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What is a Lumen? |
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A lumen is a unit of standard measurement used to describe how much light is contained in a certain area. The lumen is part of a group of standard measurements known as the photometry group, which measure different aspects of light. This group also includes such units as the candela, which measures luminance, and the lux, which measures illuminance. Strictly speaking, a lumen is defined as one candela multiplied by one steradian, which can be expressed as: 1(lm) = 1(cd) x 1(sr). A related unit of measurement – although not part of the standard units – is the foot-candle, which is often used in photography and film. To really understand what a lumen is, it is important to understand these units: the candela, the foot-candle, the steradian, and the lux. Although not entirely necessary to understand the lumen, there is an important distinction to be made between measures of radiance and measures of illuminance. When measuring radiance, you are basically looking at how much energy a light source is releasing directly. You’re not interested in what happens to that energy as it leaves the source, just in how much is at the source itself. When you’re measuring illuminance, by contrast, you are looking at how much of that energy makes it to a given object. The foot-candle is the non-standard measure of illuminance, basically defined as how much light would strike the inner surface of a sphere one foot in diameter if it were lit by a single candle. The lux is the standard measure of illuminance, and can be defined simply as how much light would strike a similar sphere of one meter in diameter. The two can be converted simply, with 10.76 lux to one foot-candle. Both the foot-candle and the lux make use of a measure of luminous intensity, called the candela. The candela was originally called the candlepower and simply referred to the amount of luminous energy emitted by a known type of candle. Later, when it was standardized, a definition was chosen that would approximate the older definition, so that existing equations could remain the same. The modern definition of the candela has to do with the radiation emitted by 1/60 of a single square centimeter of platinum when it is at its melting point. A steradian is a standard unit of measurement used to define a solid angle. The technical definition of a steradian is the solid angle subtended at the center of a sphere of radius r by a portion of the surface of the sphere having an area of r^2. In this definition, subtended has to do with the relationship between the length of the arc and the resulting angle. The steradian is represented by the abbreviation sr. Mathematically, we can then define a steradian as 1(sr) = m^2 x m^-1. So, taking all of this together, we can now interpret our original definition of a lumen as 1(lm) = 1(cd) x 1(sr). One lumen in this case is a measure of the amount of luminous flux emitted into an area by 1/60 of a single square centimeter of platinum at its melting point into a certain angle. A lumen measurement is often used along with wattage to determine the luminous efficiency of a light-emitting body. For example, a normal 100 watt light-bulb has a luminous efficiency of about 17.5, emitting 1750 lumens of light. A 13 watt florescent bulb, by contrast, has an efficiency of about 56, emitting around 730 lumens of light. The sun, in contrast, has an efficiency of around 93.
Written by
Brendan McGuigan
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