Luminous intensity
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In photometry, luminous intensity is a measure of the perceived power emitted by a light source in a particular direction. The SI unit of luminous intensity is the candela (cd).
Photometry deals with the measurement of visible light as perceived by human eyes. The human eye can only see light in the visible spectrum and has different sensitivities to light of different wavelengths within the spectrum. When adapted for bright conditions (photopic vision), the eye is most sensitive to greenish-yellow light at 555 nm. Light with the same radiant intensity at other wavelengths has a lower luminous intensity. The curve which measures the response of the human eye to light is a defined standard, known as the luminosity function. This curve, denoted <math>V(\lambda)</math> or <math>\overline{y}(\lambda)</math>, is based on an average of widely differing experimental data from scientists using different measurement techniques. For instance, the measured responses of the eye to violet light varied by a factor of ten.
Luminous intensity should not be confused with another photometric unit, luminous flux, which is the total perceived power emitted in all directions. Luminous intensity is the perceived power per unit solid angle. Luminous intensity is also not the same as the radiant intensity, the corresponding objective physical quantity used in the measurement science of radiometry.
Units
One candela is defined as the luminous intensity of a monochromatic light source of wavelength 555 nm (or frequency 540 THz), which has a radiant intensity of 1/683 watts per steradian. This is about 1.46 mW per steradian. Since there are about 12.6 steradians in a sphere, the total radiant intensity would be about 18.4 mW, if the source emitted uniformly in all directions. A typical candle produces very roughly one candela of luminous intensity.
In 1881, Jules Violle proposed the Violle as a unit of luminous intensity, and it was notable as the first unit of light intensity that did not depend on the properties of a particular lamp. It was superseded by the candela in 1946.
Usage
The luminous intensity for light of a particular wavelength <math>\lambda</math> is given by
- <math>I_v(\lambda)= \frac {I(\lambda)}{683\,\overline{y}(\lambda)}\quad,</math>
where <math>I_v(\lambda)</math> is the luminous intensity in cd, <math>I(\lambda)</math> is the radiant intensity in W/sr, and <math>\overline{y}(\lambda)</math> is the standard luminosity function. If more than one wavelength is present (as is usually the case), one must sum or integrate over the spectrum of wavlengths present to get the total luminous intensity.
See also
Template:SI light unitsde:Lichtstärke (Photometrie) es:Intensidad luminosa fr:Intensité lumineuse it:Intensità luminosa hu:Fényerősség nl:Lichtsterkte ja:光度 (光学) pl:Światłość pt:Intensidade luminosa ru:Сила света sl:Svetilnost fi:Valovoima uk:Сила світла zh:发光强度