Optical Transducers for Near Field Recording
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Optical transducers that concentrate optical energy in the near field to dimensions much smaller than the standard diffraction limit are often classified as apertures or antennas. For near field recording the transducer must obviously operate with a recording medium in its immediate vicinity which can strongly interact with the transducer. Transducers composed of gold and with a minimum dimension of 20 nm are spaced 7.5 nm from the medium in this study. Even simple apertures when optimized are able to couple ${\sim}1.5$% of the incident power into optical spots with a full width at half maximum diameter of less than 50 nm or a tenth of a wavelength. More sophisticated apertures and antennas can improve this coupling efficiency by a factor of three or more, although not by orders of magnitude. Such transducers may have applications in optical or heat assisted magnetic data storage.
- Published by the Japan Society of Applied Physics through the Institute of Pure and Applied Physicsの論文
- 2006-08-30
著者
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CHALLENER William
Seagate Research
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Challener William
Seagate Technology, 1251 Waterfront Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, U.S.A.
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Peng Chubing
Seagate Technology, 1251 Waterfront Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, U.S.A.
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Peng Chubing
Seagate Research, 1251 Waterfront Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, U.S.A.
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Itagi Amit
Seagate Technology, 1251 Waterfront Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, U.S.A.
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Gage Ed
Seagate Technology, 1251 Waterfront Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, U.S.A.
関連論文
- Experimental Effects of Laser Power on the Writability and Pluse Width in a Heat Assisted Longitudinal Recording System
- Light Delivery Techniques for Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording
- Light Delivery Techniques for Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording
- Experimental Effects of Laser Power on the Writability and Pulse Width in a Heat Assisted Longitudinal Recording System
- Near Field Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording with a Planar Solid Immersion Lens
- Optical Transducers for Near Field Recording
- Experimental Effects of Laser Power on the Writability and Pulse Width in a Heat Assisted Longitudinal Recording System