Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
63 lines (43 loc) · 3.61 KB

Physical-Light-Units.md

File metadata and controls

63 lines (43 loc) · 3.61 KB

HDRP uses Physical Light Units (PLU) for its lighting. These units are based on real-life light measurements, like those you see on light bulb packaging or a photographic light meter.

Candelas

The base unit of luminous intensity in the International System of Units. For reference, a common wax candle emits light with a luminous intensity of roughly 1 candela.

Lumens

The unit of luminous flux. Measures the total quantity of visible light a source emits. A light source emitting 1 candela of luminous intensity from an area of 1 steradian has a luminous flux of 1 lumen.

Luminance

Measures the apparent brightness of light either emitted from a light source, or reflected off a surface, to the human eye. A light source that emits 1 candela of luminous intensity onto an area of 1 square meter has a luminance of 1 candela per square meter.

Lux

The unit of illuminance. A light source that emits 1 lumen of luminous flux onto an area of 1 square meter has an illuminance of 1 lux.

Exposure value (EV)

A value that represents a combination of a camera's shutter speed and f-number. It is essentially a measurement of exposure such that all combinations of shutter speed and f-number that yield the same level of exposure have the same EV. HDRP Lights can use Ev 100, which is Ev with a 100 International Standards Organisation (ISO) film.

Natural light levels

Light measurements from natural sources in different conditions:

Illuminance (lux) Natural light level
120 000 Very bright sunlight.
110 000 Bright sunlight.
20 000 Blue sky at midday.
1 000 - 2 000 Overcast sky at midday.
< 1 Moonlight with a clear night sky.
0.002 Starry night without moonlight. Includes airglow.

Artificial light intensities

Approximate light measurements from artificial sources:

Luminous flux (lumen) Source
12.57 Candle light.
< 100 Small decorative light, such as a small LED lamp.
200 - 300 Decorative lamp, such as a lamp that does not provide the main lighting for a bright room.
400 - 800 Ceiling lamp for a regular room.
800 - 1 200 Ceiling lamp for a large brightly lit room.
1 000 - 40 000 Bright street light.

Indoor light levels

Architects use these approximate values as a guide when designing rooms and buildings for functional use:

Illuminance (lux) Room type
150 - 300 Bedroom.
300 - 500 Classroom.
300 - 750 Kitchen.
300 - 500 Kitchen Counter or Office.
100 - 300 Bathroom.
750 lux - 1 000 Supermarket.
30 City street at night.

For more examples of indoor light levels see Archtoolbox’s web page on Recommended Lighting Levels in Buildings.