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Lasers and layers

The single biggest advantage of a DVD is its vast storage capacity – a direct consequence of the type of laser DVD drives use. The laser, with wavelengths of 635 to 650 nanometers, can be focused on a smaller spot than a typical CD-ROM drive’s 780-nanometer laser. This means that the microscopic pits used to represent data on DVD can be smaller than those used on a CD, allowing a disc of the same size to store more data for every square inch. Most of the current DVDs on the market are single-sided and single-layer, but a DVD can use up to four physical surfaces for storage (double-sided and double-layered).

A single DVD disc can theoretically hold as much as 30 gigabytes of data – roughly equivalent to 50 650-megabyte CD-ROMs. That is enough data space to store eight hours of high-quality, full-screen digital video with a high-fidelity 5.1-channel soundtrack and multiple language and subtitle tracks. It is this factor that explains why the first commercial application for DVD is in video.

Four layers, four possibilities

The typical DVD disc can store in excess of 4 gigabytes of data, but with newer emerging technologies this number can easily exceed 30 gigabytes of data on a single disc. DVD-ROMs can have as much as four different data recording surfaces - two layers for each side of the disc. This is a rough description of how DVD discs can store so much information:

• Single-sided, single-layer = 4.38+ gigabytes

top laminate
recording layer A
base
bottom laminate

• Double-sided, single-layer = 7.95+ gigabytes

top laminate
recording layer A
base
recording layer A
bottom laminate

• Single-sided, double-layer = 8.75+ gigabytes

top laminate
recording layer A
recording layer B
base
bottom laminate

• Double-sided, double-layer = 15.9+ gigabytes

top laminate
recording layer A
recording layer B
base
recording layer B
recording layer A
bottom laminate

...

...DVD vs. CD

Despite being physically the same size as a standard compact disc, the DVD can hold 25 times more information than a CD.
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