18 July 2000
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=00071801.glt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


US Department of State
International Information Programs

Washington File
_________________________________

18 July 2000  

Researchers Develop New Information Retrieval Technology

   (Damaged magnetically stored data now accessible) (660)

   Researchers with the National Institute for Standards and Technology
   (NIST) and the National Telecommunications and Information
   Administration (NTIA) have developed a way to salvage important data
   stored magnetically.

   Credit cards, computer disks, audio cassettes and video tapes all
   store information in small magnetic tracks that can be damaged or
   intentionally modified. With second harmonic magneto-resistive
   microscopy (SH-MRM) technology, however, data in altered or damaged
   storage media can be retrieved.

   This technology will be especially useful in forensic analysis, where
   small segments of tape from flight data recorders are sometimes all
   investigators have to study.

   Following is the text of the release:

   (begin text)

   National Institute for Standards and Technology
   National Telecommunications and Information Administration

   July 13, 2000

   New Commerce Department Magnetic Microscope Helps Retrieve Information
   From Damaged or Altered Tapes

   [Photos]

   Audio cassettes, video tapes, credit cards and computer disks all
   store valuable information using very small magnetic tracks.
   Sometimes, these tracks are accidentally damaged or intentionally
   modified, and recovery of the data or verification of authenticity
   becomes extremely difficult if not impossible.

   Researchers at two of the Commerce Department's Boulder, Colo.,
   laboratories have developed a new technique for recovering analog and
   digital data from mangled tapes or other storage media that allows for
   much more complete and accurate analysis.

   Termed second harmonic magneto-resistive microscopy (known as SH-MRM),
   this technique makes use of the same high-resolution magnetic sensors
   developed for modern computer hard disk drives. These sensors map the
   microscopic magnetic fields across the damaged or distorted tracks,
   thereby allowing investigators to rebuild the original signal. The
   technique not only allows for reconstruction of the data but also
   gives insight into the recording process and history. To forensic
   analysts, this can provide critical information regarding the
   authenticity of evidence.

   David Pappas of the National Institute of Standards and Technology and
   Steve Voran of the National Telecommunications and Information
   Administration's Institute for Telecommunication Sciences have
   successfully imaged a number of samples from other government
   laboratories. This included the recovery of audio data from a tape
   fragment supplied by the National Transportation Safety Board
   laboratory.

   In addition, Pappas and Voran showed that raw digital data can be read
   from a very short segment of tape from a flight data recorder. This is
   important because small bits of tape are occasionally all that can be
   recovered from a major accident. While such segments may hold the key
   to the investigation, they are unreadable in a conventional tape deck.

   Pappas and Voran also have done work for the FBI. Images from sample
   audio cassette recordings provided by electrical engineer Ken Marr, at
   the FBI Engineering Research Facility Audio Laboratory in Quantico,
   Va., revealed magnetic marks produced by the erase and record heads
   during the recording process. In the hands of experts, this
   information may allow for authenticity verification. Pappas and Voran
   also showed that the audio data from test tracks can be reconstructed
   and played back directly from the SH-MRM images. This information is
   independent of the normal inductive read process and can be critical
   in the evaluation of recorded evidence produced for federal criminal
   law cases.

   As a non-regulatory agency of the U. S. Department of Commerce's
   Technology Administration, NIST strengthens the U.S. economy and
   improves the quality of life by working with industry to develop and
   apply technology, measurements and standards through four
   partnerships: the Advanced Technology Program, the Measurement and
   Standards Laboratories, the Manufacturing Extension Partnership and
   the Baldrige National Quality Program.

   NTIA is the President's principal adviser on telecommunications and
   information policy issues and, in this role, frequently works with
   other Executive Branch agencies to develop and present the
   Administration's position on these issues. In additional, NTIA manages
   the Federal use of the electromagnetic spectrum.

   (end text)

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   Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
   http://usinfo.state.gov)