Content deleted Content added
m →Post-processor architecture: mediawiki giveth and mediawiki taketh away; phab:T132308; |
Alistair1978 (talk | contribs) m typos |
||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Method for interpreting data in digital storage systems}}
In [[computer data storage]], '''partial-response maximum-likelihood''' ('''PRML''') is a method for recovering the [[Digital signal (electronics)|digital data]] from the weak analog read-back signal picked up by the [[Disk_read-and-write_head|head]] of a magnetic [[Hard disk drive|disk drive]] or [[tape drive]]. PRML was introduced to recover data more reliably or at a greater [[areal_density_(computer_storage)|areal-density]] than earlier simpler schemes such as peak-detection.<ref>G. Fisher, W. Abbott, J. Sonntag, R. Nesin, "[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/542278 PRML detection boosts hard-disk drive capacity]", IEEE Spectrum, Vol. 33, No. 11, pp. 70-76, Nov. 1996</ref> These advances are important because most of the digital data in the world is stored using [[magnetic recording]] on Hard Disk Drives (HDD) or
Ampex introduced PRML in a tape drive in 1984.
''Partial response'' refers to the fact that part of the response to an individual bit may occur at one sample instant while other parts fall in other sample instants. ''Maximum-likelihood'' refers to the detector finding the bit-pattern most likely to have been responsible for the read-back waveform.
|