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单词 magnetic disk
释义

magnetic disk


magnetic disk

n. A memory device, such as a floppy disk, a hard disk, or a removable cartridge, that is covered with a magnetic coating on which digital information is stored in the form of microscopic, magnetized regions.

magnetic disk

n (Computer Science) computing another name for disk2

hard′ disk′


n. a rigid disk coated with magnetic material, for storing computer programs and relatively large amounts of data. [1975–80]

magnetic disk

A memory device, such as a floppy disk or a hard disk, that is covered with a magnetic coating. Digital information is stored on magnetic disks in the form of microscopically small, magnetized needles.
Thesaurus
Noun1.magnetic disk - (computer science) a memory device consisting of a flat disk covered with a magnetic coating on which information is storedmagnetic disk - (computer science) a memory device consisting of a flat disk covered with a magnetic coating on which information is storedmagnetic disc, disc, diskdiskette, floppy, floppy disk - a small plastic magnetic disk enclosed in a stiff envelope with a radial slit; used to store data or programs for a microcomputer; "floppy disks are noted for their relatively slow speed and small capacity and low price"fixed disk, hard disc, hard disk - a rigid magnetic disk mounted permanently in a drive unitmemory device, storage device - a device that preserves information for retrievalcomputer science, computing - the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structures
Translations

magnetic disk


magnetic disk

[mag′ned·ik ′disk] (astronomy) disk

Magnetic Disk

 

a digital computer memory in which the data carrier is a thin aluminum or plastic disk coated with a layer of magnetic material.

Magnetic disks are 180-1,200 mm in diameter and 2.5-5.0 mm thick; Ni-Co-P or Co-W alloys are used for the magnetic coating. Data are recorded magnetically on the disks in concentric tracks on the working surface and are coded by an address, which indicates the number of the disk and the number of the track. There may be a fixed magnetic head for recording or readout on each track or a single movable head that is common to several tracks and sometimes to several disks. The pickup lever of the selection mechanism, together with the magnetic heads mounted on it, is moved by an electric or pneumatic operating mechanism that moves the heads to any disk and also to any track on a disk. The most common design has “floating” heads.

A magnetic-disk memory usually contains several dozen disks mounted on a common axle, which is turned by an electric motor. One or more disks (a packet) may be replaced, creating disk index files. There may be as many as 100 disks in a memory and 64-5,000 data tracks on each operating surface of a disk; the recording density is 20-130 impulses per millimeter. The data capacity of magnetic disk memories ranges from several tens of thousands up to several billion bits, and the average access time is 10-100 millisec.

Magnetic disks appeared during the mid-1950’s and immediately became widely used because of their excellent technical characteristics. In speed of response they are between immediate-access memories and external storages. They can store an adequate volume of data, the cost per unit of stored information (bit) is low, and their service reliability is excellent.

REFERENCE

Kagan, B. M., V. I. Adas’ko, and R. R. Pure. Zapominaiushchie ustroistva boVshoi emkosti. Moscow, 1968.

D. P. BRUNSHTEIN V. P. ISAEV

magnetic disk

(storage)A flat rotating disc covered on one or both sideswith magnetisable material. The two main types are the hard disk and the floppy disk.

Data is stored on either or both surfaces of discs inconcentric rings called "tracks". Each track is dividedinto a whole number of "sectors". Where multiple (rigid)discs are mounted on the same axle the set of tracks at thesame radius on all their surfaces is known as a "cylinder".

Data is read and written by a disk drive which rotates thediscs and positions the read/write heads over the desiredtrack(s). The latter radial movement is known as "seeking".There is usually one head for each surface that stores data.To reduce rotational latency it is possible, thoughexpensive, to have multiple heads at different angles.

The head writes binary data by magnetising small areas or"zones" of the disk in one of two opposing orientations. Itreads data by detecting current pulses induced in a coil aszones with different magnetic alignment pass underneath it.

In theory, bits could be read back as a time sequence of pulse(one) or no pulse (zero). However, a run of zeros would givea prolonged absence of signal, making it hard to accuratelydivide the signal into individual bits due to the variabilityof motor speed. Run Length Limited is one common solutionto this clock recovery problem.

High speed disks have an access time of 28 milliseconds orless, and low-speed disks, 65 milliseconds or more. Thehigher speed disks also transfer their data faster than theslower speed units.

The disks are usually aluminium with a magnetic coating. Theheads "float" just above the disk's surface on a current ofair, sometimes at lower than atmospheric pressure in anair-tight enclosure. The head has an aerodynamic shape so thecurrent pushes it away from the disk. A small spring pushesthe head towards the disk at the same time keeping the head ata constant distance from the disk (about two microns).

Disk drives are commonly characterised by the kind ofinterface used to connect to the computer, e.g. ATA, IDE,SCSI.

See also winchester. Compare magnetic drum, compact disc, optical disk, magneto-optical disk.

Suchanka's PC-DISK library.

magnetic disk

The primary computer storage device. Increasingly magnetic disks are being replaced by SSDs (see SSD). Like magnetic tape, disks are magnetically recorded and can be re-recorded over and over. Disks contain rotating platters with a mechanical arm that moves a read/write head across their surface. For more details, see hard disk and hard disk interfaces.

Tracks and Spots
A disk's surface is divided into concentric tracks (circles within circles), and the thinner the tracks, the more storage. The data bits are recorded as magnetic spots on the tracks, and the smaller the spot, the greater the storage. See areal density.

Sectors
Tracks are further divided into sectors, which hold a block of data that is read or written at one time; for example, READ SECTOR 782, WRITE SECTOR 5448. In order to update the disk, one or more sectors are read into the computer, changed and written back to disk. The operating system figures out how to fit data into these fixed spaces.

Modern disks have more sectors in the outer tracks than the inner ones because the outer radius of the platter is greater than the inner radius (see CAV). See magnetic tape and optical disc.


Tracks and Sectors
Tracks are concentric circles that are broken up into storage units called "sectors," typically 4,096 bytes long. The sector is the smallest unit that can be read or written. Tracks are only 75 nanometers wide today, and bit density is greater than one terabit per square inch. See areal density.







Magnetic Disk Summary


The following magnetic disk technologies are summarized below. Except for the hard disk, all of the following drives are no longer manufactured. However, media such as floppy disks, Zip and Rev cartridges are often available.



The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.




The Early 1990s
This RAID II prototype in 1992, which embodies principles of high performance and fault tolerance, was designed and built by University of Berkeley graduate students. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, its total storage was less than the disk drive in the cheapest PC only six years later. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org) See RAID.
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magnetic disk


Related to magnetic disk: floppy disk, hard disk, raid
  • noun

Synonyms for magnetic disk

noun (computer science) a memory device consisting of a flat disk covered with a magnetic coating on which information is stored

Synonyms

  • magnetic disc
  • disc
  • disk

Related Words

  • diskette
  • floppy
  • floppy disk
  • fixed disk
  • hard disc
  • hard disk
  • memory device
  • storage device
  • computer science
  • computing
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