Writing Quality
2. Pits and Lands
Review Pages
2. Pits and Lands
3. Error Correction - Page 1
4. Error Correction - Page 2
5. Error Correction - Page 3
6. CIRC - Page 1
7. CIRC - Page 2
8. CD Decoding system
9. C1/C2 Errors - Page 1
10. C1/C2 Errors - Page 2
11. EFM - Page 1
12. EFM - Page 2
13. Jitter - Page 1
14. Jitter - Page 2
15. Jitter - Page 3
16. Oscilloscope
17. Jitter at DVD
18. Technologies for Reducing Jitter
19. JVC ENC K2
20. AudioMASTER
21. VariREC
22. TEAC Boost Function
23. Testing Equipement - Page 1
24. Testing Equipement - Page 2
25. Calibration media
26. Tests before recording
27. Tests after recording
28. Atomic Force Microscopy
Writing Quality - Page 2
- General information about Pits and Lands
An enlarged view on top of a CD shows a picture like this.
Pit structure
In a CD-player, a laser beam with a specific wavelength detects the digital code by determining the lengths of the pits and the lands. Therefore, it is important that the shape of the pits as well as the intervals meet the necessary preconditions. In the pit structure the next basic parameters can be recognized:
Typical pit parameters
Each pit is approximately 0.5 microns wide and 0.83 microns to 3.56 microns long. (Remember that the wavelength of green light is approximately 0.5 micron) Each track is separated from the next track by 1.6 microns. The leading and trailing edge of the pits represent ones and the length of the pits represents the number of zeros. The space between the pits, called lands are also of varying lengths representing only zeros.
The CD laser 'reads' the pit-information by processing the reflected wave signals. The reflection is caused by the aluminium layer of the CD. The laser beam that is focussed on the pit track 'recognizes' the transition between pits and lands.
Thus not the pits or lands itself but the pit edges are responsible for data information. The pits are encoded with Eight-to-Fourteen Modulation (EFM) for greater storage density and Cross-Interleave Reed-Solomon Code (CIRC) for error correction.
Review Pages
2. Pits and Lands
3. Error Correction - Page 1
4. Error Correction - Page 2
5. Error Correction - Page 3
6. CIRC - Page 1
7. CIRC - Page 2
8. CD Decoding system
9. C1/C2 Errors - Page 1
10. C1/C2 Errors - Page 2
11. EFM - Page 1
12. EFM - Page 2
13. Jitter - Page 1
14. Jitter - Page 2
15. Jitter - Page 3
16. Oscilloscope
17. Jitter at DVD
18. Technologies for Reducing Jitter
19. JVC ENC K2
20. AudioMASTER
21. VariREC
22. TEAC Boost Function
23. Testing Equipement - Page 1
24. Testing Equipement - Page 2
25. Calibration media
26. Tests before recording
27. Tests after recording
28. Atomic Force Microscopy