THE CANDELA - UNIT OF LUMINOUS INTENSITY

Similar documents
Preventive Conservation and Energy conservation. Units of light, Perception of colour, Energy used by lighting.

07-Lighting Concepts. EE570 Energy Utilization & Conservation Professor Henry Louie

Radiometry vs. Photometry. Radiometric and photometric units

Lighting Terminologies Introduction

Preventive Conservation and Energy conservation

Radiometric and Photometric Measurements with TAOS PhotoSensors

H22: Lamps and Colour

Radiometry vs. Photometry. Radiometric and photometric units

True energy-efficient lighting: the fundamentals of lighting, lamps and energy-efficient lighting

the physics of different light sources incandescence and blackbody radiation the concept of photons

LIGHT AND LIGHTING FUNDAMENTALS. Prepared by Engr. John Paul Timola

Period 3 Solutions: Electromagnetic Waves Radiant Energy II

THE LUX IS A POOR PREDICTOR OF PHOTOCHEMICAL DAMAGE

Basic Lighting Terms Glossary (Terms included in the basic lighting course are italicized and underlined)

Light-Emitting Diodes

LECTURE III: COLOR IN IMAGE & VIDEO DR. OUIEM BCHIR

APPENDIX GLOSSARY OF TERMS

Basic lighting quantities

Lecture 6 6 Color, Waves, and Dispersion Reading Assignment: Read Kipnis Chapter 7 Colors, Section I, II, III 6.1 Overview and History

Basic Lighting Design Seminar

Building a simple spectroscope

Form 4: Integrated Science Notes TOPIC NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL LIGHTING

Chapter 9: Light, Colour and Radiant Energy. Passed a beam of white light through a prism.

Here is a glossary of terms about Lighting that is great knowledge to understand when growing cannabis, whether indoors our outside in a greenhouse.

Lighting Technologies

What is LED? What is LED? LED = Light emitting diode that will emit lights when it is given electricity

Lumen lm 1 lm= 1cd 1sr The luminous flux emitted into unit solid angle (1 sr) by an isotropic point source having a luminous intensity of 1 candela

Let there be light. An short introduction to the history and future of lighting. More to follow in PART 2

TECHNOLOGY INFORMATION SHEET

Retrofit Your City Street Lighting and Start Saving Thousands of Mega Watt s and CO2 Emissions

cob Track lights SERIES Applications: Product Features

Dumpster Optics THE COLORS OF LIGHT

12/02/2017. From light to colour spaces. Electromagnetic spectrum. Colour. Correlated colour temperature. Black body radiation.

Physical Science Physics

Fundamentals of Radiometry & Photometry

Test 1: Example #2. Paul Avery PHY 3400 Feb. 15, Note: * indicates the correct answer.

Westinghouse. Lamps 101

[4] (b) Fig. 6.1 shows a loudspeaker fixed near the end of a tube of length 0.6 m. tube m 0.4 m 0.6 m. Fig. 6.

BASICS OF GALLERY LIGHTING

E T W GLOSSARY OF LIGHTING TERMS

Light calculation example

NFMS THEORY LIGHT AND COLOR MEASUREMENTS AND THE CCD-BASED GONIOPHOTOMETER. Presented by: January, 2015 S E E T H E D I F F E R E N C E

Physics 1230 Light and Color

LAB 11 Color and Light

Energy Saving Gets the Green Light Part 1

Introduction to Lighting

How We See Color And Why CRI Matters

Build Spectroscope. This activity is suitable for Middle School or High School Students. State Standards Met

Physics of Light. Light: electromagnetic radiation that can produce a visual sensation.

Digital Image Processing

CHAPTER VII ELECTRIC LIGHTING

Variation of light intensity. Measuring the light intensity of different light sources

L E D L i g h t i n g G u i d e

ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION METHOD

daylight Spring 2014 College of Architecture, Texas Tech University 1

How is Light Absorbed and Transmitted?

Color Measurement with the LSS-100P

Color Temperature Color temperature is distinctly different from color and also it is different from the warm/cold contrast described earlier.

It is important to use the right ballast to ensure the luminaire also ignites at low temperatures.

LED LIGHTING GUIDE. We will help you find the right light bulb!

