Lux
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*'''[[Daylight]]''' | *'''[[Daylight]]''' | ||
*'''[[Moonlight]]''' | *'''[[Moonlight]]''' | ||
- | + | *'''[[Sunlight]]''' | |
- | + | *'''[[Lighting Installation]]''' | |
+ | *'''[[Daylight]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[Lux]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[Metal Halide lamp]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[Albedo]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[Metal Halide lamp]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[Color Temperature]]''' | ||
+ | *'''[[LED]]''' | ||
== '''Reference''' == | == '''Reference''' == |
Current revision
A lux meter for measuring illuminances in work places. The lux (symbol: lx) is the SI unit of illuminance and luminous emittance. It is used in photometry as a measure of the apparent intensity of light hitting or passing through a surface. It is analogous to the radiometric unit watts per square meter, but with the power at each wavelength weighted according to the luminosity function, a standardized model of human brightness perception.
Illuminance | Example |
---|---|
10-5 lux | Light from the brightest star Sirius |
10-4 lux | Total starlight, overcast sky |
0.002 lux | Moonless clear night sky with airglow |
0.01 lux | Quarter moon |
0.27 lux | Full moon on a clear night |
1 lux | Full moon overhead at tropical latitudes |
3.4 lux | Dark limit of civil twilight under a clear sky |
50 lux | Family living room |
80 lux | Hallway/toilet |
100 lux | Very dark overcast day |
320 lux | Recommended office lighting |
400 lux | Sunrise or sunset on a clear day. Well-lit office area. |
500 lux | Lighting level for an office according to the European law UNI EN 12464. |
1,000 lux | Overcast day |
10,000–25,000 lux | Full daylight (not direct sun) |
32,000–130,000 lux | Direct sunlight |
[edit] Also See
- Sunlight
- Lighting Installation
- Daylight
- Moonlight
- Sunlight
- Lighting Installation
- Daylight
- Lux
- Metal Halide lamp
- Albedo
- Metal Halide lamp
- Color Temperature
- LED
[edit] Reference
- Wikipedia Reference see Lux [1]
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