Basic Concept about Light-output and efficiency

output and efficiency

Luminous efficacy is a measure of how well a light source produces visible light. It is the ratio of luminous flux to power. Depending on context, the power can be either the radiant flux of the source’s output, or it can be the total power (electric power, chemical energy, or others) consumed by the source. Which sense of the term is intended must usually be inferred from the context, and is sometimes unclear. The former sense is sometimes called luminous efficacy of radiation, and the latter luminous efficacy of a source.
The luminous efficacy of a source is a measure of the efficiency with which the source provides visible light from electricity. The luminous efficacy of radiation describes how well a given quantity of electromagnetic radiation from a source produces visible light: the ratio of luminous flux to radiant flux. Not all wavelengths of light are equally visible, or equally effective at stimulating human vision, due to the spectral sensitivity of the human eye; radiation in the infrared and ultraviolet parts of the spectrum is useless for illumination. The overall luminous efficacy of a source is the product of how well it converts energy to electromagnetic radiation, and how well the emitted radiation is detected by the human eye.

  1.     Process of Vision
  2.     Visible Spectrum of Light
  3.     Light and color
  4.     Spectral Power Distribution (SPD)
  5.     Color Rendering Index (CRI)
  6.     Color Temperature
  7.     Warm and Cool Light
  8.     Luminous Flux
  9.     Luminous Intensity
  10.     Illuminance of Light
  11.     Difference bettwen Lumen,lux and Cd
  12.     output and efficiency
  13.     Visual comfort Probability
  14.     Beam Angle
  15.     Power factor
  16.     Average Rated Life/ L70 Standard