LED TECHNICAL
Lumens, Illuminance,
Foot-candles
In
defining how bright something is, we have two things to
consider.
1.
How bright it is at the source- How Bright is that light?
2. How much light is falling on something a certain distance
away from the light.
Some
Definitions.
We're
in America
, so we are going to talk about units of measurement that
concern distance in feet and inches. So, we will use some terms
that folks in Europe
don't use.
We're going to talk about "foot-candles".
This one's
simple. Get a birthday cake candle. Get a ruler. Stick the
candle on one end of the ruler. Light the candle. Turn out the
lights. Sing Happy Birthday to Doc. It was his 47th on the
23rd. OK, quiet down. Enough of that nonsense. One foot-candle
of light is the amount of light that birthday cake candle
generates one foot away.
That's a neat
unit of measurement. Why? Say you have a lamp. You are told it
produces 100 foot candles of light. That means at one foot from
the lamp, you will receive 100 foot candles of
light.
But here's
where it gets tricky. The further away you move the light from
what you want to illuminate, the less bright the light seems!
If you measure it at the light, it's just as bright. But when
you measure at the object you want illuminated, there is less
light! A Physics teacher is going to tell you that light
measured on an object is INVERSELY PROPORTIONAL to the distance
the object is from the light source. That's a very scientific
and math rich way of saying, the closer you are to the light
bulb, the brighter that bulb is. Or, think of it this way. You
can't change how much light comes out of your light bulb. So,
to make more light on an object, you have to either move the
light closer, or add more lights.
LUMENS.
A
LUMEN is a unit of measurement of light. It measures light much
the same way. Remember, a foot-candle is how bright the light
is one foot away from the source. A lumen is a way of measuring
how much light gets to what you want to light! A LUMEN is equal
to one foot-candle falling on one square foot of
area.
So, if we take
your candle and ruler, lets place a book at the opposite end
from the candle. We'd have a bit of a light up if we put the
book right next to the candle, you know. If that book happens
to be one foot by one foot, it's one square foot. Ok, got the
math done there. Now, all the light falling on that book, one
foot away from your candle equals both…….1 foot candle AND one
LUMEN!
Ah, we've
confused you. Let's split off from this and talk about the
difference between RADIANCE and ILLUMINANCE.
RADIANCE is
another way of saying how much energy is released from that
light source. Again, you measure it at the source. Unless
you're talking about measuring the radiance of something
intensely hot, like the Sun. Then you might want to measure it
at night, when it's off.
ILLUMINANCE is
what results from the use of light. You turn your flashlight on
in a dark room, and you light something up. That's ILLUMINANCE.
Turning on a light in a dark room to make the burglar visible
gives you ILLUMINANCE. It also gives you another problem when
you note the burglar is pointing your duck gun at your
bellybutton.
Illuminance is
the intensity or degree to which something is illuminated and
is therefore not the amount of light produced by the light
source. This is measured in foot-candles again! And when people
talk about LUX, it's illuminance measured in metric units
rather than English units of measure. To reinforce that, LUX is
the measurement of actual light available at a given distance.
A lux equals one lumen incident per square meter of illuminated
surface area. They're measuring the same thing, just using
different measurement units.
Pretend you're
an old photographer, like O. Winston Link, or Ansel Adams.
These two gods of black and white photography (and a print made
by either can fetch quite a hefty sum of money these days) used
a device called a light meter to help them judge their
exposure. (There is another way of judging exposure-that's when
someone whispers in our ear at a cocktail party, "You silly
twit, your fly's come undone!").
These light
meters were nifty devices. You could use it to show how much
light was falling on an object, light from the sun, and
reflected light energy from every thing else. Or you could use
it to show how much light energy was reflected off the object
itself.
All this
brings back two points. Well, three.
-
The
first point is if we measure the output of a light at
the source that gives us one
thing.
-
The
second point is that we use an entirely different unit
of measure if we are measuring the results of that
light's output.
-
The
third point is the instructor is right off his trolley,
isn't he?
-
Now
back to the book at the end of the ruler.
We've measured
two different things. We have a unit of measure for how much
light is produced. We Yankees express that as a foot-candle.
Being lazy, we use it all over the place.
