The DVD
Player
A DVD player is very
similar to a CD player. It has a laser assembly that shines the laser beam onto
the surface of the disc to read the pattern of bumps. The DVD player decodes the
MPEG-2 encoded movie, turning it into a standard composite video signal. The
player also decodes the audio stream and sends it to a Dolby decoder, where it
is amplified and sent to the speakers.
Reading a
DVD
The DVD player has the job of finding and
reading the data stored as bumps on the DVD. Considering how small the bumps
are, the DVD player has to be an exceptionally precise piece of equipment. The
drive consists of three fundamental components:
- A drive motor to spin the disc - The drive motor is precisely
controlled to rotate between 200 and 500 RPM, depending on which track is
being read.
- A laser and a lens system to focus in on the bumps and read them -
The light from this laser has a smaller wavelength (640 nanometers) than the
light from the laser in a CD player (780 nanometers), which allows the DVD
laser to focus on the smaller DVD pits.
- A tracking mechanism that can move the laser assembly so the laser
beam can follow the spiral track - The tracking system has to be able to move
the laser at micron resolutions.
Inside the DVD player, there is a good bit of computer technology involved in
forming the data into understandable data blocks, and sending them either to the
DAC, in the case of audio or video data, or directly to another component in
digital format, in the case of digital video or data.
The fundamental job of the DVD player is to focus the laser on the track of
bumps. The laser can focus either on the semi-transparent reflective material
behind the closest layer, or, in the case of a double-layer disc, through this
layer and onto the reflective material behind the inner layer. The laser beam
passes through the polycarbonate layer, bounces off the reflective layer behind
it and hits an opto-electronic device, which detects changes in light. The bumps
reflect light differently than the "lands," the flat areas of the disc, and the
opto-electronic sensor detects that change in reflectivity. The electronics in
the drive interpret the changes in reflectivity in order to read the bits that
make up the bytes.
An interesting thing to note is that if a DVD has a second layer, the start
of that layer's data track can be at the outside of the disc instead of the
inside. This allows the player to transition quickly from one layer to the next,
without a delay in data output, because it doesn't have to move the laser back
to the center of the disc to read the next layer.