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Common Lighting terms, measurement techniques and general information.

 

 

 


Figure 1. Candela

 


Figure 2. Footcandle


Figure 3. End Footcandle


Figure 4. Lumens


Figure 5. Lumens


 

 
Luminous (Light Level):
This is the amount of light measured on the work plane in the lighted space. The work plane is an imaginary horizontal, tilted or vertical line where the most important tasks in the space are performed. Measured in footcandles (fc or lux in metric), light levels are either calculated, or in existing spaces, measured with a light meter. A footcandle is actually one lumen of light density per square foot; one lux is one lumen per square meter. Like lumens, footcandles can be produced as either initial or maintained quantities.

Work Plane:
The level at which work is done where illuminance is specified and measured. For office applications, this is typically a horizontal plane 30 inches above the floor (e.g., desk height).

Beam Lumens:
The total flux in that region of space where the intensity exceeds 50 percent of the maximum intensity.

Field Lumens:
The total flux in that region of space where the intensity exceeds ten percent of the maximum intensity.

Lux:
The metric unit of measure for illuminance of a surface. One lux is equal to one lumen per square meter. One lux equals 0.0929 footcandles.

Light Level:
Light intensity measured on a plane at a specific location is called illuminance. Illuminance is measured in footcandles, which are workplane lumens per square foot. You can measure illuminance using a light meter located on the work surface where tasks are performed. Using simple arithmetic and manufacturers' photometric data, you can predict illuminance for a defined space. (Lux is the metric unit for illuminance, measured in lumens per square meter. To convert footcandles to lux, multiply footcandles by 10.76).

Efficacy:
A measure of the luminous efficiency of a radiant flux, expressed in lumens per watt as the quotient of the total luminous flux by the total flux. For daylighting, this is the quotient of visible flux incident on a surface to radiant flux on that surface. For electric sources, this is the quotient of the total luminous flux emitted by the total lamp power input.

Efficacy of a Light Source:
The total light output of a light source divided by the total power input. Efficacy is expressed in lumens per Watt.

Watt:
The unit of measuring electrical power. Watts does not relate to the light output level. It defines the rate of energy consumption by an electrical device when it is in operation. The energy cost of operating an electrical device is calculated as its wattage time in hours of use. In single-phase circuits, it is related to volts and amps by the formula: Volts x Amps x Power Factor (PF) = Watts. (Note: For AC circuits, PF must be included).

Kilowatt Hour (kWh) Formula:
The measure of electrical energy from which electricity billing is determined. For example, a 100-Watt bulb operated for 1000 hours would consume 100 kilowatt hours (100 Watts x 1000 hours = 100 kWh). At a billing rate of $0.10/kWh, this bulb would cost $10.00 (100 kWh x $0.10/kWh) to operate over 1000 hours.

 

LUMINOUS INTENSITY AND FLUX:

The unit of luminous intensity I is the candela (cd) also known as the international candle. The intensity of a light source is commonly referred to as its candlepower.

The unit of luminous flux F is the lumen (lm).  One lumen is equal to the luminous flux which falls on each square meter (m2) of a sphere one meter (1m) in radius when a 1-candela isotropic light source (one that radiates equally in all directions) is at the center of the sphere.  Since the area of a sphere of radius r is 4pr2, a sphere whose radius is 1m has 4pm2 of area, and the total luminous flux emitted by a 1-cd source is therefore 4p1m.

Thus the luminous flux emitted by an isotropic light source of intensity I is given by:

F  =  4pI  where

Luminous flux (lm)  =  4p × luminous intensity (cd)

ILLUMINATION:

The illumination (or illuminance) E of a surface is the luminous flux per unit area that reaches the surface:

E  =  F/A Illumination   =   luminous flux / area

  Luminous Intensity & Luminous Flux:


lumens = 4π × cd                             cd = lumens
                                                                      4π 

lumens  =  4π  ×  (Mean Spherical Candlepower) 

fc = cd                                           cd = fc × d ²
        d ²

lumens = fc  4π × d ²                       fc = lumens
                                                                 4π × d²

  

  Illumination:
Inverse Square Law:   E =   I
                                                  d²
Cosine Law:                             E =  I cos θ
where θ is angle of incidence                d²                
 
  Related Formulas

10.764 × fc = lux     

1 lux = 0.0929 fc

10.764 × lumens / sq. ft = lux 
 

lumens / m² = lux

1 cd / sq. ft. = π × fL  (foot-Lambert)

3.426 × fL = nits = cd / m²

 

1 fL = 1 lumen / sq. ft. 

1 fL = 3.426 cd / m²  

1 cd = 1 lumen per steradian (unit solid angle), where “steradianunit solid angle is a cone.  Unit solid angle is photometric brightness, where the spherical surface is:  
S = 4π²  

If  r = 1, then there are 4π lumens in the sphere, (12.566 lumens)

 

 

Lighting in the work place

Light Level or Illuminance, is the amount of light measured in a plane. The work plane is where the most important tasks in the room or space are performed.

Measuring Units Light Level - Illuminance

Illumenance is measured in foot candles (ftcd, fc) (or lux in the metric SI system). A foot candle is actually one lumen of light density per square foot, one lux is one lumen per square meter.

  • lux = fc 10.752
  • fc = lux / 10.752

Common Light Levels Outdoor

Common light levels outdoor at day and night can be found in the table below:

Condition Illumination
(ftcd) (lux)
Sunlight 10,000 107,527
Full Daylight 1,000 10,752.7
Overcast Day 100 1,075.3
Very Dark Day 10 107.53
Twilight 1 10.75
Deep Twilight .1 1.08
Full Moon .01 .108
Quarter Moon .001 .0108
Starlight .0001 .0011
Overcast Night .00001 .0001

Common and Recommended Light Levels Indoor

The outdoor light level is approximately 10,000 lux on a clear day. In the building, in the area closest to windows, the light level may be reduced to approximately 1,000 lux. In the middle area its may be as low as 25 - 50 lux. Additional lighting equipment is often necessary to compensate the low levels.

Earlier it was common with light levels in the range 100 - 300 lux for normal activities. Today the light level is more common in the range 500 - 1000 lux - depending on activity. For precision and detailed works, the light level may even approach 1500 - 2000 lux.

The table below is a guidance for recommended light level in different work spaces:

Activity Illumination
(lux, lumen/m2)
Warehouses, Homes, Theaters, Archives 150
Easy Office Work, Classes 250
Normal Office Work, PC Work, Study Library, Groceries, Show Rooms, Laboratories 500
Supermarkets, Mechanical Workshops, Office Landscapes 750
Normal Drawing Work, Detailed Mechanical Workshops, Operation Theatres 1,000
Detailed Drawing Work, Very Detailed Mechanical Works 1,500 - 2,000
© Assembly Contracts Ltd Manchester UK 2007

Site Last Update : Sunday, August 26, 2007

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