Table 1. Typical Lumen Efficiencies for Selected Lighting Technologies Light Type Candle n/a 10 lumens 0.2 Kerosene Lamp (simple wick)

GLOSSARY OF TERMS. Terminology Used for Ultraviolet (UV) Curing Process Design and Measurement

Light as a stimulus for vision. Electromagnetic spectrum. Radiant Energy (Electromagnetic) Spectrum. Solar Radiation Spectrum

PHYS General Physics II Lab Diffraction Grating

simply providing that illuminance is not enough to ensure good quality lighting (SLL 2012)

08-2 EE 4770 Lecture Transparency. Formatted 16:41, 12 February 1998 from lsli Steradian. Example

Illumination Guide. Choosing the right lighting to evaluate products

Application Notes Photoconductive Cells

Photo-Documentation of Ultraviolet Radiation Induced Visible Fluorescence on Daguerreotypes

Colorimetry and Color Modeling

Pupil Lumens and their impact on the choice of lighting

Section 18.3 Behavior of Light

Practice Problems for Chapter 25-26

The Science Seeing of process Digital Media. The Science of Digital Media Introduction

20W TL 324 smd LED Warm White by Simplify-It

Color. Bilkent University. CS554 Computer Vision Pinar Duygulu

Photometry for Traffic Engineers...

Digital Photography: Fundamentals of Light, Color, & Exposure Part II Michael J. Glagola - December 9, 2006

INFS 423 Preservation of Information Resources

Utilization of Electrical Energy List of contents

Traditional lighting technologies

ecoschoolsproject Which light is right? fluorescent or incandescent light? grade 8 science Greater Essex County District School Board

Assignment: Light, Cameras, and Image Formation

PHOTO ELECTRIC EFFECT - Planck s constant

HSL HUMAN SUN LIGHTING

Detailed Scientific Barrier Filter Discussion

LlIGHT REVIEW PART 2 DOWNLOAD, PRINT and submit for 100 points

Photometry for Traffic Engineers...

Conceptual Physics Fundamentals

Electromagnetic (Light) Waves Electromagnetic Waves

PHYSICS - Chapter 16. Light and Color and More

STUDY NOTES UNIT I IMAGE PERCEPTION AND SAMPLING. Elements of Digital Image Processing Systems. Elements of Visual Perception structure of human eye

MUNICIPAL OUTDOOR LIGHTING STANDARDS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT POLLUTION

Lighting Terminology Wolf Lake Drive, suite 105, Bartlett, TN O F

Color Science. What light is. Measuring light. CS 4620 Lecture 15. Salient property is the spectral power distribution (SPD)

Compact High Intensity Light Source

Properties of LED considering museum lighting

LIGHT & COLOR. Thoughts on Color

CS6640 Computational Photography. 6. Color science for digital photography Steve Marschner

Lighting SAMPLE. Learner Workbook. Version 1. Training and Education Support Industry Skills Unit Meadowbank. Product Code: 5640

Transcription:

THE CANDELA - UNIT OF LUMINOUS INTENSITY Light is that part of the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation that the human eye can see. It lies between about 400 and 700 nanometers. All the units for measuring and defining light are based on the candela, which is the unit defining the luminous intensity from a small source, in a particular direction. This unit used to be based on the light emission from a flame. Then the source became the glow from molten platinum. The current definition is a radical departure from the previous formulations; because it defines light intensity in terms of the unit for radiated power in general, the watt, or joule per second. The candela is therefore no longer strictly necessary as a fundamental unit, because it is defined in terms of another fundamental unit. Historically, the engineers' unit of power, the watt, has been separated from the unit of luminous intensity, which is also a form of power, because the eye has a varying sensitivity over the visual spectrum, being relatively insensitive to blue and to red light. This radiation may make a deep impression on the viewer but, relative to yellow-green light, more watts of radiation are needed to cause a signal to reach the brain.

Because of this the candela has to be defined for radiation at a single frequency. This makes the definition rather abstract, because no such light exists as something you can buy in a lamp store. The comforting symbolism of the candle has disappeared in the experts' merciless striving for scientific precision. Here is the definition: The candela is the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 10 12 hertz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction of 1/683 watt per steradian. Let us go through this definition bit by bit. The frequency chosen is that to which the eye is most sensitive (more about this later). This frequency is normally quoted in the lighting literature as the corresponding wavelength: 555 nanometer. The wavelength varies with the medium through which the light passes, so, in the interest of precision, our relatively familiar wavelength description of light is not used in the standard. The strange choice of the factor 683 is to make the value identical to that obtained with the previous version of the unit: the emission from 1 square centimeter of glowing, solidifying platinum.

