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- Newsgroups: k12.ed.science
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!news.columbia.edu!cunixa.cc.columbia.edu!sg
- From: sg@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Scott Genzer)
- Subject: Re: Computer desiphering
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.010257.6597@news.columbia.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.columbia.edu (The Network News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cunixa.cc.columbia.edu
- Reply-To: sg@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Scott Genzer)
- Organization: Columbia University
- References: <32187.2B36E797@puddle.fidonet.org> <1992Dec22.144854.14244@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 01:02:57 GMT
- Lines: 68
-
- Subject: Re: Computer desiphering
-
- >> I was saving a message on a 3.5" disk and wondered how a
- >>floppy disk is made. Is it like a compact disk or more like a
- >>record. Is the information retrieved with a laser or a needle? How
- >>does the computer decipher all of the little holes or dots? I was
- >>also surprised how much information fits onto a High Density disk.
-
- >Mike,
-
- >A floppy disk is just like a cassette tape that has been flattened. A magnetic
- >read/write head accesses the info, just like the play and record heads on a
- >cassette tape deck or VCR. In fact, the early PCs (including the original
- >IBM PC) allowed cassette players to be used as data storage.
-
- >---Bill VanHorne
-
- I don't know whether this is too techincal for you, and if it is, I
- apologize. But for those interested, here's a bit more exact
- definition copied w/o permission from "Elements of Engineering
- Electromagnetics" by N.N. Rao:
-
- The floppy disk consists of a coating of ferrite material applied
- over a thin flexible nonmagnetic substrate for physical support.
- Ferrites are a class of magnetic materials characterized by almost
- rectangular-shaped hysteresis loops so that the two remanent states
- are well-defined. The disk is divided into many circular tracks, and
- each track is subdivided into regions called sectors. To access a
- sector, an electromagnetic read/write head moves across the spinning
- disk to the appropriate track and waits for the correct sector to
- rotate beneath it. The head consists of a ferrite core around which a
- coil is wound and with a gap at the bottom. Writing of data on the
- disk is done by passing current through the coil. The current
- generates a magnetic field which in the core confines essentially to
- the material but in the air gap spreads out into the magnetic material
- below it, thereby magnetizing the region to represent the '0' state.
- To store the '1' state in a region, the curent in the coil is reversed
- to magnetize the medium in the reverse direction. Reading of data
- from the disk is accomplished by the changing magnetic field from the
- magnetized regions on the disk inducing a voltage in the coil in the
- head, as the disk rotates under the head. The voltage is induced in
- accordance with Faraday's Law whenever there is a change in magnetic
- flux linked by the coil.
-
- I realize this is a bit more than you asked for, but I think it is
- interesting. In more normal language, there is a wire wrapped a lot
- of times around a piece of iron-like material (ferrite) and this
- produces a magnetic field (ever seen an electromagnet?). This field
- spreads at the "air gap" of the iron and affects the disk, which is
- also made of very thin iron-like material, such that it changes the
- field of the disk. It's very similar to having an electromagnet and
- having a north and a south, and then, by having the current go the
- other way, the poles change sides. It's called Faraday's Law (the
- relationship between current and magnetic fields) and you can read
- about it in any basic physics book. Anyway, I hope this helps a
- little bit for further clarification and interest. BTW, this is NOT
- to say Bill's definition was wrong! I am just a simple electrical
- engineering student who finds this stuff neat and if there are others
- like me, well, I hope this satisfied their curiosity a bit more.
- Anyway, e-mail me if you want more info about electromagnetics or
- such.
-
- Scott Genzer
-
- Columbia University - School of Engineering and Applied Science
- Electrical Engineering major
- <sg@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu>
-
-