Candlepower
Candlepower is
a way of measuring how much light is produced by a light bulb,
LED or by striking an arc in a Carbon-Arc spotlight. Is it a
measure of how much light falls upon an object some distance
away? No. That's illuminance. Is it a measure of how well we
see an object that is illuminated by that light source? No.
That's something all together different, and we are not going
there!
Nowadays we
use the term CANDELA instead of candlepower. Candlepower, or
CANDELA is a measure of how much light the bulb produces,
measured at the bulb, rather than how much falls upon the thing
you want to light up. Further confusing the matter is beam
focus. That's how much candlepower can be focused using a
reflector/lens assembly. Obviously, if you project all your
light bulbs intensity at a given spot, or towards something, it
will be more intense, and the illuminance will be
higher.
And here comes
the confuser! A candlepower as a unit of measure is not the
same as a foot-candle. A candlepower is a measurement of the
light at the source, not at the object you light
up.
And a candela
is the metric equivalent of the light output of that one
candle, based on metric calculations. And since using a candle
is rather imprecise, the definition was amended to replace a
light source using carbon filaments with a very specific light
source, see the following:
The candela is the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of
a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 x
1012 hertz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction
of 1/683 watt per steradian.
The above from the National Institute of Standards Reference on
Constants, Units, and Uncertainty.
Candlepower is
a measure of light taken at the source-not at the target.
Foot-candles tell us how much of that light is directed at an
object we want to illuminate.
Now, lets
convert the lumens, a metric unit of light measurement, to
candlepower.
We
understand a candle radiates light equally in all directions,
its output, in this consideration is not focused by any
mechanical means (lenses or reflectors). Pretend for a moment
that a transparent sphere one meter in radius surrounds your
candle. We know that there are 12.57 square meters of surface
area in such a sphere. Remember your Solid Geometry
classes?
That one
candle (1 Candlepower/Candela) is illuminating equally the
entire surface of that sphere. The amount of light energy then
reflected from that surface is defined
thusly:
The amount of
energy emanating from one square meter of surface is one lumen.
And if we decrease the size of the sphere to one foot radius,
we increase the reflected energy 12.57 times of that which fell
on the square meter area.
LUX is an
abbreviation for Lumens per square meter.
Foot-candles equal the amount of Lumens per square feet of
area.
So, that one
candlepower equivalent equals 12.57 lumens.
And for you
figuring out LED equivalents, first you must know how many
lumens your LED's each produce. Then divide that value by 12.57
and you have candlepower of the LED. You don't have
foot-candles, remember foot-candles are illuminance. And we are
measuring radiance.
In
Summation:
Candlepower is
a rating of light output at the source, using English
measurements.
Foot-candles are a measurement of light at an illuminated
object.
Lumens are a metric equivalent to foot-candles in that they are
measured at an object you want to illuminate.
Divide the number of lumens you have produced, or are capable
of producing, by 12.57 and you get the candlepower equivalent
of that light source.
We've now
converted a measurement taken some distance from the
illuminated object, converted it from a metric standard to an
English unit of measure, and further converted it from a
measure of illumination to a measure of radiation!
Light Conversion
Link
Conversion Table
|
To convert from
|
into
|
multiply by ...
|
|
Lumens |
Candela
steradian |
1.0 |
|
Lumens |
Candle power
(spherical) |
0.07958 |
|
Lumens |
Watts |
0.0015 |
|
Lumens per square
centimeter |
Lamberts |
1 |
|
Lumens per square
centimeter |
Lux |
10000 |
|
Lumens per square
centimeter |
Phots |
1 |
|
Lumens per square
foot |
Foot
candles |
1 |
|
Lumens per square
foot |
Foot
lamberts |
1 |
|
Lumens per square
foot |
Lumens /Square
meter |
10.76391 |
|
Lumens per square
foot |
Lux |
10.76396 |
|
Lumens per square
meter |
Foot
candles |
0.0929 |
|
Lumens per square
meter |
Lumens/Square
foot |
0.0929 |
|
Lumens per square
meter |
Phots |
0.0001 |
|
Lumens per square
meter |
Lux |
1 |
|
Lux |
Foot
Candles |
0.0929 |
|
Lux |
Lumens/square
meter |
1 |
|
Lux |
Phots |
0.0001 |
|