- #1
SarahBoberra
- 7
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We took AFM images of a CD in lab. Manual counting provided that there were 224 bits in the 900µm^2 image I have. Based on this I want to determine the bit-density of the whole CD.
The total active area for the disc is the total area minus the inner inactive are of the disc. The total area was calculated using a radius of 58.5µm and was found to be 10,746 µm^2. The inner inactive area of the disc was found to be 1,661µm^2. Therefore, the total active area of the disk was 9,085µm^2.
Shouldn't the next step be to take (224 bits/900µm^2)*9,085µm^2 to get the total number of bits? For this I get 2,261.156 bits, but it can't be right because it would mean that the whole CD had only 0.00215640640258789MB of storage! I know that CDs have ~650MB of storage. What did I do wrong? Please?
The total active area for the disc is the total area minus the inner inactive are of the disc. The total area was calculated using a radius of 58.5µm and was found to be 10,746 µm^2. The inner inactive area of the disc was found to be 1,661µm^2. Therefore, the total active area of the disk was 9,085µm^2.
Shouldn't the next step be to take (224 bits/900µm^2)*9,085µm^2 to get the total number of bits? For this I get 2,261.156 bits, but it can't be right because it would mean that the whole CD had only 0.00215640640258789MB of storage! I know that CDs have ~650MB of storage. What did I do wrong? Please?