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How can sky glow be reduced?
While it is difficult to accurately model sky glow, at this point it is presumed that the most important factors are light output and lamp spectral characteristics, light distribution from the luminaire, reflected light from the ground, and aerosol particle distribution in the atmosphere. If the quantity of light going into the sky is reduced, then sky glow is reduced. Thus, current practice is to reduce sky glow by 1) using full cutoff luminaires to minimize the amount of light emitted upward directly from the luminaire; 2) reducing light levels; 3) turning off unneeded lights; 4) limiting lighted hours of outdoor sales areas, parking areas, and signs around important observing sights; 5) limiting lighting installations; and 6) mandating low-pressure sodium light sources, which allows astronomers to filter the line spectra from telescopic images. For reducing sky glow, the Institution of Lighting Engineers (ILE) has suggested limits on the amount of luminaire-emitted light that goes directly into the sky. The ILE’s limits are specified by environmental zone, as shown in Table 2.
| Table 2. Limits on sky glow for different environmental zones |
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| Environmental zone |
Sky glow ULR* (max %) |
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| E1 |
0.0 |
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| E2 |
2.5 |
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| E3 |
5.0 |
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| E4 |
15.0 |
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