The steradian is the cone of light spreading out from the source which would illuminate one square meter of the inner surface of a sphere of 1 m radius around the source. The light intensity coming towards the observer is assumed to be reaching all angles within the enclosing steradian at the same intensity. It doesn't have to in practice: one can perfectly well measure the luminous intensity from a lighthouse beam, knowing that it actually only covers less than a hundredth of a steradian. One measures the light received by a small sensor of known area and multiplies this to give the corresponding value for one steradian Luminous emission is not the same as the perceived brightness of the source when you look at it The definition implies a small source, because the energy stream from it is defined as energy within a given solid angle, independent of distance to the measuring instrument. If the source is very small, a tiny quartz halogen torch bulb for example, the brightness will appear to be intense even if its emission is one candela. If the source is, like a candle, small but not really a point, you will get an impression of a small area of light of moderate brightness, even though the light intensity is also one candela. The apparent brightness of a source when you look directly at it must not be confused with its luminous emission.

The brightness of a source is measured in candela per square meter. Everything that is visible can be regarded as a light source. Museum objects become light sources when they reflect light from a lamp. We will return to the unit of brightness, the candela per square meter, later. It is an undeservedly neglected concept in exhibition design The candela emission from practical light sources There is no practical use in a museum for a light source giving monochromatic radiation at 540 10 12 hz (555 nm wavelength in air), which the brain interprets as a yellow-green colour. This colour gives the best visibility per watt for an object such as black text on white paper. Good colour rendering, however, demands light sources that radiate over the whole visible spectrum. This inevitably reduces the efficiency of the lighting, because the eye needs more energy in the red and blueviolet ends of the spectrum to give the same visual clarity. The measurement of luminous intensity from a useful light source requires extra information: the relative sensitivity of the eye to different wavelengths.

The luminous intensity of a "white" light source is defined by multiplying the watts emitted at each wavelength by the efficiency of that wavelength in exciting the eye, relative to the efficiency at 555 nm. This efficiency factor goes under the curious name of the V-lambda curve. Here it is. This curve, obtained by averaging results from experiments with many people, has long been standardized as an essential component in the quantitative description of light. The curve defines the relationship between the human sensation of light and the physical concept of energy, which is the quantity which measuring instruments react to. The watts emitted by a light source can be measured by absorbing all the light in a perfectly black surface and measuring the heat produced. A filter corresponding to the V-lambda curve can be placed in front of the black absorber to convert the result to what the human eye and brain regard as 'brightness'. Practical measuring instruments contain semiconductor sensors which convert the absorbed light into electric current.

Practical significance of the varying efficiency of the eye at different wavelengths The efficient lighting provided by monochromatic radiation around 555nm is too weird to be acceptable even to office workers. Fluorescent lamps for office use are therefore cunningly designed to have a large emission in the central region of the spectrum, where one gets the most visual clarity for the watts driven throught the fluorescent tube, with a bit of blue and red added to fool the brain into thinking that the light is white. The picture to the left has yellow-green stripes interlaced with grey. The picture on the right has the same yellow-green stripes interlaced with red and blue. The partial whitening of the strong green impression is best observed from a distance. If you are unimpressed by this demonstration, which depends somewhat on your computer, there is another way of making visible the strong green emission of office lighting. Take a compact disk and hold it under, but at a distance of several meters from, a fluorescent tube. Even better, make a small slit in a piece of cardboard to reduce the light from the tube to a parallel stream from a small source. Wiggle the disk around (music side towards you).

In addition to the direct reflection of the light source you will pick up a diffracted image in which the light is separated into coloured bands. Notice the strong blue bands that come from the mercury vapour in the tube, the intense green emission, from the main phosphor, and a red emission from another phosphor. Compare this with the continuous spectra from daylight and from incandescent lamps. This excess of green radiation in office lighting is why photographs taken in offices usually have a greenish cast. Fluorescent lamps are also made with a more even spread of energy through the spectrum but the energy efficiency is lower. The eye cannot tell the difference between these two lights by looking at them but does notice the bad colour rendering when looking at objects under the efficient light. Measuring this colour rendering, and deciding how much it matters, is the subject of a later article. Now that I have explained the candela in detail, I will just mention that although it is fundamental to all other units of light, you won't often meet it. What matters to the architect and engineer is the total light emission of a lamp and its distribution in space. What matters to the conservator is the light falling on the object, usually from several light sources. Source: http://www.conservationphysics.org/lightcd/light_cd.php