How do CD players make CD’s spin once the sound plays?

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How do CD players make CD’s spin once the sound plays?

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2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

The tray of the player has a little motor which spins the disc. CDs work sort of like extreme versions of record players. The shiny side of the disc is covered in microscopic pits. Like the grooves on a vinyl record, these pits essentially translate to the information written to the disc. Inside the CD player, a laser shines down onto the pits, like the needle of a record player. The pits reflect light differently than the surrounding surface, and a sensor in the CD player picks up this difference and translates the data into the right format.

The CD has to spin for the player to read all of the data. If it didn’t spin, the player wouldn’t be able to read anything meaningful.

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