.com

or

Stanford News Service

David F. Salisbury, 415/725-1944, 415/725-0247 (fax)

david.salisbury@forsythe.stanford.edu (e-mail)
COPYRIGHT 1995 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Nov 14, 1995
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